Ye Apologizes for Antisemitism, Controversial Remarks in WSJ Full-Page Ad
- On Monday, Ye placed a full-page Wall Street Journal ad apologizing for past antisemitism and attributing his outbursts to manic episodes linked to bipolar disorder, writing `I am not a Nazi or an antisemite.`
- Medical records show the injury wasn’t properly diagnosed until 2023, years after Ye says a car accident broke his jaw and caused right frontal-lobe damage.
- Last year, Ye says he experienced a four-month manic episode marked by psychotic and impulsive behavior, during which he posted antisemitic hate, sold swastika T-shirts, released the song `Heil Hitler`, and faced a former marketing employee lawsuit.
- After hitting rock bottom a few months ago, his wife urged him to seek help, and Ye says he has started medication, therapy, exercise and clean living while focusing on music, clothing and design.
- Acknowledging harm, Ye says he is `not asking for sympathy, or a free pass` while aspiring to earn forgiveness and recognizing his impact on the black community, loved ones and former associates, and readers and followers influenced by his public statements.
318 Articles
318 Articles
ICYMI: Kanye West Apologizes In Wall Street Journal Ad
Source: Edward Berthelot / Getty Kanye West says he’s ready to take accountability. It appears Ye is attempting a reset after several years marked by some questionable, controversial, MAGA-aligned comments. According to Vanity Fair, the Chicago rapper placed a full-page ad in The Wall Street Journal to formally apologize for his past behavior. In the ad, titled “To Those I Hurt,” Ye revisits the infamous 2002 car crash that left him with a broke…
Kanye Swears He's Really Sorry and Not Trying To Promote an Album, You Guys
On Monday, Kanye West took out a full-page ad in The Wall Street Journal to unload a massive mea culpa about his erratic behavior in 2025. Thanks to this administration, there have been eight billion scandals since then, so to... Read more...
Kanye West denies apology for antisemitism is to boost new album sales
Kanye West faced mix public reactions to the full-page letter he published in The Wall Street Journal Monday, in which he apologized for years of antisemitic statements and attributed his troubling, erratic behavior to untreated bipolar disorder and to a 2002 car accident that caused a brain injury and long-unnoticed mental health damage. Related Articles ‘The Blind Side’ star Quinton Aaron on life support after collapse at home …
On Monday, American rapper Kanye West, who currently has the legal name Ye, bought an entire page of advertisements from the Wall Street Journal to publish an apology letter. In it, he condemned his own behavior and emphasized that “I am not a Nazi or an anti-Semite. I love Jewish people.” Kanye West's comments against the Jewish community have a long history. In 2022, according to BBC, the rapper had a series of controversial tweets with anti-S…
It's quite possible that rapper Kanye "Ye" West's bizarre behavior is due to a car accident, as he himself claims. Two psychiatrists with extensive experience in the field confirm this. Damage to the frontal lobe can indeed cause bipolar disorder and disrupt impulse control. While this condition isn't entirely curable, it can be managed with medication and a healthy lifestyle.
“I am not a Nazi or an antisemite.” Kanye West defended himself in a letter published in the Wall Street Journal via an advertisement on Tuesday, January 27. The American rapper publicly apologized for his actions by highlighting mental disorders.
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