“Heil Hitler” Isn’t Art — It’s Antisemitism, Idiocy, and a Dangerous Weapon Disguised as Music

Let’s be clear: There’s no metaphor. No misunderstood lyricism. No “he’s just expressing himself.” Kanye West — now known simply as “Ye” — released a song titled “Heil Hitler.” That is not subtext. It’s not clever. It is, flatly, the glorification of one of the most notorious mass murderers in modern history. And in this [...]

“Heil Hitler” Isn’t Art — It’s Antisemitism, Idiocy, and a Dangerous Weapon Disguised as Music

Let’s be clear: There’s no metaphor. No misunderstood lyricism. No “he’s just expressing himself.” Kanye West — now known simply as “Ye” — released a song titled “Heil Hitler.” That is not subtext. It’s not clever. It is, flatly, the glorification of one of the most notorious mass murderers in modern history. And in this moment, with the Black community still reeling from the ripples of rising white nationalism and antisemitic conspiracy theories, this song isn’t controversial. It’s criminally reckless.

Across X (formerly Twitter), Facebook, Reddit, YouTube, TikTok, and beyond, “Heil Hitler” and its twin track “WW3” are making the rounds — often reposted by alt-right influencers, bigots, and bots who are celebrating it like the Nazi anthem they wish it was. On Elon Musk’s X, the video racked up 6.5 million views in less than 48 hours. Clips of Hitler were edited into a promotional video. Andrew Tate (yes, that Andrew Tate) blasted it from his luxury car, and thousands of users reposted it like a badge of honor.

And while we’re here — Ye’s account is “verified as an organization,” meaning he could be earning money off this hate speech. We’ll say it louder for the platforms still pretending to be “neutral”: there is no artistic merit in amplifying genocide.

Let’s Talk About the Facts.

This isn’t just a “Ye meltdown.” This is part of a coordinated attempt to fracture long-standing solidarity between Black and Jewish communities — unity forged in blood, protest, and shared pain. During the Civil Rights Movement, Jewish allies marched in Selma. Jewish lawyers defended activists in court. Synagogues opened their doors when churches were bombed. Despite later cultural tensions and the complicated privilege that comes with whiteness, Jewish and Black voters consistently support policies that protect each other’s interests: civil rights, immigration, healthcare, voting access.

And that’s the part folks like Ye — and the white supremacists funding his platforms — don’t want you to remember.

They want Black folks to believe Jewish people are the problem. They want Jewish folks to fear Black America. They want division because when we’re divided, we are powerless.

What We’re Seeing Is Not Just Free Speech. It’s Weaponized Hate.

When Spotify and SoundCloud let “Heil Hitler” briefly exist on their platforms, the Anti-Defamation League had to petition for its removal. On Reddit, thousands debated whether Hitler’s name in a rap bar was “really antisemitic” or just “edgy.” Ye’s fanboys are uploading bootleg versions on podcast channels and remixing it to trick the filters. And still, Spotify’s silence is deafening. TikTok hashtags like #hh are being used to spread it under the radar.

This is the blueprint: Make the message viral. Play coy about the meaning. Then monetize the chaos.

And let’s not overlook the irony — Ye’s “new streaming platform,” Scrybe, is being pushed as the app for “indie musicians” while Heil Hitler is trending front and center. But sure, tell us again about how cancel culture is out of control.

There Are No Two Sides to This.

Praising Adolf Hitler is not rebellion. It’s not art. It’s not misunderstood. It is antisemitic filth, and it is being used to mainstream white nationalist ideology — with Blackface as the delivery device.

And if you think they won’t come for you next — if you think your proximity to fame, masculinity, or memes will save you — you haven’t been paying attention.

This is a moment of moral clarity. We must reject this. Loudly. Clearly. Universally.