Jaylen Browninsists he does not endorse the protesters who gathered outside Barclays Center to welcome Kyrie Irving’s return from suspension for the Brooklyn Nets on Sunday.
Irving had sat out eight straight games after being punished for sharing a social media post about a book and film with anti-Semitic tropes.
He returned to the fold against the Memphis Grizzlies, a game that saw approximately 100 members from Israel United in Christ gather outside the venue, chanting and handing out flyers headlined “The Truth About Anti-Semitism” and “The Truth about Slavery”.
The group has been designated a hate group by the Southern Poverty Law Center.
Boston Celtics guard and NBPA vice-president Brown retweeted a social media video of the group with the caption “Energy”.
Brown later backtracked on the post insisting he “was not aware of what specific group was outside of Barclays Center” and reiterated that stance when speaking after Monday’s defeat to the Chicago Bulls.
“I saw a large group of our people from our community showing support for [Kyrie] and his return,” Brown said.
“Me being proud of that support and being proud of our community for doing that does not mean I endorse or celebrate some of the things that were being done or being said.
“My instinct when I saw this was I didn’t notice which group it was. I just noticed the support, and that’s what I commented on. I reemphasise that I don’t think that everything that is said or being done or being said is something I endorse or represent.”
Brown added he wanted to promote “brown and black people standing together on our issues rather than seeing images of violence in our media, music and movies that we don’t entirely promote or profit from”.
Brown has criticised the Nets’ handling of Irving’s suspension and the terms set out for him to return to court.
“I’ve been in contact as a union member, as a former team-mate just to show support for the situation that [Irving’s] been going through,” Brown added.
“Being exiled from the game, of course, emotionally is a lot on our league, but it’s a lot on everyone who’s a fan of this game.
“Kyrie’s contributed in a lot of ways to the game of basketball, so for him to be able to come back and be on the floor last night, I thought was something to celebrate.
“I thought that was something to support. The NBA, the Brooklyn Nets decided whatever the disagreements were or the concern was, was obviously handled and we were moving on. I was supporting that decision.”
A man dressed in a Nazi uniform was met with well-deserved vitriol when he walked into Fanelliâs, a bar in New York City, over the weekend.
Footage of the incident shows the unidentified man getting questioned by a patron for his choice of attire as he approaches the bar. The situation seemed to only get worse from there. According to the New York Post, the bartender refused to serve the guy, leading to his departure, but not before their encounter grew increasingly hostile.
a guy just walked into fanelli cafe in soho dressed as a nazi i have no words pic.twitter.com/4szraZgVEd
âFuck you mate,â the man in the Nazi uniform said, to someone who responded, âYou want to get fucked up? [Leave] for your own safety.â Another person walked over to ensure that the unwanted individual not only left the establishment, but didnât even think about returning.
The newspaper spoke with a hostess during their brunch shift the following day about the man in the Nazi uniform, and they said no one had ever seen that person before.
The incident comes at a time where it seems as though anti-Semitism among notable figures is on the rise, most notably by the artist formerly known as Kanye West, who claims to have âlost two billion dollars in one dayâ after Adidas, Balenciaga, and other companies cut ties with him over a slew of anti-Semitic remarks.
Meanwhile, Brooklyn Nets star Kyrie Irving went back-and-forth with a reporter during a post-game press conference Saturday night after he shared a link to a documentary that makes a number of anti-Semitic claims.
Sources who have worked with the artist formerly known as Kanye West have claimed heâs long-held a fascination with Hitler.
CNN reports that several people who have been close to Ye said he once wanted to name an album after the Nazi leader. âHe would praise Hitler by saying how incredible it was that he was able to accumulate so much power and would talk about all the great things he and the Nazi Party achieved for the German people,â said one business executive, who chose to remain anonymous. Those in his close circle were apparently âfully awareâ of his alleged interest in Hitler, and four sources said his 2018 album Ye was at one point almost named Hitler.
The executive claimed Ye created a hostile work environment, and his âobsessionâ with Hitler is at least partly to blame. They left the position and came to a settlement with Ye over alleged harassment in the workplace. When they cut ties with the multi-hyphenate, they signed a confidentiality agreement in which Ye denied the allegations made against him. Ye apparently also openly spoke about his âadmirationâ for the Nazis and Hitlerâs propaganda, and said he read Hitlerâs manifesto Mein Kampf.
The report comes not long after former TMZ employee Van Lathan Jr. said Kanye professed his âloveâ for Hitler during his infamous 2018 âslavery was a choiceâ interview. One of the sources who spoke with CNN said they were present during that TMZ visit, and corroborated Lathanâs comments.
Kanye has made many anti-Semitic comments as of late, and in his latest rambling interview he spoke with MIT research scientist Lex Fridman. He shared many false statements about the Holocaust, abortion, and the Jewish community. As reported by the Los Angeles Times, he repeated a conspiracy theory about Jewish philanthropist and activist George Soros, who he claimed âwould use the Black trauma economy to win an election.â Even stranger, he suggested âa Jewish doctorâ diagnosed him with âbipolar disorder and shot me with medication.â
His embrace of dangerous conspiracy theories and hateful rhetoric first started when he publicly expressed his appreciation for Donald Trump in 2016, but heâs been far more outspoken in recent months.
It all recently kicked off after he sported a âWhite Lives Matterâ t-shirt alongside notorious far-right political pundit Candace Owens, who was once forced to explain her own praise of Hitler at a congressional hearing about white nationalism in 2019.
Music standom is a fierce beast and Kanyeâs group of stans are among the most ferocious. Over the years, theyâve stood behind him and responded to Yeâs antics by labeling him a troubled and misunderstood genius. Even thinkpieces published in major publications have focused on his mental issues. Complex has largely focused its coverage on the positive, too. Meanwhile, many of his biggest longtime supporters, collaborators, and corporations have opted for silenceâuntil very recently.
Now, day one fans are no longer willing to drink Kanyeâs Kool-Aid and people are vocalizing their frustrations, especially on fan forums and social media. On KTT2, a public fan forum that discusses all things Ye, one fan pointed out, âThis is the first time in the 15 years [Iâve] been listening to him that Iâve seen his fanbase turn on him.â On KTT2, under the thread âDo You Love Ye?â stans shared their disapproval of Kanyeâs current era. âSorry, I will hate him. I will not just ignore anti-Semite and racist comments,â one person wrote. Another wrote, âIgnoring him is not holding him accountable.â On another KTT2 forum for Ye, a fan wrote, âIt looks like the bridge is officially burned and thereâs no returning.â
âIgnoring him is not holding him accountable.â
Chris Lambert, who has been running the âWatching the Throneâ podcast along with his co-host Travis Bean since 2015, agrees. âI do think itâs the most tumultuous that itâs ever been, and the most that people are starting to lean away,â Lambert tells Complex.
The platform was initially conceived as a place to discuss Yeâs discography, but the content has evolved to touch on a variety of topics about the artist including his fashion and lifestyle. Over the past seven years, the platform has reached tens of thousands of Kanye fans, becoming one of the top trending music podcasts on iTunes. Its YouTube channel provides in-depth analysis of Yeâs work to more than 45,000 subscribers, while its Twitter account reaches more than 100,000 with updates about Yeâs life, interview soundbites, flashbacks, and more. Lambert has observed many different Kanye eras, but tells Complex the tipping point that affected fansâ opinions of Ye and their engagement came in 2018.
âYe himself stepped away from just fashion and music and started getting into politics, philosophy, social commentary,â Lambert tells Complex. âHe had always been philosophizing on those things, but I think from the perspective of the artist commentating, not from the perspective of a politician commentating or somebody thatâs trying to have more of an effect on things and take a leadership role.â
2018 is better known as Kanyeâs MAGA era. During that time, he visited the White House and publicly supported the Trump administration amidst a tumultuous political climate, but also used his platform to speak against the idea of group-thinking and embracing individualism. That same year, Kanye agitated fans after he appeared in a TMZ interview stating, âSlavery was a choice.â
Image via Getty/Kevin Winter
While Lambert acknowledges that fans started to question Yeâs actions, he says it was easier to understand his philosophy. âA lot of the stuff revolving around Trump and even his TMZ comments was about the ways in which people think and that if youâre part of a group, you canât think differently than the group or else youâre ostracized from the group,â Lambert explains. âRallying around that as a concept and applying it specifically to his life and his political viewsâthat, to me, was something that even if I didnât agree with the political views, there was a layer of understanding. It felt pertinent and relevant.â
The difference between 2018 and present day, however, is that Kanye has transitioned from sharing ideas and opinions to spreading hate speech. And instead of apologizing for his harmful comments after initially receiving backlash, he has doubled down on them many times over in various interviews.
âThatâs really the line for me,â Lambert states. âI can step back and see the philosophy behind this, even if a lot of people are focusing on the messaging of the hat and what the hat means. But everything with the hate speech has been a lot more intense.â
âIt doesnât seem like itâs something that is dissipating.â
A couple of years after the White House visit, Kanye embarked on his own presidential campaign, where he incited womenâs groups by spreading anti-abortion rhetoric during his rallies. After a period of silence, Ye re-emerged at the top of 2022, making death threats and other disparaging comments toward Pete Davidson, Kim Kardashianâs boyfriend at the time.
Most recently, Kanye has been on an even longer tirade. It started at Paris Fashion Week on October 4, where Kanye wore a âWhite Lives Matterâ shirt during his YZY Season 9 show. He received further scrutiny after mocking Vogue editor Gabriella Karefa-Johnson, who criticized his fashion choice in an editorial piece. Ye later sat down with Fox Newsâ Tucker Carlson to discuss his Yeezy line, and made a series of offensive claims about the Jewish community. He later amplified his anti-Semitic theories on Revoltâs Drink Champs, although the episode was eventually taken down.
Since that final incidentâwhich served as the straw that broke the camelâs backâthe fashion industry has largely severed ties with Ye. Balenciaga, the high end fashion brand has had a longstanding relationship with the rapper since 2015, cut ties with the creative artist on Oct. 21. It was also reported on Oct. 24 that Def Jam has parted ways with Kanyeâs imprint G.O.O.D. Music. And on Oct. 25, after weeks of backlash, Adidas, which partnered with Ye on his billion-dollar Yeezy shoe brand, terminated his contract with the rapper.
Lambert, who is Jewish, explains that Kanyeâs anti-Semitic remarks on Drink Champs and social media have already caused a ripple effect. âThe first hour of Kanye making the Defcon tweets, I had somebody call me the Jewish âKâ slur. I donât think Iâve been called that seriously in my entire life,â he says.
Getty Images /Ferdaus Shamim
A super fan who goes by ProdByZaqq on social mediaâbest known for writing âYe da [G.OA.T.] no [cap]â under every Kanye postâmost recently distanced himself from the rapper, too. âThis is just insane. Bro wtf. I canât stand this shit at all, this world got too much hate already,â he wrote on Twitter under a related article. The person behind Kanye Doing Things, an Instagram account that shares photos and memes of Ye, also shared a negative post on Oct. 24, calling him âan anti-Semitic piece of shit.â
For Lambert, deciding what and how to post about Ye now is a bit of a balancing act. âItâs been a bit of cognitive dissonance the last couple weeks because thereâs something thatâs dovetailing now,â Lambert admits. âPersonally, itâs become a lot more difficult to casually repost something thatâs like Ye at a basketball game because whatâs going to follow this? Even if he apologized on Piers Morgan, whatâs he going to say in the next interview? It doesnât seem like itâs something that is dissipating. So, itâs just like, how do I pick and choose what parts Iâm promoting or not promoting when all of it kind of feels part of the whole?â
âThis world got too much hate already.â
Based on social media and chatter in public forums, there are still some fans holding out hope and support for Ye. In a fan forum titled âIs this the end for Kanye,â one hopeful fan predicted that the rapper would bounce back from his current position. âPeople will forget about these [in a] few days and move on,â another person wrote. âHeâll have a period of being quiet where people say they miss him and heâll come back.â And on Twitter, some people are still referring to Ye as a âgenius.â âKanye is a genius and yâall are gonna be SICK when they take him out for speaking the truth that everyone is blind to,â one fan wrote on the 18th.
Kanye has also gained new supporters since he started spewing his hate speech. Of the nearly 20,000 accounts âWatching the Throneâsâ Twitter follows, Lambert notes many of them are actually embracing and amplifying many of Yeâs anti-Semitic sentiments.
Lambert breaks Kanye fans down into three levels: level zero doesnât generally like the person or his music; level one only likes the music; level two likes the music and is interested in the person; level three, âyouâre all in.â Fans from level zero to level one have probably disconnected a while ago, but he says âthose level two and three fans, the 75 to 90 percent range, will find a way through this.â
As time has shown, there is always a chance for folks to bounce back after cancellation, especially in this digital era. Even if Kanye takes a hiatus or publicly apologizes, will his legacy forever be changed? According to data site Luminate, Kanyeâs album sales are down by 23 percent and his radio airplay has decreased by 17.5 percent.
Getty Images /Gotham/GC
Until now, many people speculated that to be canceled was nothing more than a myth. In fact, plenty of celebrities have come back after being canceled. Kevin Hartâs net worth rose to $450 million after he was âcanceledâ for his resurfaced homophobic tweets that lost him the hosting gig at the 2019 Oscars, and Travis Scott is gearing up for his next album following the 2021 Astroworld tragedy.
In fact, Lambert declares Yeâs legacy is âalways dependent on the next era.â
He adds, âI do think, overall, his intentions are not as problematic as his messaging often is⊠Itâs just a question of what energy he brings to things. And if heâs able to do so with the care that he seems to bring to his music and his lyricism, then I think people are going to stick around. But if it continues to be off-the-cuff anger, people are going to get exhausted.â
Whatever the next chapter holds, this current downward spiral serves as a cautionary tale for other celebrities, that the tables eventually turnâeven for the biggest of idols.
Kanye returned to Twitter and made another comment about Jewish people, writing that heâll be going âdeath con 3 on Jewish people.â He is likely referring to DEFCON 3.
âIâm a bit sleepy tonight but when I wake up Iâm going death con 3 On JEWISH PEOPLE. The funny thing is I actually canât be Anti Semitic  because black people are actually Jew also    You guys have toyed with me and tried to black ball anyone whoever opposes your agenda.â
He then implied Jewish people created cancel culture.
See original story below.
Instagram has given Kanye another slap on the wrist.
The social media platform confirmed Saturday it had restricted the artistâs verified account for alleged policy violations. A company spokesperson told NBC News their team has since removed the posts in question, but declined to provide details on the content.
NBC News points out the move came after Kanye posted his and Diddyâs text exchange, in which Ye made comments that some considered anti-Jewish.
âThis ainât a game,â Ye wrote to Diddy. âIma use you as an example to show the Jewish people that told you to call me that no one can threaten or influence me. I told you this was war. Now gone get you some business.â
Kanye captioned the post: âJesus is Jew.â
The Donda artist addressed Instagramâs decision via Twitter, where he shared a photo of him and Mark Zuckerberg, the CEO of IGâs parent company, Meta.
âLook at this Mark. How you gone kick me off instagram,â he wrote. âYou used to be my n***a.â
Ye was also accused of antisemitism following his Thursday appearance on Tucker Carlson Tonight, where he briefly mentioned the Abraham Accords peace agreements between Israel, the United Arab Emirates, and the Kingdom of Bahrain. Ye claimed Jared KushnerâDonald Trumpâs Jewish son-in-lawâbrokered the deal for personal profit.
âYou know, he made these peace treaties. I just think it was to make money âŠâ Kanye said, before mentioning Jaredâs brother, Josh Kushner. âI just think that thatâs what theyâre about is making money. I donât think that they have the ability to make anything on their own. I think theyâre born into money ⊠And it makes me feel like they werenât serving my boy Trump the way they couldâve.â
Jewish advocacy groups criticized Kanye for his comments, claiming they perpetuated bigoted stereotypes and âantisemitic tropes like greed and control.â The American Jewish Committee (AJC) accused Ye of spewing âincoherent rants laden with racist and antisemitic undertones made on the countryâs top cable news program.â They also slammed his âanti-Jewishâ posts shared to his 18 million followers on Instagram.
This isnât the first time Instagram has punished Kanye. The social media giant suspended his account back in March, after he used a racial slur in reference to The Daily Show host Trevor Noah.