Lil Wayne Really Just Said There's No Such Thing As Racism

Bruh.
"My music is for everybody," Wayne says.
"My music is for everybody," Wayne says.
Andrew Innerarity / Reuters

Lil Wayne is convinced that racism doesn’t exist anymore because white people listen to his music and attend his concerts.

The Louisiana rapper came forward in an interview on the “Undisputed” Tuesday to dispel rumors of him possibly planning to retire from the rap game. But while fans of the artist may be glad that he’s not quitting hip-hop, his comments about race and racism are making some people scratch their heads.

"My crowd has always been everybody." -- @LilTunechi #WeezyOnUndisputed pic.twitter.com/dCcpQuqNTF

— UNDISPUTED (@undisputed) September 13, 2016

After discussing his career and his rocky relationship with Cash Money record label co-founder Birdman, the conversation shifted to race and the political statements of athletes like Lebron James and Colin Kaepernick. Wayne was asked by host Skip Bayless what it felt like seeing sometimes predominantly white audiences at his concerts, particularly a recent concert in Westchester, New York.

“I don’t want to be bashed, because I don’t want to seem like I’m on the wrong side,” Wayne responded. “But I thought that was clearly a message that there was no such thing as racism.”

The 33-year-old explained that he doesn’t have one type of crowd but, rather, his fan base has always included “everybody.” Later, according to Pitchfork, the rapper said that he thinks millennials are distancing themselves from racism because it is “not cool to them.”

Wayne implied that he was aware that he might get criticized for his statement, and the people on Twitter definitely didn’t disappoint by calling him out for his comments:

😂😂😂 RT @OPUS_Mag: Lil’ Wayne (@LilTunechi) said racism doesn’t exist because he sees white kids at his shows…….…………. pic.twitter.com/oIESQ4mXJ9

— Amin Elhassan (@AminESPN) September 13, 2016

It's wild to hear people like lil Wayne & Cam Newton saying racism doesn't exist when they've been discriminated against from the jump.

— No One (@TGTheTruth) September 13, 2016

So with LiL Wayne logic, white slave masters who had slaves cooking their food weren't racist because they was in house taking care of them

— Tia (@tiaonthebrain) September 13, 2016

White kids loving rap music means there's no such thing as racism. Wow. pic.twitter.com/VFs48nA6pc

— Saint Pest (@KidFury) September 13, 2016

Lil Wayne saying there's no such thing as racism means he put himself back on that retirement list... in my mind

— $plashy (@SplashyStacks) September 13, 2016

@TiatheGem "Im lil wayne...ive been worshipped all my life" when he doesnt realize they worship his ability and fame... not his skin color.

— The Retrograde (@thecoolsection) September 13, 2016

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It’s nice that Wayne’s music is embraced by white people, but given the reaction to Colin Kaepernick’s protest alone, it’s safe to say that racism is still most definitely a thing.

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