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Spike Lee attends the photo call for BlacKkKlansman” during the 71st annual Cannes Film Festival at Palais des Festivals on May 15, 2018 (Photo by Tristan Fewings/Getty Images)

In a week that has seen high-profile politicians from Virginia get exposed while wearing blackface, iconic filmmaker Spike Lee is not pulling any punches in what he thinks about people such as Gov. Ralph Northam.

In a wide-ranging interview with Politico, Lee was asked if Northam – who first copped to the infamous 1984 yearbook photo before oddly claiming it wasn’t him – should get a pass for claiming to have learned from his mistake.

“Three words: Hell to the naw,” Lee replied while laughing. “Let me put a little Virginia on it, a little Virginia sauce. Hail no.”

“It’s interesting that all this happens in Virginia, the cradle of the Confederacy,” he added. “And let me make it deeper for you: This year, 400 years ago, the first slaves were brought on the James to Virginia—1619. And we need to start talking about that.”

Kurtis Blow wants to pray with Virginia AG who wore blackface to look like him ‘It’s going to take love to conquer hate and racism’

Lee’s film BlacKkKlansman has been nominated for six Academy Awards and that film – as have many of his classic films – highlighted the history of blackface in the U.S. and how it is inappropriate no matter what the decade was. He also challenged the notion that racism like this was over when President Barack Obama took office in 2009.

Racist yearbook photos & slurs, another day in Virginia politics

“I was not one of those individuals who was hoodwinked or bamboozled into thinking that when my brother Barack Hussein Obama put his right hand on Abraham Lincoln’s Bible there would be a magical moment and we’ll enter the post-racial world,” Lee said. “I wasn’t going for it. Hell no. I do not believe that for a second. Another lie, another false narrative.

“Because if that’s the case we wouldn’t be in the world we are today,” Lee said, “and you could say that a lot of stuff is a reaction to eight years of president No. 44 in the White House.”

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