
Kanye West Drops New Antisemitic Anthem “Heil Hitler” in Latest Descent Into Nazi Obsession
In what can only be described as a race to the bottom of human decency, Kanye West—now fully committed to his villain era—has released a new song titled “Heil Hitler,” complete with Black men chanting Nazi slogans and a generous sample of an actual Hitler speech. Because subtlety is for cowards, apparently.
The “Music” (If You Can Call It That)
The track opens with Ye whining about his frozen assets and lost custody battles (“Man these people took my kids from me, then they froze my bank account”) before gleefully declaring, “So I became a Nazi, yeah, bitch, I’m the villain.” The chorus? A synth-heavy, deeply unsubtle chant of “All my ns Nazis, na, heil Hitler,”* performed by a group of Black men in animal skins—because nothing says “fighting oppression” like cosplaying as Hitler’s cheer squad.
The pièce de résistance? A lengthy Hitler speech sample, because Ye’s commitment to “artistic expression” now includes direct quotes from genocidal dictators.
The Backlash (Because Obviously)
- American Jewish Committee: “This is blatant antisemitism, and it’s disgusting.” (Translation: “We’re tired of this clown.”)
- Streaming Platforms: YouTube and SoundCloud have already yanked the song, while Ye cries censorship on X (“banned by all digital streaming platforms”).
- Nick Fuentes: The white supremacist and Holocaust denier—Ye’s “white supremacist homeboy”—cheered the track in advance, fantasizing about “50,000 people in a stadium singing every word.” (Because nothing unites people like hate speech.)
The Upcoming Album (Because It Gets Worse)
Ye’s next project, Cuck (yes, really), promises to be a greatest hits of bigotry, featuring tracks like:
- “Gas Chambers”
- “WW3”
- “Hitler Ye and Jesus”
The album art? Two hooded Klan-like figures, because Ye’s “edgy” phase is now a full-blown “committing career suicide in real time” documentary.
The Irony (Or Just Sadness?)
In a baffling twist, Ye took a break from praising Hitler to shout out Jewish streamer Adin Ross, calling him “a positive person.” This, after he previously called Ross “arrogant” and texted him “HOW YALL SAY IT NEVER AGAIN” alongside a Holocaust reference. Consistency is not his strong suit.
The Takeaway
Once one of music’s most celebrated artists, Kanye West has now fully embraced his role as “the guy who got too rich to care about consequences.” Between the Nazi merch, the Fuentes bromance, and now “Heil Hitler: The Musical,” it’s clear Ye’s “free thinker” arc is just a cover for “unrepentant bigot.”
The only question left: How much lower can he go?