No Malice Responds To Lil Wayne & Pusha T Beef, Defends His
Brother
Earlier this week, Clipse member Pusha T released "Exodus 23:1"
to the Internet and radio, a song that many presumed was the
latest in a series of perceived disses towards Drake and Young
Money Entertainment. Young Money's CEO Lil Wayne responded,
first with a tweet disrespecting Pusha T "and anybody who love
him," and yesterday (May 25) by way of his own song, "Goulish."
@LilTunechi
Lil Wayne WEEZY F Fuk pusha t and anybody that love em
May 24 via Twitter for iPhone Favorite Retweet Reply
Today (May 26), the other half of The Clipse, and older brother to
Pusha No Malice (f/k/a Malice) responded via Twitter. "Well I LOVE
Pusha! That's my blood and I ain't never kiss em," tweeted the
Virginia Beach emcee and author.
@NoMalice757
aka Yes My Lord Well I LOVE Pusha! That's my blood and I ain't
never kiss em.
May 26 via Twitter for iPhone Favorite Retweet Reply
The mention of kissing refers to a mid-2000s photo of Lil Wayne
and Cash Money Records CEO Birdman (f/k/a Baby) engaged in a
kiss. The ritual was later said by Birdman in 2006, to be because
of their father-son relationship since Wayne's youth. In 2006, the
pair released a collaborative album, Like Father, Like Son although
the executive is not Wayne's biological father. In 2009, the rapper/
CEO was pressed again about the photo, and said he would kiss
his adoptive son and star rapper again.
Pusha T has yet to speak on "Exodus 23:1" actually being directed
at Drake or Young Money. Last year after similar subliminal disses
towards Drake were implied in "Don't Fuck With Me," a freestyle
over Drake's "Dreams Money Can Buy," the Re-Up Gang Records
artist denied the song as an attack.
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