DMX/JARULE BEEF (Ja A FAG?!)

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Jul 6, 2002
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#1
this comes from allhiphop.com's news section for the month of August:

DMX addressed the beef with Ja-Rule last week on San Francisco's KMEL, calling out Ja-Rule on a number of issues, including Ja allegedly stealing DMX's style, Ja's sexuality, Irv Gotti and Murder Inc.

"I have to set a few things straight. You got n*ggas running around running they mouth that don't really get down like that. I just want to clear the air. First of all Gotti is my n*gga, but what he needs to do is shut the f*ck up and mind his business for a minute," DMX said. "You are not Gotti, your name is Irving Lorenzo."

DMX said that his beef is directed only towards Ja-Rule saying that Ja has become a "fake type n*gga." X also alleges that Rule disrespected him one night in a club.

"I kept as real as I could. I seen him in the club one night. I go over with just two of my n*ggas, say what's up. They like 20 deep. This n*gga sends a n*gga over to me like yo, Ja's over there. Like what the f*ck am I supposed to do, go over there and suck his d*ck?"

X revealed that while he was heated, the beef wouldstay on record and that he has four songs already written aimed at Ja. "Ja-Rule is a diva! He can't f*ck with X, never," X barked.

X also made the shocking claim that Ja-Rule was in fact a homosexual. "Some n*gga that was stylin his clothes for one of them shows got him ecstasy'd up and f*cked him. Ja-Rule is f*ckin n*ggas I'm telling you dog! On my momma! The n*gga told me that himself," X said referring to the stylist. "You talkin bout me, you can't be serious! For all them homo n*ggas out there that want some d*ck, give ya man Ja-Rule some X and he'll f*ck you."

DMX admitted that he had a cocaine problem, but said that he has beat the addiction. "N*gga wanna talk about cocaine problems and sh*t like that, yeah every real n*gga go through something. It takes a real n*gga to get up out of that and I'm a real a real motherf*cker that's why I'm still here doin the damn thing. I did it and learned a lesson. But explain f*ckin a man? I heard it from the horses mouth!"

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

WTF?! DMX is a Kracchead. Has anyone up on here heard his last album? My cousin made me a crw and I broke that peice! On one song his hook goes like "And I'mma Bang/ Hit tha Rock, spit the Flame/ Do My MuthaFuc*in Thang!" And I was like, ok, whatever you fuc*in kracchead! ( & SNAPPED the cd into several minute sized peices)
 
Jul 6, 2002
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#3
You can officially take Ja Rule off DMX's list of "mans and them" — the dog says he's going to be sinking his teeth into his onetime buddy and rhyme running mate.

"I got some sh--, man," X said Friday from a Chicago studio about what he plans to put on his upcoming album. "They trying to stop me from doing this song called 'Ruled Out.' Everybody in here don't want me to do it — they whining — but I'm gonna do it."

X and Ja's kinship goes back way before they morphed into superstars, or even before they both became a part of the Island/Def Jam family tree. Murder Inc. CEO Irv Gotti, who produced many of their early underground recordings while they were struggling artists, ties them both together.

"You know what happened," X barked of what has caused the friction between the two, taking for granted that it's common knowledge. Seems like X has the same criticism that some hip-hop fans had of Rule early in his career: Ja sounds too much like the Yonkers rapper.

In DMX's "Do You," which was a single off of Funkmaster Flex's 2000 release, Vol. 4 - 60 Minutes of Funk, he blasted those trying to imitate him, rhyming, "You don't even know what you got inside/ How the f--- you gon' find out, you keep wanting to ride ... Can't do you, then what you flow for?/ You ain't gon' get there tryin' to be me, dog."

Although he never mentioned Ja's name, many felt it was an indirect dis. X didn't say if "Do You" was meant for Rule, but he did admit to dropping subliminal lines at Ja even earlier than that with "We Don't Give a F---" ("Well you might as well forget me, 'cause from this point on it's war/ It won't stop until one of us is gone ... Somebody should have told me, I was f---in' with a clown").

"It's not like I'm the only [one] that thinks about this," X lamented. "N---as ask me about this sh-- every day. So what I'm gonna do, sit here and do nothing about this sh--? That ain't right. I could see if the n---a talked like that regularly. How I talk is how I rap.

"I been thinking about it for a minute," he continued to bark. "I bit him lightly, on the second album [Flesh of My Flesh, Blood of My Blood]. 'Use to be my dog, you were in my left t--ty.' The funny sh-- is that Gotti did the beat. But I see he didn't get the point. I'm like, 'Come on dog, what are you doing?' "

As for Ja's take, in 1999, before dropping his superstar-turning Rule 3:36, he told MTV News it "was a challenge to make everybody believe Ja Rule's not f---ing trying to be like DMX ... I'm my own man."

Rhyme styles aside, X said he still considered Ja a friend until Rule recently started letting the fame get to him.

"A little?" X, words drenched in sarcasm, responded when asked if he felt Rule was getting a little too Hollywood. "One thing I can't really f--- with is how a n---a change up. If I could stay the same, why can't you? Even if you do change up, don't change up to your n---as before all this. We was broke together, man."

X cited a recent incident on the West Coast to back his claims.

"We in the club in L.A. one night, he got his people, I got my people," he said. "We at two different sides of the club. Me, out of respect — that's my n---a — I take two people with me to get through the crowd. I take a bottle of liquor over there, have a couple of drinks with my n---a, 'cause that's how I am.

"Two weeks later we happened to be in the same club," X continued. "Same circumstances. Some kid walks over to me and says, 'Ja says he's over there.' I'm like, 'Alright, is he gonna come over?' 'Nah, he said come over there.' Get the f--- out of here, man. I already extended my hand once. Give me the same courtesy. You can't do the same as me? I sent him right back over there. You think [Ja] would come over there after all of that. Nothin'! I'm like, 'F--- you!' "

X promised nothing short of his relentless brand of gutter-embedded rhymes and sounds throughout the rest of his album, which he's just started in the Windy City.

"It's all over the place," he revealed.

Despite doing his thing for years, including being the only artist in the SoundScan era (which dates back to May 1991) to have his first four LPs debut at #1 on the Billboard 200 albums chart, X feels he has a lot to prove on his still-untitled new project.

"Yeah," he explained, " 'Cause I don't feel my last album was promoted as good as it could have been. Every day, if I have the channel on a video station, I'm seein' nothing but bullsh--. I'm like, 'These n---as is getting away with this.' N---as know, when they listen to my [music], it's like, 'Listen to what he's saying.' To have all that sh-- knocked down with [rappers] talking blah, blah, blah and 'I think my butt getting big,' all this that don't make no sense. What are you giving my peoples? You're killing us, dog!"

DMX's new album is due out in December.
 

Mak-X

Sicc OG
Jun 14, 2002
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#7
I heard that Ruled Out song a couple months ago, dude is hittin hard. And I knew bout that club incident a couple months back also, Ja's let the fame go to his fuckin head, his first cd was raw. But after that he's gone bullshit.
 
G

GANGSTAEIGHT

Guest
#9
DMX says "nigga" too much

and Ja-Rule is weak as fuk

why did I figure that one day this would go down