In the latest in a series of startling interviews, tweets and
videos, West, 40, also revealed he had undergone liposuction
some years ago because he did not want to be called fat.
The Grammy Award-winning musician's most controversial comments
came in a rambling video interview at the Southern California
offices of celebrity website TMZ.com.
West emerged from a year's silence on Twitter two weeks ago to
post up to 20 tweets an hour on topics ranging from politics, to
philosophy and fashion.
At one point in the TMZ interview, shown on its website, West
says, "When you hear about slavery for 400 years. For 400 years?
That sounds like a choice."
Amid a social media outcry, West later said on Twitter, "Of
course I know that slaves did not get shackled and put on a boat
by free will. My point is for us to have stayed in that position
even though the numbers were on our side means that we were
mentally enslaved."
The civil rights group NAACP said in a Twitter response
addressed to West, "There is a lot of misinformation out there
and we are happy to provide insight. Black people have fought
against slavery since we first landed on this continent."
On Tuesday, the "Jesus Walks" singer also gave the first details
of his November 2016 admission to a Los Angeles psychiatric
hospital after a series of curtailed concerts and political
rants.
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"I was drugged out," he said in the TMZ interview. "Two days before
I was taken to the hospital I was on opioids. I was addicted to
opioids."
He said he was given painkillers after undergoing previously
unreported liposuction surgery, adding, "I got liposuction, because
I didn't want y'all to call me fat."
In separate video released on Tuesday to match his new single "Ye
vs. the People," West discussed the support he voiced for Trump last
week, which caused controversy among many of his fans.
Asked what he admired about Trump, West told fellow rapper T.I.,
"the ability to do what no one said you can do, to do the
impossible."
In the single, West raps lines like "Make America Great Again had a
negative perception/I took it, wore it, rocked it, gave it a new
direction."
(Reporting by Jill Serjeant in Los Angeles; Editing by Matthew Lewis
and Lisa Shumaker)
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