🧠📜 “Jay-Z Chose Sides With Evil” — Prodigy’s Last Interview BEFORE He Died Mysteriously From… An Egg? 🍳😨
When the news first broke that Prodigy — one half of the legendary hip-hop duo Mobb Deep — had died at the age of 42, the headlines were simple: “Complications from sickle cell.” It seemed like a tragic, yet
plausible end to a man who had battled the disease his entire life.
But then the real story came out: he choked on a boiled egg.
In a hospital.
While under medical supervision.
That’s when the whispers turned into full-blown conspiracy. Because this wasn’t just any rapper. This was Prodigy — the rapper who put the Illuminati on hip-hop’s radar before most fans even knew how to
pronounce the word.
And in the months leading up to his bizarre death, Prodigy wasn’t exactly quiet. In interviews, social media posts, and cryptic lyrics, he kept warning people: the industry isn’t just corrupt — it’s dangerous.
Let’s rewind.
Back in 1995, long before YouTube rabbit holes and TikTok theories, Prodigy spit a bar that would echo for decades:
“Illuminati want my mind, soul, and my body / Secret society trying to keep their eye on me.”
The line, buried in LL Cool J’s “I Shot Ya (Remix),” was the first time the term Illuminati was mentioned in rap — at least publicly. But it wouldn’t be the last. In fact, that single line lit the fuse for what would
become an entire genre of hip-hop conspiracy: secret societies, rituals, child trafficking, elite control — and how rappers were allegedly being used as pawns to push mass manipulation.
Prodigy wasn’t just talking. He was living it.
In 2007, while serving time for weapons possession, he wrote an open letter from prison — and it was explosive. In it, he accused Jay-Z directly of being “in the know,” and choosing to side with corporate evil to
protect his empire.
“Jay-Z conceals the truth from the Black community and the world, and promotes the lifestyle of the Beast instead,” Prodigy wrote.
“He knows the truth, but he chose sides with evil in order to be accepted by the corporate.”
But he didn’t stop there. He promised:
“I will relentlessly attack Jay-Z, Illuminati, and every evil that exists… until my lights are put out.”
And now those lights are out.
Fast forward to 2017 — Prodigy releases Hegelian Dialectic: The Book of Revelation, an album drenched in philosophy, spiritual warfare, and warnings. He talks about mass mind control, government deception,
and Satanic agendas being pushed through pop culture.
Five months later, he dies in a hospital bed… by choking on an egg.
Not a car crash.
Not violence.
Not complications from his disease.
An egg.
Now here’s where it gets really disturbing. After the initial cause of death was released, Prodigy’s family didn’t buy it — and they took legal action. They filed a lawsuit against Spring Valley Medical Center in Las
Vegas, accusing the hospital of negligence, claiming they failed to monitor his oxygen levels, ignored doctors’ orders, and didn’t keep his IV fluids running properly. Essentially, they let him die.
And for people who had been following Prodigy’s path — his message, his mission — the lawsuit only confirmed what many already suspected:
This wasn’t an accident. This was a hit.
But why?
Well, in the years before his death, Prodigy was sounding alarms everywhere. He claimed that not only was the music industry a breeding ground for ritualistic abuse and control, but that it was connected to
global systems of oppression.
In his final interviews, he talked about:
Satanic rituals involving children
The U.S. government being a corporation
The manipulation of Black communities through food, pharmaceuticals, and branding
Secret agendas hidden in plain sight
He even said in a now-buried interview:
“They’re doing rituals on little kids… satanic sex rituals. This stuff is really going on in the world. I’m not afraid of that, because I already know what it is.”
In another clip, he referenced 9/11 as a global ritual, saying:
“They killed 20 birds with one stone. Changed laws, changed minds, changed everything. It was ritualistic.”
He didn’t sound paranoid. He sounded convinced.
And then came the tweets.
In 2014, he posted about the UN investigating child ritual abuse in the UK, captioning:
“I told y’all MFers they doing sex rituals on kids… dumb people need to wake the F up.”
In another tweet, he wrote:
“Illuminati is preschool information to me… that’s like learning your ABCs.”
He also shared books, documentaries, and red-pill content on everything from Federal Reserve manipulation to occult symbolism in media. This wasn’t a gimmick. It was his life’s mission.
So what did he mean when he said he had a “list” of industry insiders? And who was on it?
There’s a moment in his last interviews where he hints that not all rappers are in the Illuminati — but some definitely know about it and choose to play along. One name that always came up? Jay-Z.
But when asked directly, Prodigy clarified:
“I don’t think Jay is in it… but he knows what’s up. He knows the truth. He just plays the game.”
Still, the animosity between them ran deep. And fans still question if that beef ever truly died. Jay-Z later claimed they’d “squashed things” in a club, saying:
“We spoke. We kicked it. It was all love.”
But isn’t that exactly what you’d say if your biggest critic suddenly turned up dead?
Just ask DMX. Jay claimed love for him too — after allegedly sabotaging his album. Ask Ja Rule, who was supposed to release an album with Jay and DMX, but the project mysteriously disappeared. Jay stays
“squashing” beefs — usually after the other person is gone or out of power.
And Kanye? He referenced Prodigy’s death in a now-censored interview with Candace Owens, calling it suspicious. The interview? Deleted. Candace’s account? Suspended. Just another coincidence?
The truth is, Prodigy wasn’t just another rapper.
He was a thinker. A researcher. A revolutionary mind trapped in an industry built to break minds.
He didn’t care about fame. He cared about freedom. And he believed there were forces working overtime to keep us enslaved — mentally, physically, spiritually. Whether or not you believe in the Illuminati,
Prodigy believed he had proof. And he refused to stay silent.
Now, in death, the silence around him is deafening.
There are no mainstream documentaries. No tribute albums. No widespread memorials. Just a question:
Did Prodigy choke on an egg… or was he choked out by the very machine he tried to warn us about?
You decide. Because Prodigy left the clues — in his lyrics, his letters, his interviews. And if you really listen, you’ll realize:
He didn’t die with secrets.
He died because he told them.
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