Kanye West, mental illness and disobeying religious clintelism

Kanye West has been critically acclaimed for revolutionizing hip-hop through genre-bending albums like The College Dropout and My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy, praised for his bold production, emotional vulnerability, and cultural impact on fashion, music, and celebrity.

I have read the tabloids, so I am aware of his excesses—praising Hitler, blatant antisemitism, wearing a black KKK suit, and more. So let’s take a look at his mental illness and whether he may—or may not—get away with his antisemitism.

Kanye West: Mental illness and excess without restraint

Kanye West has been open about his mental health. He was diagnosed with bipolar disorder. At times, he called it a superpower. At other times, he refused the label. That contradiction itself reflects the condition.

His behavior has confirmed the diagnosis. In 2016, he was hospitalized for a psychiatric emergency. Doctors cited paranoia and sleep deprivation. Soon after, he endorsed Donald Trump in a MAGA hat. That same year, he claimed slavery was a choice. Public outrage followed. He doubled down.

Later, he ran for president. His campaign events included crying onstage. He spoke about abortion, divine visions, and his own family. None of it followed any clear logic. His speeches alarmed even his supporters. His family grew distant. Kim Kardashian later filed for divorce, citing irreconcilable differences. Behind the scenes, reports of medication refusal emerged.

Quirky business

In business, his behavior turned erratic. He launched projects without structure, he canceled deals overnight. He cut ties with major brands. His fashion empire collapsed after antisemitic outbursts. Adidas, Gap, and others severed contracts worth billions. These actions were not isolated—they formed a pattern.

He declared himself the new Jesus and compared himself to Steve Jobs, Walt Disney, and Picasso. Kanye West spoke of voices in his head. He warned of microchips, mind control, and global plots. At times, he claimed divine communication. At others, he raged at interviews and stormed off sets.

The excess grew with the fame. He bought sprawling ranches, he traveled with security, spiritual advisors, and a private choir. He lived as if rules did not apply. His circle enabled him. Critics were dismissed. Interventions failed.

His mental illness is not a secret. It is public, visible, and undeniable. But it goes untreated. And when it merges with power, it becomes dangerous. Like other public figures before him, he stopped hearing “no.”

Kanye West is not simply eccentric. He is unwell. And the culture that once praised his genius now watches him spiral.

Kanye West may hate Jewish-clientelism influence over the US, but not Jews

Here we go. Some Czechs are oligarchs depleting the country, so why not blame all Czechs. Kanye West follows the same logic.

You may object Jews stick together more, but this is still not an excuse.

Jew-hating West would have entered the gas chamber as the first one. Adolf Hitler would have been frightened by modern DNA testing, culturally Slavic nations being closer to Germans than Italians. But his contempt for black people was even greater than for Slavs.

Testing the limits of religious clintelism: How can he get away with this?

My dear readers know very well I hate clientelism of any kind, particularly the religious one.

I also wrote that there is Catholic, Protestant and – here we go – Jewish clientelism which is the most powerful.

Jewish clientelism influences the US financial system, including from outside.

Not to mention, this powerful network penetrates the music industry with influence or direct ownership of the music labels.

There are religious clientelism groups hating Jewish clientelism

Without any proper connection, this would have been the end of Kanye West. But the game is still not over. Therefore, it will show who is stronger. Rockefellers, Morgans, Vanderbilt are said to be disgusted by Jewish clintentelism.

So some of the powerful anti-Jewish clientelism groups must back Kanye West back. He is still able to sell records, function even if he has become a laughing stock.

What clientelism will win?

Kanye West’s outbursts and scandals will ultimately show whether the opposing clientelism is strong enough—or willing—to use its power to end Mr. West’s artistic ambitions.

It is about Americans tolerating religions and clientelism as well. And then, of course, wondering why the political process is clogged.


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