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50 Cent Defends George W. Bush Against Kanye West

Posted by Tom Breihan at 4:04 PM, November 3, 2005

50 Cent G-Unit!.jpg
50 Cent is the future?

"Now if you don't sell five mil, they've had enough of him / Let me find out hip-hop's turning Republican."
-Joe Budden, "Dumb Out"

Budden's line comes in the context of "Dumb Out," a staggering seven-minute mixtape rant. Budden is pissed that no one seems to know what label he's even on, that no plans seem to be in place to put out any of his music, that his career is maybe over after his first album sold badly. He's bitter that a guy who showed great promise but didn't sell too many albums the first time out wouldn't get a second chance, as he should be. But Budden's line takes on a larger significance with this morning's news that 50 Cent has defended George W. Bush against Kanye West's criticism, telling Contactmusic.com, "The New Orleans disaster was meant to happen. It was an act of God ... What Kanye West was saying, I don't know where that came from."

50 Cent is a smart guy, and he knows exactly why Kanye said what he said. He almost certainly knows that money was diverted from the construction of levees in New Orleans, that the toady Bush installed to run FEMA proved to be woefully incompetent. So why is 50 defending Bush against another rapper? Is he turning Republican?

Now that rap is big business, now that Jay-Z can buy shares of basketball and soccer teams and appear on the cover of Fortune, now that successful rappers are basically expected to become business moguls, doesn't it make sense that rappers would take on corporate politics as they enter the corporate world? If 50 Cent loves his money as much as Kenneth Lay does, doesn't it make sense that he'd hate paying taxes just as much? 50 may have been poor, but is that any indication that he wouldn't become Republican after getting rich? He wouldn't be the first to do so.

Or is it a publicity stunt? Eazy E once attended a Republican fundraiser luncheon, explaining that the $2500 he spent on the luncheon bought him a million dollars' worth of publicity, that he didn't even vote. With 50's movie about to open and his video game about to hit stores, he's in the midst of a huge publicity push? Why wouldn't he say something to get the exurban white public on his side? If it makes him money, why should he give a fuck?

But the real reason for 50's defense of Bush probably has more to do with the epic, unspoken beef that has dominated East Coast rap for at least a year, 50's boardroom feud with Jay-Z. It's no coincidence that 50 has signed Mobb Deep and M.O.P. and Mase, all guys that Jay has had problems with at one point or another. And Jay's guest list at last week's "I Declare War" show included plenty of guys who don't like 50: Nas, D-Block. Jay had announced, of course, that he was going to be going after someone, and the whole night seemed to be gearing up for an attack on 50; it's not hard to believe that a last-minute phone call might've been all that kept their mutual animosity from coming out into the open. Jay seemed to be massing his army (Nas, Kanye, Diddy, Beanie Sigel), drawing a line between his people and 50's. And even if nobody mentioned 50 Cent by name, it wasn't hard to figure out who Nas was talking about when he said "a lot of niggas is making money and still fucking mad at the world." 50 has even taken shots at Kanye before, claiming that people were looking for something "nonconfrontational" after his success and releasing Tony Yayo's bullshit album on the same day. But 50 doesn't seem to care much about Bush or Kanye. He cares about taking another shot at Jay.

The feud began years ago, when 50 was going at everyone on mixtapes and Jay fired back. It began again in 2003 when both rappers did a coheadlining tour and 50 took shots at Jay from the stage. But there's a philosophical difference at work as well. Jay-Z is certainly flashy, but he takes rap very seriously. His own work is full of loaded details and intricate phrases and deft little allusions. 50 is a strong rapper, but subtlety isn't his thing; "Candy Shop" might be the dumbest song to hit #1 this decade, which is saying something. Jay works with people outside his camp, superstar producers like Timbaland and the Neptunes and legendary veteran rappers like Scarface and Bun B and indie-backpack types like Talib Kweli. He seems to enjoy pushing himself outside of his comfort zone. Other than Dr. Dre, 50 doesn't generally work with star producers; he prefers journeymen like Hi-Tek and Denaun Porter. And he rarely collaborates with people who aren't close to him; the Get Rich or Die Tryin' soundtrack album doesn't include a single verse by anyone unaffiliated with G-Unit. His world is more insular, less cosmopolitan than Jay's. And unlike Jay, he seems to see rap as a means to an end. He said earlier this week that he'd be willing to work with Jadakiss despite openly beefing with him earlier this year. If it'll make him more money, he'll put aside a beef that never seemed to mean much to him anyway. After that, it's not a big leap to defend George W. Bush. Everything is business, nothing is personal, and the more I think about it, 50 Cent is George W. Bush to Jay-Z's Bill Clinton. Hip-hop's turning Republican.

Voice review: Greg Tate on 50 Cent's The Massacre

comments

All I can say is that although there has been neglect by the Bush administration towards African Americans in the wake of Katrina, I do not belive that Kanye West was at all informed before he spoke. If he had been, I think maybe he would have said something a little more intelligent. I mean did you see the look on his face when he said it, it was as if he didn't even know what he had just said.

I don't know. Maybe he is a lot smarter than I give him credit for, but that was my reaction.

Posted by: Margaritaville at November 4, 2005 12:10 PM

interesting article....

A few questions though....

at what point did jay z have beef with MOP. he appeared on their song "4 alarm blaze"..and were recently signed to ROC.

They might have beef with the label for not releasing any of their material during ther stint there..but have never dissed jay z...

also..where does fat joe play into this?
he was at odds with both jay z and 50 at some point.

third, outside of helping to sell records....what's the point of the feud....

It's all mildly funny.....to me...but think that reporters predictably play these things up too much.

Posted by: DtotheJ at November 4, 2005 2:11 PM

It's certainly entirely possible that I'm reading way too much into this feud and building it up too much. But it's really amazing to me how many of these guy's decisions seem to come from their mutual opposition. It's this huge unspoken thing that really seems to be shaping the East Coast rap landscape in ways that we probably won't entirely understand for years.

As for the point of the feud, I don't think it necessarily has a point. I think it's alpha-dog supremacy stuff; neither of these guys wants to be #2.

M.O.P. has never dissed Jay outright, and I don't think they ever would. But they broke from the Roc as soon as it split, and it seemed like they were finally taking the first available opportunity to get out of a bad situation. In the interviews they gave at the beginning of the year, there was a palpable sense of frustration; the Roc signing was supposed to take them to new levels until it became apparent that they weren't a priority, that their album wouldn't be coming out anytime soon. And if 50 actually does put out their album, if he takes it past gold, he'll be rubbing Jay's face in the fact that he did something Jay couldn't.

Fat Joe, yeah, he's not about to become friends with either Jay or 50, and that means that he's never going to step up and become a big part of the East Coast rap landscape, not that he ever would. He'll keep doing what he's been doing, going back and forth between uber-pop joints with guys like Nelly and DITC street shit for the heads. It's really amazing that the success of "Lean Back" didn't show him that he could become bigger than ever if he kept just doing accessibly rough shit like that. If he'd come out with a few more singles like that immediately after, he could actually be a major figure. But he didn't, so he's not a threat. I think the more interesting question is where the Diplomats fit into all this stuff. Cam and Jay don't like each other, and Jim Jones has come close to outright dissing Jay by name. Juelz is still on Def Jam, though, so it's complicated. And 50 doesn't seem to get along with the Diplomats either, especially after he signed Mase. It's weird, since these guys are unquestionably the biggest thing in the city right now in terms of mixtape-level street-rap, but their appeal doesn't stretch far outside the city, and they don't seem likely to become a real sales force unless they build (or rebuild) some amicable relationship with either Jay or 50.

Posted by: Tom Breihan at November 4, 2005 2:31 PM

Who's Tom Breihan? It doesn't really matter, but he obviously has something against 50 besides thinking he's gone republican. To say that "candy shop" is dumb may or may not be accurate, but to call it the dumbest thing this decade? Apparently you havent been listening to the scores of rappers releasing songs like "Get Low" "Lean Back" "Big Pimpin" or "stand up"
I must say, regardless of Jay's extremely intelligent and very well honed skill, what probably kept the beef from poppin off, was the chance that Eminem would get involved.Em would decimate ANYONE who stepped to the plate, and he would violate all aspects of their manhood doing it. Em doesnt care who he hits, Jay or otherwise, and he is way more complex than even the great Jay.

Posted by: spencej1653 at November 8, 2005 12:57 PM

STATUS IZ HOOD:

No one predicted the kind of storm katrina was. Worse yet, the money was diverted because NO refused to use it to refurbish damaged levees BEFORE katrina. They thought it unecessary because Katrina was a "fifty year storm". Then to top it off, FEMA wasnt prepared because FEMA cant see into the future, and the storm was just too destructive to get FEMA in in-time. Blacks arent being neglected by Bush, wake up. Kanye West gave HOW MUCH to the effort... yeah, thought so.

Posted by: spencej1653 at November 8, 2005 1:04 PM

Speaking of 50 cent, if you want more information or background into the neighborhood and era that the "get rich or die trying" film and book are talking about....you should check out a dvd called "King of Kings" about Lance and Tony Fertaudo and the Southside Jamaica Queens crack era.

It's not a typical "hood dvd" by any stretch. It's actually an anti-drug, anti-rockefeller drug law piece....but it's done in a way that speaks to the youth out there.Dudes behind it have track record of community service.

For those mainly interested in 50, this dvd gives you the context that his film and book were set in.

Posted by: DtotheJ at November 10, 2005 10:20 AM

In response to what spencej1653 stated regarding how much Kanye West gave to the Hurricane Katrina effort. It was reported that he gave one million dollars. It was also reported that Jay-Z, Russell Simmons and I believe Puffy gave the same. I dont exactly recall hearing what 50 cent gave.

I was a huge Jay-Z fan but recently I started to look at him a little cross-eyed due to the way he handled the situation with him and R.Kelly. I felt he played himself by coming on the radio and running his mouth, but the one time that he played himself is nothing compared to the many times 50 has played himself. that dude is garbage he is no one special in my book. his first album was hot but this dude shows no growth. he still running his yap about getting shot 9 times. nobody cares any more. fat joe said in one of his verses since when is it cool to get shot 9 times and not shoot back. but i want to know since when is it cool to get shot? that dude 50 has all of you people that think the hood life is sweet brainwashed.

and since when is eminem more complex than jay-z lyrically. yeah that dude is complex wasnt he in rehab a minute ago. and hes another one still crying about his mommy and his wife. that aint hood. i live in the hood. that dude couldnt survive the hood.

message to those who dont live in the "hood" People who live in the hood dont want to stay in the hood. we want a better life too. but the key is when you get out the hood you give back and remember where you came from. and you dont exploit the life of those still there. thats keeping it hood.

Posted by: j.adams at December 1, 2005 5:26 PM

haj fifti sent

Posted by: m at February 14, 2008 6:01 PM

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