Good morning, Allison - I didn't hear about this sports-related controversy, and thank you for the explanation and discussion. I think it probably isn't just Kyrie who has learned these alternate histories or theories. Every time I write anything related to Jewish culture ies or history (my father is a Jew), an account shows up to inform me differently to what I had thought or said, regardless of whether I am addressing something that is well-known or as factual as any of us can be. I worked for a Jewish individual who had some pretty fixed (and wrong) views about Black Americans. She was of an older generation. I find others with similar views, so she shared perspectives with a lot of Jewish people of her generation. Based on this, it really doesn't seem like Kyrie should have been suspended as he doesn't seem to have meant any type of anti-Jewish message, unlike somebody else whose name used to start with "K" who does seem to dislike and want to downgrade Jewish people. I don't know if this has happened to you or is something known to you but I also find that white supremacists will impersonate both Black and Jewish Americans on social media and spread conspiracy theories that are harmful to others. I have seen these accounts say things that I would have sworn would have come out of the mouths of neo-Nazis. But the account saying it has a Black or stereotypically-Jewish (Hasidic man) image. As you said, real history is suppressed and not taught in schools - making it so easy for these beliefs to be spread and take hold.