Meek Mill Needs Parental Supervision Via Management

I guess we’re not the only ones who are tired of the Drake-Meek Mill feud.
The dispute began when Meek Mill accused Drake on Twitter of using a ghostwriter to write his lyrics. The flames were fanned when Drake released two diss tracks against the Philadelphia-based rapper. Meek Mill released a diss track, “Wanna Know” via Soundcloud, but was forced to take it down due to a sample of the theme music of the wrestler, The Undertaker.
In a recently deleted post, Meek Mill wrote, “I’m not entertaining no rap/real beef over drake s/o a rapper! … I don’t feel like I gotta try to prove myself to people and end up in a real situation over this fake rap sh*t! … All this killer sh*t on social media is like walking ya self into prison, and that ain’t my lifestyle.”
Quite frankly, I have no idea what Meek Mill’s talking about in those deleted posts. If you’re going to call someone out, through Twitter nonetheless, you better be ready to “prove” yourself. It appears that Meek Mill is admitting defeat in his deleted post as indicated by “I don’t feel like I gotta…prove myself…” and “…that ain’t my lifestyle.” (Finally!) More importantly, however, I’m very upset by the erroneous comma usage in the last sentence.
Over the weekend, he tweeted:

He claimed that he was unable to access his Twitter account because his management had changed the password following the initial exchanges.
Drake is currently celebrating If You’re Reading This It’s Too Late being the first record released this year to go platinum, proving that the Toronto-rapper has bark and bite.
Meek Mill, however, apparently needs parental supervision via his management. Perhaps we need to up the age to surf the Web without parental supervision to 28? We have to protect the children from making online mistakes, because, you know, the Internet is forever.


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