OUT NOW Clipse - Let God Sort Em Out

Added to Calendar: 07-11-25

Push on Ye


"He's a genius. And his intuition is even more genius level, right? But that's why me and him don't get along, because he sees through my fakeness with him. He knows I don't think he’s a man. He knows it."
Well damn
 
1. No im not
2. What the flying fuck does that have to do with Pusha saying he think Ye is a clown ass nigga which he clearly said?
You are, a billion times over

You said "But it's cool" because you're alluding to him being compromised or hypocrite but a black Democrat can't make such inferences

"Joe Biden is a senile bigot whose last coherent words to the black community were, get in line behind Mexicans, but it's cool" - yall

Nahmean?
 
One foe who definitely isn’t getting any [more] of Pusha’s time at press time, though? Drake. The 6ix God famously bowed out of their 2018 Memorial Day Weekend bout just as it was getting good, when Pusha forever altered the perception of diss tracks by backing his up with forensic evidence like a legal investigator. Drake infamously let things fizzle out before dropping an album with lines like “Never a matter of could I or should I… As luck would have it, I've settled into my role as the good guy.”

But before the events of last spring, Drake had been spending a lot of time on wax practically begging Pusha to get back in the ring—particularly in 2023, when he made a music video wearing all of the classic Pharrell jewelry pieces that P auctioned off in (intentionally?) swagless fashion; bragged, on Travis Scott’s “Meltdown,” that he would destroy those grails without a care; and claimed that he could post up in Virginia any time on his own For All the Dogs album, where he also taunted a rapper going broke amidst a refrain of “empty clips.” In the years since they battled, Drake has done everything to complicate the good-guy image he once gamely upheld—Dogs even samples the Scarface “bad guy” clip.

Pusha’s heard the taunts, and much like when I asked him a similar question three years ago, he could not care less. “I think after everything that had been done, I don't think there was ever anything subliminal to be said ever again in life. Not only just musically, like bro, I actually was in Canada. I actually had a show and made it home. So, I can't pay attention to none of that. I did the dance for real, not to come back and tip-toe around anything.”

So, you would only ever engage again if he went full tilt?

“Man, I would only engage again if I felt like it.


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You are, a billion times over

You said "But it's cool" because you're alluding to him being compromised or hypocrite but a black Democrat can't make such inferences

"Joe Biden is a senile bigot whose last coherent words to the black community were, get in line behind Mexicans, but it's cool" - yall

Nahmean?

You sound even dumber than usual.
 


The funny shit is, people are blaming Drake's lawsuit for this and rightfully so...but the Pusha T and new Kendrick Lamar fans who've decided to make every verse they spit a potential shot at Drake also share blame for that perception Def Jam wanted to avoid. It was a dumb move, but it's not hard to see why they thought the optics would be what they are...because even with them clarifying in the article the verse nor the album at all has any Drake shots alot of the comments are saying the verse was about Drake.
 
It could also be easily seen that Pusha quote about Ye is Pusha admitting openly to being fake. Which is funny to see his fans turn into some diabolical scheme when all he did himself is admit to being the same shit he criticizes others for
 
Rob Markman said he heard the verse in question and the album in its entirety months ago. His takeaway was that it’s a verse about the state of things after the last year. In that lens one can maybe understand why the label chose to side with caution.

On the other hand it gives credence to the lawsuit being the most bitch made move in hip hops history.

 
Rob Markman said he heard the verse in question and the album in its entirety months ago. His takeaway was that it’s a verse about the state of things after the last year. In that lens one can maybe understand why the label chose to side with caution.

On the other hand it gives credence to the lawsuit being the most bitch made move in hip hops history.


Suing a label is bad for hip hop?

Not the rampant misogyny and glorification of deplorable behavior but the suing of a record label that steals people music for 20–30 years before they can even try and get it back

That’s what “ruined” hip hop?


It’s a poster on here that i don’t rock with at all that let us know the game is alive and well. we just choose to not give them younger dudes a chance
 
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