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Up Hamas, down sense: The music industry’s moral failure

The growing support for Kneecap despite their pro-Hamas comments reflects the culture of self-righteous ignorance that dominates the anti-Israel position.

May 7, 2025 14:33
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Mo Chara (left) and Moglai Bap from Northern Irish hip hop trio Kneecap perform onstage during the 2025 Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival (Image: Getty)
3 min read

An open letter unwittingly supporting hate speech has been signed by over a hundred music industry artists including Jarvis Cocker’s Pulp, Paul Weller, Massive Attack, Fontaines DC and Bicep. The anti-Israel rapper activist Lowkey is another.

That’s not how they see it, of course. But like a pratfall of clowns who stumble upon a gun, they have picked up the highfalutin language used by defenders of democracy and freedom of expression and while directing it at what they see as an establishment conspiracy to silence politically engaged artists, they have shot themselves in the foot.

With the moral clarity of Voltaire – that chap who would defend to the death the right of others to express opinions he opposed - the letter argues that agreeing or disagreeing with the views of Belfast rap trio Kneecap is not the point. What matters is that political and music industry leaders have a duty to defend artists’ “creative expression” rather than “seek to silence views which oppose their own.”