It’s not about drugs. If it was, Trump wouldn’t have pardoned one of the largest narco traffickers in the world last month.
It’s about oil and regime change.
And they need a trial now to pretend that it isn’t. Especially to distract from Epstein + skyrocketing healthcare costs.
.@elonmusk is deadass a bitch. A loser. A dweeb. A racist, islamophobic, homophobic, transphobic bastard. Idgaf how many times I gotta say this or how many times you niggas will get annoyed but I dead hate this nigga. Every time I join this app I gotta realize I use the same app as that albino dung beetle body built ass mf. This nigga ruined Twitter, he’s trying to ruin the country I live and love and you niggas are allowing this fucking fat BITCH to do it. Fuck every single one of Elons supporters. Fuck Donald Trump. fuck the Republicans. FUCK the democrats too. Fuck doc rivers. This hate I have for you Elon will be justified just you wait. I hope you see this shit bitch ass nigga
We remember 9/11 not only on this day, but every day—in the empty seats at our tables, in the loved ones still suffering from illness, in a skyline forever changed.
And we recommit ourselves to building a future worthy of the courage and sacrifice of those we lost.
@ZohranKMamdani me and my fellow Utahn Americans will be in New York City tomorrow and would love to meet with you love the policies you’re trying to enact in NYC and would like to see more young people inspired by change firsthand
Doechii calls out President Donald Trump for deploying the National Guard to stop ICE protests in Los Angeles and speaks on injustice during her acceptance speech for Best Female Hip-Hop Artist at the #BETAwards
When Kendrick Lamar declared, “40 Acres & a Mule, this is bigger than music…,” he wasn’t merely making a lyrical statement—he was invoking a profound historical injustice that continues to shape the realities of Black America. The phrase “40 acres and a mule” references the unfulfilled promise made to formerly enslaved Black Americans after the Civil War, a broken commitment that symbolizes the systemic economic disenfranchisement of Black people in America.
Lamar’s words transcend hip-hop; they speak to the deep wounds of generational oppression and the ongoing fight for reparations—a demand for justice, not charity.
By placing this historical struggle within the framework of his music, Kendrick isn’t just rapping; he is using his art as a vehicle for truth, resistance, and a call to action.
His statement reminds us that reparations aren’t just a political debate or an abstract concept—they are a moral imperative, a debt owed, and an essential step toward true justice and equality.
Kendrick Lamar went 5-for-5 at the Grammy's the same week of his Super Bowl halftime show 🤩
🏆 Song of the Year
🏆 Record of the Year
🏆 Best Rap Song
🏆 Best Rap Performance
🏆 Best Music Video