Mark Cuban defends NBA's China partnership despite opposing 'Chinese and all human rights violations'
Billionaire investor Mark Cuban unpacks the dueling economic plans pitched by Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Trump on 'Your World.'
Dallas Mavericks minority owner Mark Cuban doubled down on his public approval for the NBA's partnership with China on Monday.
During a long and wide-ranging group thread on X that began earlier this week, Cuban was confronted with a question of whether he approves of the NBA's business partnerships with China amid human rights violations that have occurred under the current regime.
The question was asked by Chuck Flint – former chief of staff to Republican Senator Marsha Blackburn, who has been a strong opponent of the NBA's partnership with China.
Flint's question specifically pointed to the NBA-backed training camps in Xinjiang, where the Chinese government represses the Uyghur population, which the U.S. government has deemed as genocide.
"I have said I'm against Chinese and all human rights violations. The NBA exports content to China and gets paid for it. I'm ok with that," Cuban wrote in response. In that same post, Cuban promoted a film he claims to have produced about Chinese influence in the American stock market.
Cuban's response was the result of a branching dialogue of different mentions, responses and re-shares with captions that originated from a single post of him posing with former President Donald Trump in the Oval Office.
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Cuban clarified that the post did not mean he is endorsing Trump.
Meanwhile, Cuban has been complicit and an advocate of the NBA's partnership with China despite multiple human rights violations that include the Uyghur genocide, coercive population control through forced abortion,