Nick Cannon Gets Canceled – After Anti-Semitic Slurs and Anti-White Rant (VIDEO)
If you haven’t watched this yet, then you may have no idea how much of a racist Nick Cannon is.
Actually, it’s not even that he’s just racist, he’s a black supremacist!
This is what he said during his podcast:
“Melanin is so powerful, connects us in a way, that the reason why they fear blacks is because of the lack that they have of it. When you see a person that has a lack of pigment, a lack of melanin, they fear that they will be annihilated.”
“So, therefore, however they got the power, they had a lack of compassion. Melanin comes with compassion, melanin comes with soul. We call it soul. You know soul brothers and sisters. That’s the melanin that connects us. So the people that don’t have it, and I’m going to say this carefully, are a little less.”
“They didn’t have the power of the sun, the sun then started to deteriorate their skin, so then they’re acting out of fear, they’re acting out of low self-esteem, they’re acting out of a deficiency. So, therefore, the only way that they can act is evil. They have to rob, steal, rape, kill in order to survive. […] They had to be savages, they had to be barbaric, because they’re in these Nordic mountains, they’re in these rough environments, so they’re acting as animals. So they are the ones that are actually closer to animals, they are the ones that are actually the true savages.”
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w0HkK-AmOL8
This is utter bull***t. I’ve never robbed anyone, raped anyone, or killed anyone in order to survive or get to where I am today.
This is literally the most racist thing I’ve heard any celebrity say, and it’s coming from a black man. It looks like white supremacy isn’t what we should be concerned about, it’s black supremacy.
It wasn’t long before ViacomCBS canceled his program.
Cannon later issued some sad excuse for what he said, but not really, because he didn’t repent of anything that he actually said, he only tried to justify it.
According to Vulture.com:
Cannon asserted the truth of a number of conspiracy theories in the episode, referencing “the Rothschilds, centralized banking, the 13 families, the bloodlines that control everything even outside of America.” Cannon insisted that the conversation was not hateful, because “Semitic people are black people.” “You can’t be anti-Semitic when we are the Semitic people,” he said. He also voiced admiration for Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan.
In a statement on Facebook yesterday, Cannon addressed the episode, writing, “I do not condone hate speech nor the spread of hateful rhetoric,” but did not directly apologize for the podcast episode, instead saying, “I encourage more healthy dialogue and welcome any experts, clergy, or spokespersons to any of my platforms to hold me accountable and correct me in any statement that I’ve made that has been projected as negative.” Cannon elaborated on his thoughts in a statement to Fast Company, saying, “There’s no malice or negative intent, but in a time like 2020 we got to have these conversations.”