
Clownish Spike Lee Embarrasses Himself And The NBA With Palestinian Outfit Choice
The left loves to pretend that bigotry is a conservative creation. For them to assume that stance is easy because mental illness, or those consumed by the dissociated state of radical Democratic cult involvement, are unable to see the truth.
They don’t see things through rose colored glasses; they see things through a delusional prism that denies reality and replaces well-being with radical delusions of things that can never be.
At this point, it’s the conservatives who are wearing the rose-colored glasses. They keep believing that Democrats will come around, and that Truth, Justice, and the American Way will magically persevere.
It won’t. The Democrats will never humble themselves back to normalcy on their own. Conservatives need to draw a line in the sand and force them to come around from their perverse, frustrating ways.
At the NBA All-Star game over the weekend, Spike Lee, desperate to stay relevant, showed up dressed like a Palestinian flag. He was wearing a keffiyeh-patterned sweater and flag badges on his bag strap.
Lee, who had courtside in-your-face seats, wore his Palestinian get-up to annoy Deni Avdija, the first Israeli to play in the NBA All-Star game.
Lee’s obnoxious wardrobe choice rightfully angered many pro-Israel fans. Avdija was playing for the world team in the NBA’s latest attempt to make its All-Star game worth the time. The new format pitted players from around the world against American-born players.
For his part, in a postgame interview, conducted mostly in Hebrew, Avdija said:
“I feel like when I come to play, I come with the entire nation, and it’s fun to show that it’s possible, even for a small country like us.”
Late last night, Lee tried to put the matter to rest, with the lame excuse that since he’s a New York Knicks fan and more familiar with East Coast teams and players, he wasn’t aware that Avdija was Israeli. In an Instagram post, he said this.
“There has been some conjecture about what I wore to the games on Saturday and Sunday. The clothes I wore are symbols of my concern for the Palestinian children and civilians, and my utmost belief in human dignity for all humankind. What I wore was not intended as a gesture of hostility to Jewish people or to support violence against anyone, nor was it intended as a comment on the significance of Deni being an All-Star.”
Right, if you believe that lie, Lee will tell you another one. His choice of attire was pre-planned and deliberate. Being courtside, he knew that not only would every player see him, but every camera in the building would, too.
Lee, like every radical, loves to start trouble, often times through blatant ignorance. He couldn’t care less about Palestine; it’s fashionable for liberals to denounce Israel, and Lee wasn’t about to let his chance to be center stage slip away.
I wonder how Lee would feel if people showed up outside of his home in Klan gear and used the excuse that it was being done to show how far we’ve come during black history month.
He wouldn’t buy that excuse any more than we’re buying his.