0:00
/
0:00

Many thanks to Candace Owens for speaking on the elephant in the room. See, anyone who knows me will verify that “I have been saying it for years.” I never got on board with the whole “Tupac thing.” Even in 1996. I mean, I listened to some of his music, but I knew he was kinda, “sugary.” It was those “twinkly eyes.” Another thing with him was “he was trying to act like a “super thug.” I knew he wasn’t, but it did not matter enough for me to “rabbit hole” the issue. Thanks Candance for settling this.

So, I wanted to post this just to gloat and to send a copy of this to a hardcore Tupac disciple who probably cannot come to grips with this reality. Most people from that era, and that music genre, “THEY WANTED TUPAC TO BE REAL.” They wanted a “real thug,” someone they could idolize and identify with. Someone who they could emulate a life like, and “fail in ,” just like Tupac did. Like absolutely everything else, Tupac was a fraud. This I truly believe.

In closing, once again, another “icon,” or big time celebrity turns out to be a phony. By now people should see a pattern. This is why “investing energy” in these “things” is a waste of time. Nothing “famous” in popular culture is accidental.

Think of how many people Tupac lead astray? How many crimes his music “gassed up” people into committing? How much dirt that happened while it was playing? How many young kids “trying to be a part of thug life ” that were harmed or incarcerated?

Nothing is accidental with Tupac.

Lord have Mercy

Discussion about this video