Kyrie Irving can be a very odd person with him now promoting a conspiracy theory of Alex Jones on Instagram
It may upset some individuals, but it’s not entirely out of the ordinary. Kyrie Irving, who rose to fame between 2018 and 2021 for his opinions on vaccinations and the flattening of the Earth, has now given voice to a ridiculous hypothesis with firmly anti-semitic roots.
Kyrie Irving Shares Alex Jones Conspiracy Theory Of The New World Order On Instagram Story, Video Goes Viral
“There is a tyrannical organization calling itself the New World Order…by releasing diseases and viruses and plagues upon us, we then basically get shoved into their system”
— Alex Jones 2002 clip posted by Kyrie Irving pic.twitter.com/3JYEnguEk5
— New York Basketball (@NBA_NewYork) September 15, 2022
.@KyrieIrving Alex Jones is a dangerous, dangerous man.
It’s very hurtful and deeply unwise to share a video like this on Instagram. pic.twitter.com/19yvTKh2U9
— Cameron Tabatabaie (@CTabatabaie) September 15, 2022
wonder how many times kd gotta say “damn that’s crazy” when he have a convo with kyrie
— aaron. (@ayroned) September 15, 2022
On Instagram, Kyrie Irving shared a 2002 movie by well-known conspiracy theorist Alex Jones. The repost was made by an account called “The Free Thought Project,” and it with the message “never forget: Alex Jones tried to warn us.”
The founder of the InfoWars website, Alex Jones, asserts the following in a video: “There have been corrupt societies in the past. The New World Order, a totalitarian organisation, effectively subjugates us by releasing diseases, viruses, and plagues onto us “. Alex Jones ran into difficulty in 2022 and had to pay a sizable payment because of his continued harassment of the parents of the Sandy Hook school shooting victims.
A shadowy power elite with a globalist agenda allegedly plans to set up a dictatorial one-world government that will eventually rule the entire planet, according to the New World Order conspiracy theory. According to a Middlebury Institute analysis, the idea that Jews are heavily involved in the planning of the “NWO” may appear harmless at first, but it actually poses a “real-world risk” and encourages anti-Semitism.
According to the First Amendment of the US Constitution, citizens are entitled to express their beliefs without restraint. However, it does not guarantee that all communication will not be subject to penalties, as is the case with, say, hate speech. Kyrie Irving needs to stop and think about whose voices he is amplifying by sharing this information.
In 2018, Irving acknowledged that he had been a conspiracy theorist.
He was undoubtedly a major conspiracy believer at the time. Irving apologised at the time for promoting Flat Earth and added, that he is sorry about all that.
Do not come out and say that stuff, even if you think that. That’s for private chats since how you’re perceived and received alters. Then, 18 months after initially stating that “The Earth is flat,” he said that he is actually a smart-ass person. The Earth is spherical. It is in front of us.
In past he was advocating anti-vaccine views
In the past, Irving has drawn criticism for advocating anti-vaccine views and spreading false health information at the height of the COVID pandemic.
Irving chose to exercise his $36.9 million season-long option over the offseason and will continue to be a Brooklyn Net. For the Nets, with whom he has played for the last three seasons, the seven-time All-Star averaged 27.4 points and 5.8 assists last season. He will soon begin the last year of a four-year, $137 million .