G/O Media may get a commission
Advertisement
One day later, on Friday, Ye began posting screenshots of his text messages with Diddy, who apparently wanted to meet up to chat about the issue in person. Ye didn’t take kindly to his suggestion and cursed him out. In response, Diddy said he just wanted to talk to Ye as a Black man because “this is hurting our people.” After being asked by Diddy for an address once more, Ye said Jewish people had told Diddy to call him.
“This ain’t a game. Ima use you as an example to show the Jewish people that told you to call me that no one can threaten or influence me,” Ye wrote. “I told you this was war. Now gone get you some business.”
Advertisement
As explained by the American Jewish Committee, Ye invoked the antisemitic trope of control in his post, which is dangerous and foments hatred against Jews. Ye needs to learn how to make a point without using antisemitism, it maintained.
Advertisement
“The control theme seeks to falsely portray Jews as secret puppet masters ruling over others,” the committee said on Twitter. “Ye needs to learn that words matter.”
The committee also pointed out that this wasn’t Ye’s first antisemitic remark this week. In an interview with Tucker Carlson, Ye accused former presidential senior advisor Jared Kushner of helping to orchestrate the Abraham Accords—which normalized diplomatic relations between Israel, the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, Sudan, and Morocco—“to make money.”
Advertisement
Kushner is Jewish, and the committee stated that invoking the greed theme has led to “a long list of Jewish stereotypes, such as being money-oriented or controlling the world’s finances.”
On Saturday, although Meta confirmed that some of Ye’s content had been deleted, the spokesperson clarified that Ye had not been kicked off the platform, as he said on Twitter, adding that Instagram at times places restrictions on accounts that are frequent rule breakers. These restrictions include not allowing them to post, comment, or send DMs on Instagram.
Advertisement
The Meta spokesperson did not elaborate on what rules or policies Ye had broken.
Over on Twitter, Ye posted a photo of him with Zuckerberg and said the Meta CEO used to be his friend (using the n-word). Ye’s move to the blue bird app captivated users, who responded with sarcasm, laughter, and disbelief over his behavior. Some also celebrated Ye’s return to the platform, since the last time he was active was in late 2020.
Advertisement
One of those users was Twitter’s potential future owner, Elon Musk, who offered the artist a warm welcome back.
“Welcome back to Twitter, my friend!” Musk tweeted.
Advertisement
At this point, it’s not clear whether Ye will make Twitter his permanent social media home or go back to Instagram once his restrictions are lifted.