"The 13th Amendment is slavery in disguise," he said, "meaning it never ended. He later clarified his view, saying he wished to amend, not abolish, the amendment. Others, including the actor Chris Evans, picked up on Kanye's call to "abolish the 13th amendment", which suggested, as the Washington Post had it, that the rapper wanted to "abolish the abolition of slavery". Delusions of grandeur, extreme issues with narcissism - none of which would be a talking point if we weren't speaking about the man leading our country." She added that she believed that Kanye needed "an intervention just as much as he does," and signed off with: "Message sent with concern that will never be addressed." I can only assume you relate to his personality on some level. Lana Del Rey, who performed at Kanye's wedding to Kim Kardashian in 2014, responded, saying: "Trump becoming president was a loss for the country but your support for him is a loss for the culture.
EMINEM JOE BUDDEN SWAY INTERVIEW FREE
We will provide jobs for all who are free from prisons as we abolish the 13th amendment. We build factories here in America and create jobs. We will no longer outsource to other countries. Parts of the speech ended up on social media, then Kanye doubled-down on his views by posting a photo of himself wearing a MAGA cap on Twitter and Instagram, complete with the caption: "this represents good and America becoming whole again. As BBC News reported, Kanye had both worn a cap bearing Trump's slogan - Make America Great Again - and, after the cameras had stopped rolling, delivered "a rambling political speech to the audience" in which he expressed support for Trump and claimed, again, that he was going to run for president himself in 2020.
This disagreement, provoked by Kanye's appearance on Saturday Night Live recently, concerns a difference in political views, or, specifically, views on President Trump. UPDATE: Part two can now be viewed, which gets into the beef with Joe Budden, issues with Slaughterhouse, and more.or Ye, as Kanye now goes by. Now I’m in this f*ckin’ weird thing, because I’m like, ‘I’ve gotta answer this motherf*cker,’” Em said.Ĭheck out part one of “The Kamikaze Interview” below. The reason I dissed him is actually a lot more petty than that.
I’m like, ‘What the f*ck? Yo, my man better chill.’ So, that’s not why I dissed him. Then he starts doing a press run, basically, about Hailie. “So I see, ‘Machine Gun Kelly talks about Eminem’s daughter’ or whatever, right? So I’m like, ‘What the f*ck?’ I click on it. While it was speculated that MGK commenting on Em’s daughter Hailie did spark the feud, his reasoning for going after the Cleveland rapper on the “Not Alike” track was deeper. Of course, the big elephant in the room was the Machine Gun Kelly beef and why Em felt he had to go after him. “There’s a shift somewhere that happened where, if it doesn’t sound like everything else, then it’s trash automatically.” “I remember a time in hip-hop when you had to be so different from the next people, or you were trash,” Eminem said. With his latest, Em wanted to shock listeners and not give them a chance to form an opinion ahead of actually hearing the album. At the root of the discussion was the sweeping criticism that Eminem’s Revival album received and much of Kamikaze seems born of responding to those who felt the record was underwhelming.