“Trump is brainwashing them” – Eminem has destroyed MAGA supporters and asks what in the hell middle-class white people have in common with a billionaire who never had to struggle.
Eminem just destroyed MAGA supporters stating what in the hell would middle-class white people have in common with a billionaire who has never seen struggle in his life.
2002 saw the peak of Eminem’s pop-darling career. He had quickly traversed the boundaries of genre and was now routinely being recognised as the face of hip hop and pop as the resident bad boy of the scene. An admittedly gross notion, the Detroit rapper’s rise saw him gain plenty of enemies, including, it would seem, Benzino.
Eminem recently began trending online after a video featuring him went viral on the internet. The rapper spoke about former US President Donald Trump in the video and his words left several Republicans on social media triggered. In the video, the popular rapper said that the politician was “brainwashing” his supporters and questioned how people could relate to him as he has “never known struggle.”
An anonymous individual with the username @rising_path shared the video on TikTok on Monday and the clip has since been reshared online multiple times.
“Watching him play to his base that thinks that he cares about them and it’s actually the people that he cares about the f*cking leaks. If you are talking about his core being, you know, a majority white middle class, what I don’t understand how the f*ck do you feel like you relate to a billionaire who has never known struggle his entire f*cking life,” the rapper said.
“Watching him play to his base that thinks that he cares about them, but it’s actually the people that he cares about the least,” Eminem said. “How in “the f*ck do you feel like you relate to a billionaire who has never seen struggle in his entire life … Part of me understands he’s somehow still got them because he is brainwashing him into thinking something great is going to happen. Nothings happening. I don’t know. I get really flustered when I talk.”
A noted publication in the world of hip hop, the magazine was rightly seen as a pivotal turning point for the genre. It allowed a mainstream view on to what had previously been seen as a purely underground movement. When The Source gave Nas’ debut album Illmatic five out of five microphones it effectively began the New Yorker’s reign as one of the best mics in the business.