‘Kanye West gambled notoriety would carry no price – this time, rightfully, it did’

‘The Government was right to conclude Kanye West’s presence at the Wireless Festival would ‘not be conducive to the public good”

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Voice of the Mirror has its say…

West ban is not censorship

Banning Kanye West from entering the UK to headline the Wireless Festival is not censorship. It is accountability, which is long overdue.

The US rapper’s antisemitic tirades, admiration for Adolf Hitler, a song titled “Heil Hitler”, and the promotion of swastika-branded clothing were not careless remarks.

They formed a pattern – a sustained campaign of hate dressed up as controversy. Words like his do not exist in a vacuum. They legitimise prejudice, embolden extremists and poison public minds.

The Government was right to conclude his presence would “not be conducive to the public good”. Fame does not grant immunity. You cannot profit from spreading hatred and then expect a visa, a stage, a cheering crowd and a pocketful of cash.

West’s offer of dialogue and change rings hollow. Apologies do not erase repeated, monetised hate. Critics warn of a slippery slope. But this is about drawing a line. West gambled notoriety would carry no cost. This time, rightfully, it did.

History fail

Nigel Farage’s threat to block visas from countries seeking slavery reparations is a headline-grabbing gimmick masquerading as policy.

It offers outrage rather than answers and division rather than diplomacy. Punishing ordinary citizens from nations like Jamaica, Ghana and Barbados would not resolve a complex historical debate; it would simply inflame tensions and cheapen Britain’s standing.

The transatlantic slave trade was a brutal reality that scarred generations. Serious discussion about its legacy deserves calm leadership, not megaphone politics.

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Farage’s proposal would do nothing to address migration, nothing to shape foreign policy and nothing to confront history honestly. It is performative politics designed to provoke rather than govern. We need thoughtful engagement, not crude threats. Turning history into a visa blacklist does no one any good.

War is lunacy

The Orion spacecraft’s distant view of Earth captures the fragile brilliance of our shared home and the heights human ingenuity can reach.

But down here, conflict and chaos still dominate. As tensions rise and a reckless voice from the White House toys with annihilation, what the world needs now is words, not war.