Black Americans are dragging Jennifer Aniston after she reacted to Jamie Foxx ‘fake friends hashtag’ on IG story


Black Americans are dragging Jennifer Aniston after she reacted to Jamie Foxx 'fake friends hashtag' on IG story
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Information reaching Kossyderrickent has it that Black Americans are dragging Jennifer Aniston after she reacted to Jamie Foxx ‘fake friends hashtag’ on IG story.


Jamie Foxx too reacted to the backlash and apologised to the Jewish community stating, ‘I know my choice of words have caused offense and I’m sorry. That was never my intention.’

He further went on to clarify, ‘I was betrayed by a fake friend and that’s what I meant with ‘they’ not anything more. I only have love in my heart for everyone. I love and support the Jewish community.

Jamie was forced to apologise after netizens slammed him for his anti-semitic thinking. Even some compared Jamie’s now-deleted post with Kanye West’s antisemitism.

One user wrote: ”For crying out loud. Has Jamie Foxx gone full Kanye on us?”

“Did Kanye hack Jamie Foxx’s Instagram account?” Another user wrote.

However, Jamie’s fan and supporters claim he was referring to Judas, ‘Jamie Foxx was talking about Judas betraying Jesus and yall turned it into him hating Jews.’

The actor deleted the post later but not before fans noticed that it was liked by Jennifer Aniston. Distancing herself from the ‘Like Comment’ she took to Instagram to refute any claims that she might’ve been supporting any messages affiliated with Jamie’s deleted post. “This really makes me sick,” her statement began. ‘I did not ’like’ this post on purpose or by accident. And more importantly, I want to be clear to my friends and anyone hurt by this showing up in their feeds’. 

“They killed this dude name Jesus… what do you think they’ll do to you?” the actor and singer, 55, wrote on the post along with the tags #fakefriends and #fakelove.

Before the post was removed, Aniston appeared to “like” it, sparking outcry from her fans and prompting her to release a statement condoning the “horrifically antisemitic message.”


The since-deleted post by Foxx, a self-proclaimed Christian, alluded to the Biblical crucifixion of Christ, and has elicited backlash for appearing to promote antisemitic myths that Jewish people were responsible for the death of Jesus. “This really makes me sick,” she wrote on her Instagram Story late Friday. “I did not ‘like’ this post on purpose or by accident.”

“And more importantly, I want to be clear to my friends and anyone hurt by this showing up in their feeds — I do NOT support any form of antisemitism,” she added. “And I truly don’t tolerate HATE of any kind. Period.”
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