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        <title><![CDATA[Nick Cannon responds to backlash following anti-Semitic comments]]></title>
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            <media:title type="html">Nick Cannon responds to backlash following anti-Semitic comments</media:title>
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        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Talk about wildin&#8217; out.</p><p>Nick Cannon is raising eyebrows across the internet for the most recent episode of his YouTube talk show, Cannon&#8217;s Class, in which he openly promotes anti-Semitic and bizarre racial theories.</p><p>Cannon, 39, was speaking with former Public Enemy figure Richard &#8220;Professor Griff&#8221; Griffin, 59, who was sacked from the group in 1989 for making similar claims in an interview.</p><p>Despite referencing fringe conspiracy theories about Jewish people, including &#8220;the Rothschilds, centralized banking, the 13 families, the bloodlines that control everything even outside of America,&#8221; Cannon repeatedly asserts that their conversation is not about hate. Griffin agrees, claiming that black people cannot be anti-Semitic, since, purportedly, the Semitic people and language are unrelated to Caucasians.</p><p>Cannon adds that Black people are &#8220;true Hebrews&#8221; and praises the controversial Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan.</p><p>&#8220;The people that don&#8217;t have [melanin] are a little less,&#8221; Cannon also notes, claiming that &#8220;when they were sent to the mountains of Caucasus … The sun then started to deteriorate them so then, they&#8217;re acting out of fear, they&#8217;re acting out of low self-esteem, they&#8217;re acting out of a deficiency.</p><p>&#8220;So, therefore, the only way that they can act is evil. They have to rob, steal, rape, kill in order to survive. So then, these people that didn&#8217;t have what we have — and when I say we, I speak of the melanated people — they had to be savages … They&#8217;re acting as animals so they&#8217;re the ones that are actually closer to animals. They&#8217;re the ones that are actually the true savages.&#8221;</p><p>Following the initial outcry, Cannon <strong>released a statement on Facebook</strong> reading, in part, &#8220;Anyone who knows me knows that I have no hate in my heart nor malice intentions. I do not condone hate speech nor the spread of hateful rhetoric.&#8221;</p><p>&#8220;There&#8217;s no malice or negative intent, but in a time like 2020 we got to have these conversations,&#8221; <strong>he added in a statement to Fast Company</strong>. &#8220;And if there&#8217;s an assumption that is perceived as ignorant, let&#8217;s debunk it right away.&#8221;</p><p>He did, however, refuse to apologize, saying, &#8220;To me apologies are empty … <span >What we need is healing. What we need is discussion. Correct me. I don&#8217;t tell my children to say, &#8216;I&#8217;m sorry.&#8217; I want them to understand where they need to be corrected. And then that&#8217;s how we grow.&#8221;</span></p><p>Griffin was kicked out of Public Enemy after <strong>he blamed Jews</strong> for &#8220;the majority of wickedness that goes on across the globe&#8221; in a Washington Times interview, citing Henry Ford&#8217;s anti-Semitic work &#8220;The International Jew.&#8221; Farrakhan, meanwhile, has been identified as anti-Semitic and anti-gay <strong>by the Anti-Defamation League</strong> and <strong>the Southern Poverty Law Center</strong>.</p><p>Reached for comment by Page Six, Cannon&#8217;s team referred us to his Facebook post.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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