No, and that isn't what I said or implied.
The reporter is not criticizing Kyrie for watching the right-wing propaganda, he's criticizing him for promoting the right-wing propaganda.
The availability of racist material is always a problem, but that isn't the point of the criticism, nor what it the point of Kyrie's response - in this case, he was promoting the material - Amazon's ability to make money off of it is tied to its popularity, and a celebrity who frequently dips into alt-right conspiracy promotion is just the person to help increase those numbers.
Black Hebrew Israelites popped up because Black literacy is low and they appeal to a certain kind of chauvinism masquerading as Black pride, they target disaffected Black men, largely living in urban areas and without any kind of ideological bent or drive, and they bring them into the fold. Just like any other modern religion.
Neither of those things is "fine," and a celebrity sharing it helps the white man make even more money off of it.
There was no contradiction in what I said, your attempts to move the goalposts doesn't change anything I typed out.
Having to go back and forth with you morons about an obvious point is tiring.