Lil Wayne Breaks Down Controversial Response to George Floyd’s death
Lil Wayne caught wind of his comment on George Floyd’s death which many mostly blamed cops involved in the tragic incident. Slew of celebrities are doing everything under the sun to make sure Justice served by using lot of bullying on social media.
While Lil Wayne Fat Joe and Dr Dre talked about George Flody’s on Young Money radio, Wayne made comment which couldn’t literally didn’t give full support in backing Goerge Floyd.
According to what said, “that we have to sometimes blame ourselves for incidents like George Floyd’s and that the blame can’t be put on the entire force for a brutality case like this one. “we have to stop viewing it with such a broad view, meaning we have to stop placing the blame on the whole force and the whole everybody or a certain race or everybody with a badge,” he said. He added, “We have to actually get into who that person is. And if we want to place the blame on anybody, it should be ourselves for not doing more than what we think we’re doing.”
Also Read: Black Hip-Hop Panthers Speaks For Late George Floyd
It really got ton of reactions but on Friday Lil Wayne with his Young Money radio last episode featuring appearance like Snoop Dogg, Stephen Jackson, Bun B and Killer Mike. He made sure he breaks down what really went down, what he meant indeed.
“I respect the effort of the people to seek justice and what they doin’. I just knew it was time for more action than a tweet. Also, my mama always told me — I sat in the passenger seat getting picked up from school every day and dropped off. I would look outside that window in the ‘hood, so you gon’ see situations when you riding home. I might make a comment or give my opinion on what I just saw.”
Weezy said his mother would often cut him off immediately. “Mind you f*ckin’ business,” he remembered his mother telling him. “Mind your business. You don’t even ask, ‘Why you smack me? Why I need to mind my business?’ But you know one thing, I need to mind my damn business. So, for folks out there that figure that whatever, Wayne gon’ say this or… Listen. I’m from New Orleans, understand. I’m from New Orleans where, what we’re seeing ladies and gentlemen around the world finally because [of] the cameraphones and all that, baby, we went through that every day. We saw that, we went through that every week. We gave police names, just cause of who they were and how they were, and we got used to that… That was the system. That’s what I grew up in. So, don’t blame me, don’t fault me. But if you do, you already know.”