Hey Billy, notice a pattern yet?
"This predicted foray into political commentary by Eric Clapton prompted recollections of his obscenely racist rant, delivered onstage. "Do we have any foreigners in the audience tonight?" the musician said before the roaring crowds at Birmingham. "If so, please put up your hands. So where are you? Well wherever you all are, I think you should all just leave. Not just leave the hall, leave our country. I don’t want you here, in the room or in my country. Listen to me, man! I think we should send them all back. Stop Britain from becoming a black colony. Get the foreigners out. Get the wogs out. Get the coons out. Keep Britain white!"
"Several eyewitness observers, as well as a contemporaneous magazine review of the concert, corroborate the fact that Clapton used several odious racial slurs, said Black people should be removed from Britain, and expressed support for Enoch Powell, an infamous Conservative politician who was the leading proponent of anti-immigration and racially discriminatory policies in Britain, and who Clapton's publicly defended for several decades."
"Caryl Phillips, now a novelist and professor of English at Yale University, attended the Birmingham concert. He was born on the Caribbean island of St. Kitts and immigrated to England as a child, and was therefore part of the non-white and immigrant communities targeted by Powell, Clapton and the far-right, racist National Front party. In a recent documentary, Phillips recalled his experience, explaining that Clapton’s racist rant was protracted and intermittent over the course of the evening, and did not merely come in a single outburst: 'When he started talking about Enoch Powell, and how “Enoch was right” and "blacks should be forced out", I felt embarrassed, and I could that tell my best friend felt embarrassed, and we couldn’t really talk about it. But the thing that made it really awful, aside from the actual racism of the comments, aside from the hostility that he was giving out, the venom from the stage, was that he would play a couple of songs and I’d think “Oh thank God, it’s gone away now, it’s not going to come back, we’ve dealt with it”, and then he would start up again with the “Enoch was right” and that “we should all vote for him” and that “England was a white country” and "get the wogs out.” It was a betrayal, in a way that is kind of primal." (quote from Snopes.com)
Keep pretending there's no connection between the alt-right, your conspiracy theories, conservative think tanks and white supremacists. And by the way, this is the second antivaxxer you've cited who is fond of Enoch "rivers of blood" Powell, a guy who fanned race riots against West Indians. Have you figured out why, yet?