Former Sponsors Abandon Aaron Smith-Levin in Disgust

As bigot and misogynist Aaron Smith-Levin spins out of control, he has been disavowed by his former partners. Apparently, being a bigot and a hate-speech-monger is “bad for business”—a phrase Smith-Levin himself uses when describing how his toxicity drives even fellow bigots away from his hate channel.

Smith-Levin, a professional anti-religious bigot, extended his public hate campaign to persons with disabilities on May 22. 

“We’ll make sure never to work with [Smith-Levin] again,” one company wrote STAND.

“Our partnerships team has confirmed that they are no longer going to sponsor this creator,” said another.

“How was this joke funny? This man is a sociopath.”

Smith-Levin has spent nearly a decade engaging in daily harassment of the Church of Scientology and its members. But on May 22, Smith-Levin extended his public hate campaign to persons with disabilities, making the following “joke” on a YouTube podcast: “The last summer that I was there, I was just brutally molested every day by this guy with Down syndrome.” Smith-Levin then erupted in maniacal laughter, lasting for a full minute.

Apparently proud of his disgusting slur, Smith-Levin clipped his 18-second “joke” and posted it on X.

He was met with instant outrage, including from his own followers, who posted:

  • “Mocking disabled people is a joke?”
  • “No seriously, WTF is wrong with you.”
  • “Finding humor at the expense of SA [sexual assault] victims AND our disability community. Gross.”
  • “That’s a disgusting joke. Not funny at all.”
  • “You are devoid of morals and empathy.”
  • “You’re sick if you think that’s funny.”
  • “Making fun of SA and disabled people is disgusting.”
  • “Disgusting enough that you said this… but then you clip and share it. Wtf.”
  • “How was this joke funny? This man is a sociopath.”

One spokesperson for a national Down syndrome foundation put it this way in speaking about Smith-Levin: “There is absolutely no place in society and our rhetoric today to demean anyone—let alone someone with Down syndrome—making them the butt of an insensitive joke like this.”

But Smith-Levin was undeterred, taking to YouTube to announce he would not be apologizing. “I very intentionally made a very offensive joke and it was premeditated,” he said, grinning. “Oh my God, I was so proud of myself.... I thought it was absolutely hilarious—and just having the opportunity to tell that joke made the entire trip [to Los Angeles] worth it.”

AUTHOR
STAND Staff