Kanye West began a public feud with his pal Sean "Diddy" Combs on Friday, revealing screenshots of their text exchanges on Instagram.
The two were at odds over Kanye's White Lives Matter t-shirts, which he presented at Paris Fashion Week amid a storm of criticism last month. Kanye, 45, challenged Diddy, 52, to come do something unlawful to him and threatened to use him as an example to demonstrate to the Jewish people.
Jesus is a Jew, he declared in one of his Instagram captions as a passionate Christian. Diddy was formerly one of Kanye's only well-known allies who defended him, calling him a "free thinker" and claiming that his message was "misconstrued" while expressing disagreement with the White Lives Matter slogan.
It appears that Diddy contacted Kanye directly to express his concerns about the tees, sparking a textual dispute. Kanye West being Kanye, decided to air their exchange online, even saying Diddy cannot get between him and his money.
Ultimately, Diddy told him to just stop and he's just messaging Kanye to say his actions are hurting the black community - the community Kanye West himself belongs to.
But West was not having any of it.
He wrote, "Anything you text I will post. I love you. And you guys are breaking my heart. I accept your apology in advance."
He added that "God is Love."
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Meanwhile, just hours after his explosive interview with Tucker Carlson on Fox News, Kanye West announced on Instagram that his forthcoming Los Angeles gig had been canceled. He said in the post, which was shortly deleted that his Sofi Stadium performance on November 4 has been canceled. He said he's thinking if it's whether my White Lives Matter t-shirt had anything to do with it."
He also provided a screenshot of a text message informing him that SoFi is unavailable because the event lacks sufficient employees.
During Paris fashion week, West sported a "White Lives Matter" T-shirt and clothed many Black models in apparel with the same wording. The Anti-Defamation League classifies the term as a "hate slogan" employed by White supremacist organizations, such as the Ku Klux Klan. Thursday, West told Fox News presenter Tucker Carlson that he wore the shirt and statement because "it's the obvious thing."
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