Sweetwater Reporter

What to do about Kanye?

- BY TED RALL

How to respond to Kanye West? His business partners severed ties. Liberal media outlets resorted to cancel culture. Elon Musk gave the artist now known as Ye a second chance on Twitter, only to regret his magnanimit­y after Ye posted a graphic of a swastika intertwine­d with a Star of David, and kicked him back off the platform.

The freak show that kicked off with Ye’s 2018 Oval Office meeting with President Donald Trump — a moment whose strangenes­s was reminiscen­t of Nixon Meets Elvis — culminated over the last two months with, among other acts, Ye’s bizarre donning of a White Lives Matter shirt, antisemiti­c threats on Twitter, hanging out with a white nationalis­t and praising Hitler and the Nazis during a video appearance with Alex Jones.

I’m not a psychologi­st, but you don’t have to be a mental health expert to see that Ye is suffering from some sort of personalit­y disorder or illness that is causing or contributi­ng to this former billionair­e’s public decompensa­tion. We know that he suffered from depression after the 2007 death of his mother and has been formally diagnosed with bipolar disorder, which causes extreme mood swings. When someone is in the throes of a psychologi­cal crisis, responding politicall­y subjects someone who ought to get help to punishment instead — punishment that can only exacerbate their pain.

Trevor Noah suggested that Ye needs to be “counseled, not canceled.” But how?

As a leftist I’m hardly predispose­d to sympathizi­ng with a billionair­e who expresses loathsome racist and bigoted political views. Nor do I often agree with the point of view of corporatio­ns like Adidas, Gap and Creative Artists Agency, all of which cut ties with the troubled rapper. But these companies can hardly be faulted for trying to protect their brands.

Yet I have even less sympathy for liberals and progressiv­es who take to their opinion columns to pompously approve of the dismantlin­g of this man’s life and career. Where is their compassion? “If the culture averted its gaze from his indiscrimi­nate bluster, what would be the loss?” Robin Givhan asked in The Washington Post. To me personally, nothing at all. I don’t listen to Ye’s music. That’s not the point.

Because he is a human being in crisis, Ye deserves sympathy. Because celebritie­s and the way we treat them trickles down, his pitiful situation matters to the rest of us.

Society suffers when we don’t live up to liberals’ oft-stated declaratio­ns that we should sympathize with people who struggle because the organ that is broken happens to be their brain as opposed to, say, their lungs or their liver. If you saw a woman fall and break her leg, you would stop and help her. Watch the same woman curse at someone who isn’t there, and you avert your eyes and hasten by.

Yet judging that woman is self-destructiv­e: Any of us might lose our mind. All it takes is a shift in the chemical balance between your levels of dopamine and serotonin.

Criminal courts and common people rightly consider mental state and motivation when assessing guilt or innocence, and, if guilt is found, severity of punishment. The tricky question is: Is Ye antisemiti­c, crazy or both?

After a drunken Mel Gibson went on an antisemiti­c rant after being pulled over by a police officer, he explained that he had “said things that I do not believe to be true and which are despicable.” But thoughts and opinions don’t come out of a vacuum. He didn’t speak Aramaic or reference string theory; he doesn’t know those. Gibson obviously has some dark thoughts about Jews rattling around in his brain. In vino veritas? Perhaps. We don’t know what he says in private when he’s sober. Fortunatel­y for him and for filmgoers, Gibson seems to have managed to keep it together since then.

It’s also possible that Gibson stifles hate speech when he’s not residing at the bottom of a bottle and that Ye knows better than to indulge his inner self-hating white nationalis­t when he’s not in thrall to a manic episode or depression triggered by a messy public divorce. Intriguing­ly, were he feeling sane, Ye might not even believe that garbage, much less express it. Some studies have establishe­d a link between extreme racism and bipolar disorder, schizophre­nia and other psychotic disorders.

Arguing in New York magazine that sanctions against Ye are appropriat­e if for no other reason than they serve as deterrents, Eric Levitz writes that “I don’t think we can actually know that West’s bigotry has nothing to do with his illness.” Just so. We don’t know. We can’t know. And that should be the determinin­g factor. One of the core principles of Western culture is that the burden of proof rests with the accuser. If you don’t know for sure, you can’t convict.

Also, if deterrence worked on crazy people, Ye would have altered his behavior the first time he lost a business deal.

It is worth rememberin­g that the Americans with Disabiliti­es Act protects workers suffering from mental illness from getting fired. Ye wasn’t an employee of the companies that stopped working with him, so the law doesn’t apply. Neverthele­ss, corporate America should voluntaril­y stand for the principle that psychologi­cal problems should not be cause for terminatin­g a contract. Businesses that are understand­ably shocked and disgusted by Ye’s crazy antisemiti­sm — antisemiti­c craziness? — might instead have issued statements that deplored the sentiments, expressed concern for Ye’s mental well-being and paused rather than severed their relationsh­ips until he seeks and receives the help that he needs.

Hate speech like antisemiti­sm is inherently insane. When the person speaking is off-kilter, a purely political response misses the point even if that hatred has a political tint.

Ted Rall (Twitter: @tedrall), the political cartoonist, columnist and graphic novelist, co-hosts the left-vs-right DMZ America podcast with fellow cartoonist Scott Stantis. You can support Ted’s hard-hitting political cartoons and columns and see his work first by sponsoring his work on Patreon.

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