Author Topic: Eminem - I remember (everlast diss)  (Read 1231 times)

'DsR'

  • Muthafuckin' Don!
  • *****
  • Posts: 801
  • Karma: 17
Eminem - I remember (everlast diss)
« on: January 25, 2006, 08:53:58 PM »
as i listened to this song @ work on my mp3 player i realized they blanked out a part in that song and im just wondering what he says..


its goes something like ......ur a homosexual rappin irish ??????? ...... i was i was irish i could be a  ?????? too.

"fuck under tha influence im hella fucked up, swervin down the freeway spillin my cup"
 

Sikotic™

Re: Eminem - I remember (everlast diss)
« Reply #1 on: January 26, 2006, 12:42:56 AM »
I was thinking it was faggot because he was going through alot of criticism by GLAAD and other gay organizations at that time.

It was a nice diss, but Everlast topped him by simply taking a shot at Em's daughter. Em started bitching about it after....well why do you talk about her so much then idiot?
My Chihuahuas Are Eternal

THA SAUCE HOUSE
 

The Watcher

Re: Eminem - I remember (everlast diss)
« Reply #2 on: January 26, 2006, 01:01:40 AM »
as i listened to this song @ work on my mp3 player i realized they blanked out a part in that song and im just wondering what he says..


its goes something like ......ur a homosexual rappin irish ??????? ...... i was i was irish i could be a  ?????? too.

the blanked out word is muslim

Em woulda been on alot of hate lists if he didnt blank that out
army of the pharaohs never make love songs
we finger fuck bitches with freddy krueger gloves on
- celph titled

"lol infact lmao" - Proof of D12

anticipate the shots like obama at the podium
- joe budden
 

TraceOneInfinite Flat Earther 96'

  • Muthafuckin' Don!
  • *****
  • Posts: 13905
  • Thanked: 458 times
  • Karma: -1648
  • Permanent Resident Flat Erth 1996 Pre-Sept. 13th
Re: Eminem - I remember (everlast diss)
« Reply #3 on: January 26, 2006, 01:04:43 AM »
as i listened to this song @ work on my mp3 player i realized they blanked out a part in that song and im just wondering what he says..


its goes something like ......ur a homosexual rappin irish ??????? ...... i was i was irish i could be a  ?????? too.

The word they edited was "Muslim".  Eminem is playing into stereotypes because he was assuming that a white Irish guy shouldn't be a Muslim.  

When you look at it, there are millions of white Muslims in Europe, countries such as Albania and Bosnia are white Muslim countries.  And even in the caucus mountains where white people come from, the people inhabiting that region today are Muslims.

Which, it may be true that being Irish and Muslim is not common, but anyone can be a Muslim, if they just bear witness that the only thing worthy of worship is God.   Every religion claims to believe in God, but Islam the only religion that believes in God only.  Because Christianity makes Jesus a partner to God, Hindiusm sets up cows and other animals and statues as idols and intercessors to God, and Catholics believe the Pope can intercede between them and God, and they pray to Mary rather than directly to God.  Islam is the religion that truly worships and prays to God only, and does not allow any partnership with him.  

Bottom line: The Creator of the Universe is greater than anything that exists within his creation.  

Everlast converted to Islam after his House of Pain days, here's an article about it.

American Performing Artist Discovers Islam: An Interview with Everlast
By Adisa Banjoko    11/01/2004
 

American rap music has seen more than its share of influence from the religion of Islam. With groups such as Public Enemy rapping about their respect for the Nation of Islam, to people such as Q-Tip of A Tribe Called Quest embracing mainstream Islam, the religion seems to be a recurrent theme in the genre, both impacting lyrics and lives. One artist more recently touched by Islam is Eric Schrody, better known in music circles as Everlast.
What follows is an interview with journalist Adisa Banjoko in which Everlast discusses his journey to Islam and the challenges he faces as a new Muslim.
Adisa: Tell me about the first time you learned about Islam?
Everlast: It was probably around the late 80's. I was hanging out with Divine Styler (a popular Los Angeles rap artist). He was basically at the end of his 5% period (a reference to an American religious sect); he was starting to come into Islam. He lived with the Bashir family. Abdullah Bashir was sort of his teacher – and mine it wound up later. As he was making the transition from 5% into Islam, I would just be around and hear things.
I'm trying to think of the first time I recognized it as Islam. I think it was when one of Divine's friends took Shahada (the Muslim profession of faith) and I was there. I heard him say, "I bear witness that there is no God but Allah, and Muhammad is His servant and messenger." And I remember me being like, "What is this? I'm white. Can I be here?" It was out of ignorance, you know? Cause here in America , Islam is considered a "Black thing." And that's when someone pointed out to me, "You have know idea how many white Muslims there are in the world." I was like, "Really," and somebody broke it down. I said, "That's crazy. I had no clue."
Adisa: Do you feel any extra pressure being a white Muslim in America?
Everlast: I don't think of it on the grand scale. To me, Islam is mine. Allah is the God of all the worlds, and all mankind and all the `Aalameen (worlds). Islam is my personal relationship with God. So, nobody can put any more pressure on me than I can put on myself. But as far as the mosque where I pray, I have never felt more at home or more welcome. And it's not just mine. The few mosques that I've gone to around the country, I've never ever been made to feel uncomfortable. Like in New York , the mosque is big and there's so many people that nobody is looking to notice you. There were Chinese, Korean, Spanish [peoples] – everything, which was a good thing for me because at my mosque I'm the only white male, [although] there are some white females.
I think at first, I thought about it more than anybody else the first couple times I went to Jumma (the Friday congregational prayer). The first time I went to Jumma, I was taken by a friend of mine in New York . It was in Brooklyn in Bed-Stuy (Bedford-Stuyvesant). I was nervous about the neighborhood I was in, not the mosque. But I was just so at ease once I was there. I was like, "This is great." I didn't feel any different than anybody else in the mosque.
Adisa: How did your family take your turning to Islam? Because you were raised Catholic, right?
Everlast: Well, you know my mom is very open minded, very progressive. My mother lives with me. And I've been raised all my life without a belief in God, but a knowledge that He exists. I was taught, if anything in the world, know [that] there's a God. And my mom, even though she was Catholic she was the first person to point out the hypocrisy in the church. My mom really hasn't attended church in a long time. But as far as me, my mom is just happy that I have God in my life.
She sees me making prayers. And Divine is one of her favorite people in the world. She knows how much different we are than when she first knew us as kids. When me and Divine first hooked up, we were wild. We were out partying, fighting, doing whatever we had to do. We thought, "Yeah, that's what being a man is about. We're going to go out here and be thuggish."
She has seen how much it's changed me and him, and how much peace it's brought me since I've started to really accomplish something with it. I actually had a long talk with my mother the other day and we were on the topic of religion. We were actually talking about life and death, and the future, and when she might go – that won't be for a long time, in sha' Allah (God willing). But I asked her to do me one favor. I said, "Mom, when you die there might be some angels who ask you a question, and I want you to answer it; and I'm not sure exactly how it goes, 'cause I ain't died yet. Remember that there's only one God, and he's never been a man."
She said, "I know what you are trying to tell me."
I said, "Jesus wasn't God, Ma".
Some of what I know has definitely shown up in my mother. She's no Muslim, but she knows there's only one God. And that makes me very happy. I know guys that have turned towards Islam and their families have turned them out.
Adisa: My family tried to. I just can't understand that. But you know what? That's a trial. Although I've changed my name for like 8 years now, they still run up calling me by my birth name. Then it's, "Oh I forgot that you're Muslim." Then it's the pork jokes... It never stops.
Everlast: It's one of those things where people laugh at what they don't understand, or they fear what they can't grasp. The thing is that nobody can pretend that they don't understand it, because I've never come across anything more simple in my life.
Like I remember that when I sat down and asked, "So, what does a Muslim believe," and I got the list run down to me. I was like, "You don't put up the wall between Christianity and Judaism." They were like, "Nah, it's all the same story."
If when you finally get down to reading the Qu'ran, the Bible, and the Torah, which is pretty much just the Old Testament, you find that the Qu'ran is just an affirmation of what is correct and isn't correct within those books. And then you say to yourself, "How did that go down when these cats were all from different parts of the world?" But they are all confirming each other's story.
I'm reading a book right now called Muhammad: The Life of the Prophet, by Karen Armstrong. It was written by a non-Muslim. So far, I'm only about a quarter of the way through; but it starts out telling you how they originally tried to make Muhammad look like the most evil man on the earth – that he established Islam under the sword. But then you learn that Muhammad only fought when he had to. Muhammad only fought to defend Islam. It's a very good book about the man. It just lets you know that this cat was a man. We ain't trying to tell you that he was anything else but a man. We're telling you as Muslims that he was the most perfect example of a man to walk the earth so far. And from what I've read, he is the last one to come of his kind.
When you get beyond being scared of Farrakhan (the Nation of Islam's head) and what he's saying – and here as a white person I'm speaking – when you get beyond the ignorance of believing that Islam has anything to do with just people that are blowing up things, that doesn't have anything to do with Islam, they might do it in the name of Islam, but it has nothing to do with Islam – you can't argue with it.
When I explain Jesus to a Christian, he can't argue with me. And I don't mean argue, saying, "Jesus isn't God!" I mean, how much more sense does it make that he's a man? If I was Christian, which to me means to be Christ-like, and God asks me, "Hey how come you weren't more like Jesus?" I'll say, "I wasn't more like Jesus because You made him half of a God; I'm only a man!" That doesn't make any sense.
God doesn't want things hard on us. God wants things easy as possible. Allah is going to make it as easy as possible. If you ask and you are sincere, Allah will bring it to you. He might throw some rocks on your path, to make you trip and stumble. But it's going to come to you.
Adisa: Talk to me about the first and second time you took your Shahada (profession of faith).
Everlast: Well the first time, it was right after I had heard a tape from Warith Deen Muhammad (son of Nation of Islam founder, Elijah Muhammad, who took most of the Nation of Islam into mainstream Islam). That just kind of broke down the whole Jesus thing. He explained that we [Muslims] do Christians a great favor by bringing Jesus down to the level of a man. Why would God create a man who is half a God and compare us to him? And it just sent off a bomb in my head. So I took Shahada. And then the initial high wore off.
It was almost like a Christian who says that they accept Jesus. Then they say, "No matter what I do now, I'm saved." Cause I was raised with that kind of mentality. Like, "OK, I accept the truth so let me just go out here and sin my butt off and I'm saved."
I didn't really claim to be Muslim though at that time. I picked and chose what I wanted to believe. Allah gave me leeway for a time. But eventually it was time to fish or cut the line. I was coming to a point where I was unsatisfied emotionally and spiritually. I had money in the bank and a $100,000 car, women left and right: everything that you think you want. And then just sitting there being like, "Why am I unhappy?" Finally that voice that talks to you – not the whisper [of Satan] – the voice said, "Well, basically you're unhappy because you're living foul and you're not trying to do anything about it."
My stubbornness at that time wouldn't allow me to talk about it at that time. You get in that state of mind where you're like, "I can figure this out all by myself."
I finally got humble enough to talk to Divine and Abdullah about it. They asked me, "How do you feel? What do you think it is?" So finally, I'm sitting there taking Shahada again. From that point on, I've made a commitment where I'm going to try my best. I'm going to do my best to make my prayers, let's start there. Let's make our prayers and pray for the strength to stop doing one thing at a time. That's what I'm still dealing with.
You know, once you get over the big things, it becomes very subtle. It can be as subtle as looking a man, and not even speaking bad about him, but backbiting him in your mind. The easy ones to beat – well I shouldn't say easy – the big ones are easy to notice. It's the subtle psychological stuff that helps you get into who really you are. You got to be able to face the truth of who you are. If you are not able to face that truth of who you are, you're going to crumble, man.
People question me and go, "You're Muslim?" And I'm like, "Yeah I'm Muslim, but I'm also a professional sinner. I'm trying to get over it, trying to retire. I won't front and say I'm better than you. I just believe that I've been shown the truth and hopefully that will save me."
Adisa Banjoko is a journalist and lecturer living in the San Francisco Bay area. He can be contacted at soulpolisher2001@yahoo.com
This interview was originally published on 12 July 1999 and has been republished, with a few minor changes, by IslamOnline.net with the permission of the author.
« Last Edit: January 26, 2006, 01:07:20 AM by Allah's Slave: Abdul-Infinite »
Givin' respect to 2pac September 7th-13th The Day Hip-Hop Died

(btw, Earth 🌎 is not a spinning water ball)
 

Sikotic™

Re: Eminem - I remember (everlast diss)
« Reply #4 on: January 26, 2006, 01:09:22 AM »
My bad. I haven't heard the song in awhile and for some reason some other word was playing through my head haha.
My Chihuahuas Are Eternal

THA SAUCE HOUSE
 

hempside

  • Muthafuckin' Don!
  • *****
  • Posts: 885
  • Karma: -277
Re: Eminem - I remember (everlast diss)
« Reply #5 on: January 26, 2006, 12:57:31 PM »
as i listened to this song @ work on my mp3 player i realized they blanked out a part in that song and im just wondering what he says..


its goes something like ......ur a homosexual rappin irish ??????? ...... i was i was irish i could be a  ?????? too.

The word they edited was "Muslim".  Eminem is playing into stereotypes because he was assuming that a white Irish guy shouldn't be a Muslim.  

When you look at it, there are millions of white Muslims in Europe, countries such as Albania and Bosnia are white Muslim countries.  And even in the caucus mountains where white people come from, the people inhabiting that region today are Muslims.

Which, it may be true that being Irish and Muslim is not common, but anyone can be a Muslim, if they just bear witness that the only thing worthy of worship is God.   Every religion claims to believe in God, but Islam the only religion that believes in God only.  Because Christianity makes Jesus a partner to God, Hindiusm sets up cows and other animals and statues as idols and intercessors to God, and Catholics believe the Pope can intercede between them and God, and they pray to Mary rather than directly to God.  Islam is the religion that truly worships and prays to God only, and does not allow any partnership with him.  

Bottom line: The Creator of the Universe is greater than anything that exists within his creation.  

Everlast converted to Islam after his House of Pain days, here's an article about it.

American Performing Artist Discovers Islam: An Interview with Everlast
By Adisa Banjoko    11/01/2004
 

American rap music has seen more than its share of influence from the religion of Islam. With groups such as Public Enemy rapping about their respect for the Nation of Islam, to people such as Q-Tip of A Tribe Called Quest embracing mainstream Islam, the religion seems to be a recurrent theme in the genre, both impacting lyrics and lives. One artist more recently touched by Islam is Eric Schrody, better known in music circles as Everlast.
What follows is an interview with journalist Adisa Banjoko in which Everlast discusses his journey to Islam and the challenges he faces as a new Muslim.
Adisa: Tell me about the first time you learned about Islam?
Everlast: It was probably around the late 80's. I was hanging out with Divine Styler (a popular Los Angeles rap artist). He was basically at the end of his 5% period (a reference to an American religious sect); he was starting to come into Islam. He lived with the Bashir family. Abdullah Bashir was sort of his teacher – and mine it wound up later. As he was making the transition from 5% into Islam, I would just be around and hear things.
I'm trying to think of the first time I recognized it as Islam. I think it was when one of Divine's friends took Shahada (the Muslim profession of faith) and I was there. I heard him say, "I bear witness that there is no God but Allah, and Muhammad is His servant and messenger." And I remember me being like, "What is this? I'm white. Can I be here?" It was out of ignorance, you know? Cause here in America , Islam is considered a "Black thing." And that's when someone pointed out to me, "You have know idea how many white Muslims there are in the world." I was like, "Really," and somebody broke it down. I said, "That's crazy. I had no clue."
Adisa: Do you feel any extra pressure being a white Muslim in America?
Everlast: I don't think of it on the grand scale. To me, Islam is mine. Allah is the God of all the worlds, and all mankind and all the `Aalameen (worlds). Islam is my personal relationship with God. So, nobody can put any more pressure on me than I can put on myself. But as far as the mosque where I pray, I have never felt more at home or more welcome. And it's not just mine. The few mosques that I've gone to around the country, I've never ever been made to feel uncomfortable. Like in New York , the mosque is big and there's so many people that nobody is looking to notice you. There were Chinese, Korean, Spanish [peoples] – everything, which was a good thing for me because at my mosque I'm the only white male, [although] there are some white females.
I think at first, I thought about it more than anybody else the first couple times I went to Jumma (the Friday congregational prayer). The first time I went to Jumma, I was taken by a friend of mine in New York . It was in Brooklyn in Bed-Stuy (Bedford-Stuyvesant). I was nervous about the neighborhood I was in, not the mosque. But I was just so at ease once I was there. I was like, "This is great." I didn't feel any different than anybody else in the mosque.
Adisa: How did your family take your turning to Islam? Because you were raised Catholic, right?
Everlast: Well, you know my mom is very open minded, very progressive. My mother lives with me. And I've been raised all my life without a belief in God, but a knowledge that He exists. I was taught, if anything in the world, know [that] there's a God. And my mom, even though she was Catholic she was the first person to point out the hypocrisy in the church. My mom really hasn't attended church in a long time. But as far as me, my mom is just happy that I have God in my life.
She sees me making prayers. And Divine is one of her favorite people in the world. She knows how much different we are than when she first knew us as kids. When me and Divine first hooked up, we were wild. We were out partying, fighting, doing whatever we had to do. We thought, "Yeah, that's what being a man is about. We're going to go out here and be thuggish."
She has seen how much it's changed me and him, and how much peace it's brought me since I've started to really accomplish something with it. I actually had a long talk with my mother the other day and we were on the topic of religion. We were actually talking about life and death, and the future, and when she might go – that won't be for a long time, in sha' Allah (God willing). But I asked her to do me one favor. I said, "Mom, when you die there might be some angels who ask you a question, and I want you to answer it; and I'm not sure exactly how it goes, 'cause I ain't died yet. Remember that there's only one God, and he's never been a man."
She said, "I know what you are trying to tell me."
I said, "Jesus wasn't God, Ma".
Some of what I know has definitely shown up in my mother. She's no Muslim, but she knows there's only one God. And that makes me very happy. I know guys that have turned towards Islam and their families have turned them out.
Adisa: My family tried to. I just can't understand that. But you know what? That's a trial. Although I've changed my name for like 8 years now, they still run up calling me by my birth name. Then it's, "Oh I forgot that you're Muslim." Then it's the pork jokes... It never stops.
Everlast: It's one of those things where people laugh at what they don't understand, or they fear what they can't grasp. The thing is that nobody can pretend that they don't understand it, because I've never come across anything more simple in my life.
Like I remember that when I sat down and asked, "So, what does a Muslim believe," and I got the list run down to me. I was like, "You don't put up the wall between Christianity and Judaism." They were like, "Nah, it's all the same story."
If when you finally get down to reading the Qu'ran, the Bible, and the Torah, which is pretty much just the Old Testament, you find that the Qu'ran is just an affirmation of what is correct and isn't correct within those books. And then you say to yourself, "How did that go down when these cats were all from different parts of the world?" But they are all confirming each other's story.
I'm reading a book right now called Muhammad: The Life of the Prophet, by Karen Armstrong. It was written by a non-Muslim. So far, I'm only about a quarter of the way through; but it starts out telling you how they originally tried to make Muhammad look like the most evil man on the earth – that he established Islam under the sword. But then you learn that Muhammad only fought when he had to. Muhammad only fought to defend Islam. It's a very good book about the man. It just lets you know that this cat was a man. We ain't trying to tell you that he was anything else but a man. We're telling you as Muslims that he was the most perfect example of a man to walk the earth so far. And from what I've read, he is the last one to come of his kind.
When you get beyond being scared of Farrakhan (the Nation of Islam's head) and what he's saying – and here as a white person I'm speaking – when you get beyond the ignorance of believing that Islam has anything to do with just people that are blowing up things, that doesn't have anything to do with Islam, they might do it in the name of Islam, but it has nothing to do with Islam – you can't argue with it.
When I explain Jesus to a Christian, he can't argue with me. And I don't mean argue, saying, "Jesus isn't God!" I mean, how much more sense does it make that he's a man? If I was Christian, which to me means to be Christ-like, and God asks me, "Hey how come you weren't more like Jesus?" I'll say, "I wasn't more like Jesus because You made him half of a God; I'm only a man!" That doesn't make any sense.
God doesn't want things hard on us. God wants things easy as possible. Allah is going to make it as easy as possible. If you ask and you are sincere, Allah will bring it to you. He might throw some rocks on your path, to make you trip and stumble. But it's going to come to you.
Adisa: Talk to me about the first and second time you took your Shahada (profession of faith).
Everlast: Well the first time, it was right after I had heard a tape from Warith Deen Muhammad (son of Nation of Islam founder, Elijah Muhammad, who took most of the Nation of Islam into mainstream Islam). That just kind of broke down the whole Jesus thing. He explained that we [Muslims] do Christians a great favor by bringing Jesus down to the level of a man. Why would God create a man who is half a God and compare us to him? And it just sent off a bomb in my head. So I took Shahada. And then the initial high wore off.
It was almost like a Christian who says that they accept Jesus. Then they say, "No matter what I do now, I'm saved." Cause I was raised with that kind of mentality. Like, "OK, I accept the truth so let me just go out here and sin my butt off and I'm saved."
I didn't really claim to be Muslim though at that time. I picked and chose what I wanted to believe. Allah gave me leeway for a time. But eventually it was time to fish or cut the line. I was coming to a point where I was unsatisfied emotionally and spiritually. I had money in the bank and a $100,000 car, women left and right: everything that you think you want. And then just sitting there being like, "Why am I unhappy?" Finally that voice that talks to you – not the whisper [of Satan] – the voice said, "Well, basically you're unhappy because you're living foul and you're not trying to do anything about it."
My stubbornness at that time wouldn't allow me to talk about it at that time. You get in that state of mind where you're like, "I can figure this out all by myself."
I finally got humble enough to talk to Divine and Abdullah about it. They asked me, "How do you feel? What do you think it is?" So finally, I'm sitting there taking Shahada again. From that point on, I've made a commitment where I'm going to try my best. I'm going to do my best to make my prayers, let's start there. Let's make our prayers and pray for the strength to stop doing one thing at a time. That's what I'm still dealing with.
You know, once you get over the big things, it becomes very subtle. It can be as subtle as looking a man, and not even speaking bad about him, but backbiting him in your mind. The easy ones to beat – well I shouldn't say easy – the big ones are easy to notice. It's the subtle psychological stuff that helps you get into who really you are. You got to be able to face the truth of who you are. If you are not able to face that truth of who you are, you're going to crumble, man.
People question me and go, "You're Muslim?" And I'm like, "Yeah I'm Muslim, but I'm also a professional sinner. I'm trying to get over it, trying to retire. I won't front and say I'm better than you. I just believe that I've been shown the truth and hopefully that will save me."
Adisa Banjoko is a journalist and lecturer living in the San Francisco Bay area. He can be contacted at soulpolisher2001@yahoo.com
This interview was originally published on 12 July 1999 and has been republished, with a few minor changes, by IslamOnline.net with the permission of the author.

thanks brotha.
heyheyhey smoke weed everyday.
 

ac1386

  • Lil Geezy
  • *
  • Posts: 83
  • Karma: 4
Re: Eminem - I remember (everlast diss)
« Reply #6 on: January 26, 2006, 04:09:34 PM »


Which, it may be true that being Irish and Muslim is not common, but anyone can be a Muslim, if they just bear witness that the only thing worthy of worship is God.   Every religion claims to believe in God, but Islam the only religion that believes in God only.  Because Christianity makes Jesus a partner to God, Hindiusm sets up cows and other animals and statues as idols and intercessors to God, and Catholics believe the Pope can intercede between them and God, and they pray to Mary rather than directly to God.  Islam is the religion that truly worships and prays to God only, and does not allow any partnership with him. 


correct me if im wrong cause im not all that religious but ummmm jews? i dont think moses is in the same catagory as jesus.
 

'DsR'

  • Muthafuckin' Don!
  • *****
  • Posts: 801
  • Karma: 17
Re: Eminem - I remember (everlast diss)
« Reply #7 on: January 26, 2006, 07:29:18 PM »
^thats what i was thinkin

"fuck under tha influence im hella fucked up, swervin down the freeway spillin my cup"
 

jeromechickenbone

  • Guest
Re: Eminem - I remember (everlast diss)
« Reply #8 on: January 26, 2006, 07:35:58 PM »
I always thought he called him a "Mick".  Could be Muslim though.
 

eS El Duque

  • Muthafuckin' Don!
  • *****
  • Posts: 5158
  • Karma: 35
  • SuperTight
Re: Eminem - I remember (everlast diss)
« Reply #9 on: January 26, 2006, 08:02:46 PM »
wow..what a long ass reply lol
DUBCC FANTASY BASEBALL CHAMPION 2008


 

TraceOneInfinite Flat Earther 96'

  • Muthafuckin' Don!
  • *****
  • Posts: 13905
  • Thanked: 458 times
  • Karma: -1648
  • Permanent Resident Flat Erth 1996 Pre-Sept. 13th
Re: Eminem - I remember (everlast diss)
« Reply #10 on: January 29, 2006, 08:35:44 PM »


Which, it may be true that being Irish and Muslim is not common, but anyone can be a Muslim, if they just bear witness that the only thing worthy of worship is God.   Every religion claims to believe in God, but Islam the only religion that believes in God only.  Because Christianity makes Jesus a partner to God, Hindiusm sets up cows and other animals and statues as idols and intercessors to God, and Catholics believe the Pope can intercede between them and God, and they pray to Mary rather than directly to God.  Islam is the religion that truly worships and prays to God only, and does not allow any partnership with him. 

correct me if im wrong cause im not all that religious but ummmm jews? i dont think moses is in the same catagory as jesus.

Judaism is not really a religion, it's a race of people.  They are from the Tribe of Judah.  Not just anyone can be Jewish.
« Last Edit: January 29, 2006, 08:37:31 PM by Allah's Slave: Abdul-Infinite »
Givin' respect to 2pac September 7th-13th The Day Hip-Hop Died

(btw, Earth 🌎 is not a spinning water ball)
 

Citizen-Y

Re: Eminem - I remember (everlast diss)
« Reply #11 on: January 29, 2006, 08:53:26 PM »
I was thinking it was faggot because he was going through alot of criticism by GLAAD and other gay organizations at that time.

It was a nice diss, but Everlast topped him by simply taking a shot at Em's daughter. Em started bitching about it after....well why do you talk about her so much then idiot?

Yeah, Eminem said that he was offended by that and Everlast said, "Damn, I offended Eminem the shock rapper, I guess I win."
 

ac1386

  • Lil Geezy
  • *
  • Posts: 83
  • Karma: 4
Re: Eminem - I remember (everlast diss)
« Reply #12 on: January 30, 2006, 07:49:29 AM »


Which, it may be true that being Irish and Muslim is not common, but anyone can be a Muslim, if they just bear witness that the only thing worthy of worship is God.   Every religion claims to believe in God, but Islam the only religion that believes in God only.  Because Christianity makes Jesus a partner to God, Hindiusm sets up cows and other animals and statues as idols and intercessors to God, and Catholics believe the Pope can intercede between them and God, and they pray to Mary rather than directly to God.  Islam is the religion that truly worships and prays to God only, and does not allow any partnership with him. 

correct me if im wrong cause im not all that religious but ummmm jews? i dont think moses is in the same catagory as jesus.

Judaism is not really a religion, it's a race of people.  They are from the Tribe of Judah.  Not just anyone can be Jewish.

nah judaism's a religion, race is biological, like indian, african, irish. Anyone CAN be jewish, you can convert to judiasm, its got its own place for worship, its own "bible," its own beleifs, and its one of 3 main religions, its most definetly a religion. its ok to be wrong you dont gotta start twistin shit around to make yourself sound right.
 

Shallow

  • Muthafuckin' Don!
  • *****
  • Posts: 7278
  • Karma: 215
  • I never had a digital pic of myself before
Re: Eminem - I remember (everlast diss)
« Reply #13 on: January 30, 2006, 09:17:11 AM »


Which, it may be true that being Irish and Muslim is not common, but anyone can be a Muslim, if they just bear witness that the only thing worthy of worship is God.   Every religion claims to believe in God, but Islam the only religion that believes in God only.  Because Christianity makes Jesus a partner to God, Hindiusm sets up cows and other animals and statues as idols and intercessors to God, and Catholics believe the Pope can intercede between them and God, and they pray to Mary rather than directly to God.  Islam is the religion that truly worships and prays to God only, and does not allow any partnership with him. 

correct me if im wrong cause im not all that religious but ummmm jews? i dont think moses is in the same catagory as jesus.

Judaism is not really a religion, it's a race of people.  They are from the Tribe of Judah.  Not just anyone can be Jewish.

nah judaism's a religion, race is biological, like indian, african, irish. Anyone CAN be jewish, you can convert to judiasm, its got its own place for worship, its own "bible," its own beleifs, and its one of 3 main religions, its most definetly a religion. its ok to be wrong you dont gotta start twistin shit around to make yourself sound right.


Yes he does. It's the only way he can sleep at night.

Seriously though. Don't expect a response. Usually when Infinite gets stumped he disappera from that thread and then says the same thing in another thread until someone stumps him there.

He just spent 3 pages trying to legitimize something Eminem said in a diss. Go through Em's catalogue and you'll find countless of absurd claims. But when he says something wrong about Islam Infinite writes a thesis.
 

Bojakabo

  • Muthafuckin' Don!
  • *****
  • Posts: 1423
  • Karma: 55
  • BOJAKaBOOOO
Re: Eminem - I remember (everlast diss)
« Reply #14 on: January 30, 2006, 10:51:54 AM »
one thing 4 sho everlast killed eminem with whitey revenge! i luv that song!