D.C. Police Commander Was Cooking the Books on Crime
Cornerstone University Appoints Salem Media's Eric Metaxas As Distinguished Fellow
D.C. Police Are Now Under Federal Control
Watch These Dem Govs Get Wrecked on National Television Over Gerrymandering Hypocrisy
‘We See You, We’re Watching You’: Pirro Issues Blistering Warning to DC Criminals
Media Claims Israel Assassinated a Journalist – but There Is More to the...
Federal Judge Shoots Down DOJ Push to Unseal Ghislaine Maxwell's Grand Jury Records
Zelenskyy Not Getting a Seat at Trump-Putin Summit
Israel Broadens the Scope of Takeover Operation for Gaza
Is Mamdani a Good Choice for NYC Mayor? Hochul Responds.
Abbott Issues a Warning Over Redistricting Fight With Dems
It's 'Liberation Day in DC' As Trump Vows to Take Capital Back
Another Nation Plans to Recognize Palestine As a State Next Month
Enough Is Enough: Pirro Blasts D.C. Leaders for Protecting Criminals
Trump Wants to Privatize Freddie and Fannie - Key Components in the 2008...
Tipsheet

Celebs Promote Farrakhan's 'Powerful' Comments on Race

AP Photo/Glynn A. Hill File

Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan is a virulent anti-Semite, homophobic, and racist, but that didn’t stop celebrities from using their platforms to promote him.

Advertisement

Comedian Chelsea Handler and actress Jessica Chastain recently shared a clip of one of his speeches from The Phil Donahue Show discussing racial prejudice.

“I learned a lot from watching this powerful video,” Handler wrote in sharing the video. Jennifer Aniston, Michelle Pfeiffer and Jennifer Garner were among the celebrities who liked it. 

One woman asked why can't "white people, black people, Jewish people" "come together." Farrakhan responded by saying that "the desire is good" but that reality is the "total opposite."

He accused the audience of viewing black Americans as "second-class or inferior citizens" and enforcing "black inferiority" by stripping their African culture dating back to slavery and pushed white culture onto them, citing "white names," the English language, and "white Jesus" as examples.

When another white audience member expressed her concern that she "hears violence" from his rhetoric, Farrakhan insisted she had "deep guilt" and feared that "if black people come to power" that they would commit violence on white people, he says, the way white people had committed violence on black people for years.

Farrakhan rejected an accusation from an attendee that he has a "prejudice" against white people, saying that after "400 years" of oppression, he and other black people are "looking at reality of what we have suffered and continue to suffer." (Fox News)

Advertisement

Her followers who knew about Farrakhan’s past called her out for promoting him, but she continued to defend the controversial NOI leader.

“So, based on this logic, if you find a video of Hitler saying something positive and powerful, will you feel equally compelled to share it?” replied Instagram user cindyjh5. “You gave hate credibility and a large platform today.”

Added user socalmama94, “Farrakhan is a hateful anti Semite. He wears that label proudly. There are many others whose wisdom you could be sharing.

“This is disappointing Chelsea.”

Even after as the criticism poured in, however, Handler, 45, argued that Farrakhan’s hatred may have been justified by his own experiences on the receiving end of bigotry.

“Another thing: perhaps Farrakhan’s anti-Semitic views took form during his own oppression,” wrote Handler. “We know now that oppression of one race leads to an oppression of all races.” (New York Post)

Handler, who is Jewish, finally deleted the post and Chastain, who also shared it, did the same. 

Farrakhan has long referred to Jews as satanic, termites, and in control of the media, Hollywood, the government, economy, and the slave trade.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement