Sponsored Links

Rewrite and translate this title Meek Mill on Andrew Schulz’s Kendrick Lamar Comments: ‘White Man Saying They’ll Rape Black Men Openly Is Extreme’ to Japanese between 50 and 60 characters. Do not include any introductory or extra text; return only the title in Japanese.

Sponsored Links


Rewrite

Meek Mill does not find Andrew Schulz’s recent suggestion he could sexually assault Kendrick Lamar very funny.

“White man saying they’ll rape black men openly is extreme… and then say it’s just a joke,” wrote Meek Mill in a tweet shared on Thursday, Dec. 4. “Black manhood is not a joke! I seen the same guys saying I was gay on his stand up! My white friends like it’s a joke! We don’t joke like that in the black community at all!”

Schulz, who has indicated that he is not apologetic for his widely criticized response to what he perceived as a diss by Lamar, jumped in the replies with a screenshot of a tweet Meek replying to Schulz joking about his sexuality in a stand-up special. “You seemed to like it,” Schulz wrote alongside a shrug emoji and the screenshot, which read, “The first time I laughed at being gay… But don’t wit me in real life I may swing lol.”

In a stand-up show earlier this year, Schulz joked that while he doesn’t think Meek is gay, he believes the rapper is “incredibly bad at proving he’s straight.”

In a follow-up tweet, Meek added, “I said fuck rap shit start looking like a circus to me… they wanna see me crash and ‘I will not’ it’s not worth it to me!”

On an episode of his podcast Flagrant, Schulz responded to a line from Kendrick’s “Wacced Out Murals” that he suggested was aimed at him and his collaborators. “Don’t let no white comedian talk about no Black woman, that’s law,” K Dot rapped on the track. “The n***as that coon, the n***as that bein’ groomed, slide on both of them.”

Schulz suggested that K Dot was hypocritical, only supports Black women when it benefits him, and that he thinks that people are letting him get away with talking too much smack. Most egregiously, he suggested that he could sexually assault the rapper if they ever shared a prison cell.

“I would make love to him and there’s nothing he could do about it,” he said. “Just Kendrick Lamar, I would make love to him. And the only thing that he could do is decide if it’s consensual or not. … I would go so far as to say he couldn’t stop most people on the planet from having sex with him. … He’s talking a lot of shit, but if it came down to it I could put him on my lap, I could feed him a bottle.”

The comments drew criticism from the likes of actor O’Shea Jackson Jr., who labeled Schulz a “weird ass n***a,” and TDE president Terrence “Punch” Henderson, who wrote, “Wait… wait… I know as a Black man who’s involved in Hip Hop Music, that we are a bit slow and don’t really understand sarcasm and humor… but did my guy say he want to sleep with Dot??”

in HTML format, including tags, to make it appealing and easy to read for Japanese-speaking readers aged 20 to 40 interested in fashion. Organize the content with appropriate headings and subheadings (h1, h2, h3, h4, h5, h6), translating all text, including headings, into Japanese. Retain any existing tags from

Meek Mill does not find Andrew Schulz’s recent suggestion he could sexually assault Kendrick Lamar very funny.

“White man saying they’ll rape black men openly is extreme… and then say it’s just a joke,” wrote Meek Mill in a tweet shared on Thursday, Dec. 4. “Black manhood is not a joke! I seen the same guys saying I was gay on his stand up! My white friends like it’s a joke! We don’t joke like that in the black community at all!”

Schulz, who has indicated that he is not apologetic for his widely criticized response to what he perceived as a diss by Lamar, jumped in the replies with a screenshot of a tweet Meek replying to Schulz joking about his sexuality in a stand-up special. “You seemed to like it,” Schulz wrote alongside a shrug emoji and the screenshot, which read, “The first time I laughed at being gay… But don’t wit me in real life I may swing lol.”

In a stand-up show earlier this year, Schulz joked that while he doesn’t think Meek is gay, he believes the rapper is “incredibly bad at proving he’s straight.”

In a follow-up tweet, Meek added, “I said fuck rap shit start looking like a circus to me… they wanna see me crash and ‘I will not’ it’s not worth it to me!”

On an episode of his podcast Flagrant, Schulz responded to a line from Kendrick’s “Wacced Out Murals” that he suggested was aimed at him and his collaborators. “Don’t let no white comedian talk about no Black woman, that’s law,” K Dot rapped on the track. “The n***as that coon, the n***as that bein’ groomed, slide on both of them.”

Schulz suggested that K Dot was hypocritical, only supports Black women when it benefits him, and that he thinks that people are letting him get away with talking too much smack. Most egregiously, he suggested that he could sexually assault the rapper if they ever shared a prison cell.

“I would make love to him and there’s nothing he could do about it,” he said. “Just Kendrick Lamar, I would make love to him. And the only thing that he could do is decide if it’s consensual or not. … I would go so far as to say he couldn’t stop most people on the planet from having sex with him. … He’s talking a lot of shit, but if it came down to it I could put him on my lap, I could feed him a bottle.”

The comments drew criticism from the likes of actor O’Shea Jackson Jr., who labeled Schulz a “weird ass n***a,” and TDE president Terrence “Punch” Henderson, who wrote, “Wait… wait… I know as a Black man who’s involved in Hip Hop Music, that we are a bit slow and don’t really understand sarcasm and humor… but did my guy say he want to sleep with Dot??”

and integrate them seamlessly into the new content without adding new tags. Ensure the new content is fashion-related, written entirely in Japanese, and approximately 1500 words. Conclude with a “結論” section and a well-formatted “よくある質問” section. Avoid including an introduction or a note explaining the process.

Sponsored Links
Sponsored Links