Unhinged “The Hunger Games” star Billy Porter thinks modern America is “Nazi Germany” and that black people are the new Jews.
He expressed this ridiculous opinion while speaking with Pink News about “Cabaret,” a musical he stars in that depicts life in Berlin during the rise of the Nazis.
“That [play] was written as a response to Nazi Germany, and it lived in that space for 60 years as a history piece, looking back on something that we have had moved through,” Porter said of the musical.
“And now we’re doing it, and America is Nazi Germany. It’s not going to be Nazi Germany. It’s not becoming Nazi Germany. It’s not in fear of becoming [Nazi Germany]. It is Nazi Germany right now, and the Jews are black people,” the delusional actor added.
His comments sparked blowback on social media (*Language warning):
A rich black man says that black people are being treated the same as jews who were thrown into ovens.
Don’t let pride month get too far into your head.
— Cyclops (@rick_cyclops) June 19, 2025
It’s some weird cosplay shit. Wealthy people playing victim, black people playing Jews in Nazi germany. Basically people making up problems.
— MAGAinAustin (@6ck6r2gjm5) June 19, 2025
Idk who that man is, but he’s lost his mind. He needs to sit down, take all the makeup off, and drink a cold glass of water. Maybe liberals just need a Snickers.
— Carnelian (@carnelianpagan) June 19, 2025
What a retard. Remind me again how America is confiscating the property of black peoples and herding them into cattle cars so we can transport them to be exterminated.
— Wade Chandler (@WadeChandl67303) June 19, 2025
He can fuck right on off. Blacks in the USA have more “rights” than any other ethnic group. Has he forgotten that DEI programs support them and oppress whites? White people are the only ethnic group that’s actually being oppressed and that’s a fact.
— Opie Cunningham (@dean_data) June 19, 2025
— WilliamtheThird✝️#Dawgs (@ThirdWilli98237) June 19, 2025
Porter’s latest foray is “This Bitter Earth,” a Black Lives Matter-themed play he’s directing.
“‘This Bitter Earth’ follows Jesse, a pensive Black playwright, who is confronted by his white, privileged boyfriend Neil, a Black Lives Matter activist, about his perceived inaction and political apathy,” according to Pink News.
“Neil is outraged at America’s continued assault on [b]lack men, and means well in his attempts to change the world. Jesse doesn’t see discrimination and violence via activism; he experiences discrimination and violence through the fact of being alive,” the summary continues.
The play was written by Harrison David Rivers, an equally delusional black man who experienced fear and trepidation “moving” among American society after fentanyl-consuming Minneapolis convict George Floyd died in police custody in 2020.
“I mean, walking through the world, I was afraid,” he told Pink News. “I was thinking a lot more about where I’m going and how I’m getting there than I ever had before. I actually think it’s quite a lovely luxury to not have to think about your body in spaces.”
Loved how out there Billy Porter (pictured below) was
at Soho Theatre last night for This Bitter Earth which he directed starring Omari Douglas from TV’s It’s A Sin. Review at https://t.co/MBA7tZHJHs soon pic.twitter.com/XrlYjkL1zu— Neil Durham (@NeilDurham) June 19, 2025
Rivers consider his new play a part of his own BLM-styled activism.
“I feel like this play actually confirmed for me that my writing is a part of my activism which, maybe that was already true, but I didn’t know that,” he said. “And so the writing of this play was me going, ‘No, this is how I’m going to speak to this moment. This is how I’m going to stand up.’”
He’s not that these days, so-called “black bodies” still aren’t “revered” and worshipped by society.
“I mean, my goal is always like, ‘Oh, wouldn’t it be nice if in a couple of years this was no longer an issue, that black bodies were revered, that black bodies were sacred… and so we actually maybe don’t need the play anymore, right?” he said.
Similar to Rivers, Porter also said his activism runs through his work.
“That’s where my politics is,” he noted. “That’s how I express the things that bring me joy and the things that f–king terrify me.”
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