🧠“‘He Was NEVER One of Us’: Eazy-E’s Forgotten Warning About Snoop Dogg Comes True in 2024 💣💰”

Ice Cube Remembers Eazy-E on 20th Anniversary of N.W.A Partner's Death

In the ever-evolving narrative of hip-hop, legacies are shaped not just by music, but by truth — and betrayal.

And no rivalry in the game carries more unresolved tension than the silent war between Eazy-E and Snoop Dogg.

While history books have tried to file it under “old school drama,” the latest string of controversies surrounding Snoop has fans revisiting Eazy’s last interviews — and the chilling clues he left behind.

Let’s take it back.

Back to the days of Ruthless Records and the gritty origins of gangsta rap.

Eazy-E, born and raised in Compton, was more than a rapper — he was a visionary.

A pioneer.

A man who turned the streets into platinum records and made the world listen.

But when his empire — N.W.A.— started to fracture, a new force emerged: Death Row Records.

And with it came Dr.

Dre, Suge Knight, and a young rapper from Long Beach who would become a household name: Snoop Dogg.

Snoop was slick.

Smooth.

Charismatic.

Snoop Dogg Admits He Loves Eazy-E's Diss Song But Regrets Their Beef -  HipHopDX

And behind him stood Dre — Eazy’s former brother-in-arms, now turned bitter rival.

When Dre and Snoop dropped The Chronic in 1992, it wasn’t just a genre-defining moment — it was a declaration of war.

That album was laced with disses aimed directly at Eazy-E, branding him a relic, a has-been.

But Eazy didn’t flinch.

He fired back with “Real Muthaphuckkin G’s,” a blistering rebuttal that pulled the curtain back on Snoop and Dre, branding them as “studio gangsters” — rappers pretending to live a life they never truly knew.

Eazy claimed that Dre wasn’t really from Compton, that he came from dance music and lip gloss — not drive-bys and street corners.

He mocked Snoop’s image, calling him “anorexic,” all bark and no bite.

But beneath the insults was a calculated warning: don’t trust Snoop.

He’s not who you think he is.

And now… decades later, that message is hitting different.

Snoop’s journey since Death Row has been nothing short of strange.

While he’s worn many hats — rapper, actor, entrepreneur, football coach — he’s also left a trail of contradictions and questionable allegiances.

It started with whispers during the Tupac era.

Snoop was Death Row’s golden child… until Pac arrived.

Suddenly, Snoop wasn’t the main attraction anymore.

And according to insiders like Warren G, Snoop was supposed to be in Vegas the night Pac was shot.

But he wasn’t.

He stayed behind.

Allegedly at the urging of Warren himself.

And when the news of the shooting broke, Snoop — instead of standing by Pac — distanced himself.

Fast.

Eazy-E - Rolling Stone Australia

Suge Knight later questioned why Snoop had a walkie-talkie that night, suggesting he was somehow in the loop.

He even accused Snoop of never visiting Pac in the hospital, despite telling people he did.

Then, just months after Tupac’s death, Snoop appeared on Steve Harvey’s show — hand-in-hand with Diddy, of all people — to publicly squash the East Coast-West Coast beef.

A PR move? Or something more?

The timing was… off.

Fast forward again.

After Eminem took shots at Diddy in his 2018 diss track “Killshot,” it was Snoop who suddenly came for Em.

Said he wasn’t in his top 10.

Called him overrated.

Why? Fans noticed the pattern.

Every time someone challenges Diddy, Snoop sides with him.

Despite being tied to Death Row — a label built in opposition to Bad Boy — Snoop keeps finding his way back to Puff.

And then came the biggest flip-flop of all.

In 2017, Snoop roasted every Black artist who even considered performing at Donald Trump’s inauguration.

He called them Uncle Toms, threatened to “roast the sh*t” out of anyone who touched that stage.

He even dropped a music video where he literally shot a clown version of Trump.

Edgy, political, and seemingly principled.

But in 2020, during Trump’s re-election weekend, Snoop was caught performing at the “Crypto Ball” — a Trump Inauguration event.

And the kicker? He didn’t post about it.

Not a word on Instagram.

Not a tweet.

For a man who usually posts 15 times a day, that silence was deafening.

Snoop Dogg Reflects on Eazy-E's Diss Track and the Regret of Their Feud

Now throw in that cringey anti-hate commercial he did recently — the one where celebrities dramatically recite lines about racism, ending with the line: “I hate that we even have to make this commercial.

” It was funded by a group that critics say masks pro-Israel propaganda behind anti-Semitism awareness.