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this nigga stay making no fucking sense lmfao
he bugging dont he already got 2 gun charges?
chicago niggas
Gotta go fast. [video]

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That moment you realize Bernie Sanders has your vote
+ The Terrifying True Story Of How Futureās DJ Got Stuck In A Dubai Jail For 56 Days
DJ Escoās Amsterdam birthday celebration ended with an IRL nightmare. Hereās what itās like to get locked up in the UAE.
On January 13, Futureās affable DJ Esco (real name: William Moore) returned to his motherās home cooking after an unexpectedly long stay in the United Arab Emirates. Heād traveled there to perform with Future atĀ the 2014 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix, a swanky weekend also attended by Kim Kardashian, Prince Harry, and the Spice Girls. Future would later call his experience in Dubai āpricelessā and something he would ānever forget.ā
Esco will also never forget his experience in Dubai, which began when he was arrested at the airport for marijuana possession. He ended up spending 56 long days in a prison where few others spoke English. As he tells it, during his stay he met a Taliban legend, learned about Islam, and befriended a warden who would ultimately help facilitate his release. āI wasnāt pissed that I was the one that got caught,ā he said, recalling his experience for The FADER a week after he got home. āI was more focused on how to get out then how I got in.ā Here, in his own words, is his crazy, terrifying, and totally riveting story.
DJ ESCO: We had been on the European tour for a month and our last show was supposed to be in Amsterdam. My birthday was around that same time, so I was like, Iāll wait to celebrate my birthday in Amsterdam. I had never been to Amsterdam, so wanted to go to a cafe and the red light district. Just typical tourist shit, you know?
Then we got asked to do an extra show in Abu Dhabi. Once we left from Europe, we were gonna do this one show in Abu Dhabi, then go back to America. At the time, I wasnāt really aware of the whole geographics, where everything was at. Weāre at the end of the Europe tour, and itās my birthday, and weāre in Amsterdam, so weāre gonna celebrate! I got the weed.
But Iām not trying to walk around around with all this weed, you feel me? I was not intentionally trying to bring weed to Abu Dhabi. And if I would have known the rules and laws they got over there, I would have quadruple checked my bag and made sure there wasnāt a piece of weed. I swear I would have.
So we land in Abu Dhabi and Iām just walkinā through the airport and I got everybodyās bags. Probably, like, 20 or 30 bags. Itās a whole buncha bags that we pushinā. And I didnāt realize at the time that discrimination might be an issue, so Iām just walking around and thinking everythingās normal.
Photography Chris Jackson / Getty Images
Our cameraman starts filming me walking in the airport, but apparently thereās no cameras allowed in the airport. This is how this whole thing startedānow weāre causing a scene. Iām on my way out the door and a police officer stops the cameraman first. Theyāre real mean. Heās like, āNo cameras in the airport! Delete the pictures!ā He made our cameraman delete all the pictures right there on the spot. After he did that, I was like, Damn, heās gonna do something. Like, Shit, man, we got him riled up.
We keep walking, but the officer ran to catch up to us. He stopped me and heās like, āWho are you?ā Because the camera was on me. I tell him I do music and that I just came here to do a show at the Grand Prix. Heās like, Lemme see your passport. Then he wants to see everyoneās, but itās just me and and my manager. Everyone else had went ahead.
Then he was like, āI wanna check all these bags. Who these bags with? You? I wanna check every single one.ā Thereās no point of separating them, because now youāre searching six people instead of just one person. So I said, āYeah, theyāre my bags.ā But Iām thinking, like, this man really wanna check these? He really wants to hand check 40 bags? He crazy!
So heās checking the bags so long, his coworkers are coming over like, āMan, would you leave these people alone, because you had this man standing here for an hour and you still havenāt found anything. Why donāt you just wrap it up and let it go.ā Meanwhile, itās like when you in high school and you going to the principalās office and you trying to think, like, Did I do anything in class? And eventually Iām like, I should be cool, heās just turnt up.
So, okay. He finally found like, this fairy dust particle of weed in my backpack. Theyāre trying to get like a magnifying glass andāIām for realātheyāre like, arguing if itās green or brown. Theyāre tearing the luggage apart like I got kilos of cocaine or something, ripping the bags apart looking for extra compartments and shit. The officer gets down to the last two bags, and thatās when he finds a bag with some weed in it. It was a good little amount, probably 15 grams or something like that.
At this point Iām thinking, first of all, What the fuck? I didnāt know the weed was there. And second, I didnāt know what the hell they was gonna do. Cause once they seen some weed they went crazy. You would have thought I had a bomb and there was ten seconds left and the world is about to end if they didnāt get every officer up there. But Iām not scared yet, because Iām still thinking that worst case scenario, theyāre just gonna send me back on the plane. Okay, I canāt come. Itās the last show anyways, and I donāt really want to go through all these interrogations. Do what you want to do with the weed, and send me back next flight. So Iām still relaxed at this point. Little did I know, I was gonna be in that motherfucker for 56 days.
They donāt tell you youāre not going home. Theyāre trying to see if Iāve been to Dubai, to see if Iām trying to sell this. I donāt know nobody in no Dubai. Iām like, āItās for me! Itās for nobody else. We do music, I didnāt come to Dubai to sell weed.ā This is when Iām learning, okay they have zero tolerance for this. Period. Theyāre really acting like this is the biggest drug in the world. And thatās when I was like, Okay, this might be serious.
Photography Haider Shah / AFP / Getty Images
āThereās no judge, no jury. They assign you to a prosecutor, and the prosecutor can just do what he wants.ā
They take me to a police station. No English is going down at this point. When they arrest me at the airport, nobody speaks English. Your only hope is this translator, and you donāt know what the hell heās translating. His ear isnāt even trained to capture my English. So youāre saying shit and heās repeating it back in Arabic, and the officer is looking at you, and you donāt know what theyāre talking about. Then they give you a paper, the paper is in Arabic, nothing in EnglishāI didnāt even know they read from right to left, it took me a long time to figure this outāand they tell you to sign it and then you can go home. But I didnāt know what the paper said! Theyāre translating what Iām sayingāIām saying I donāt know whatās going on. I never been here, I donāt know nobody here, I came here for a music showābut I donāt know what theyāre translating, if he was saying what I was saying. You just donāt know. And itās discriminationāI had my hair down and I got dreadlocks, I got tattoos.
This is Thursday, November 19. Everybody had gone, because Iād already said Iāll take care of this and see you later. Weāre American, so we think youāre gonna get up the next day and get bailed out. But it donāt work like that in Abu Dhabi.
They say, āGrab some extra clothes because youāre gonna be here for a couple of days.ā So I was like, āA couple of days? I thought y'all was takinā me home right now!ā Then they take me to the jail cell and I never came back out.
When you first get in there, you donāt know whatās going on. First of all, Iām the only American. Itās Pakistanis, Saudis, Afghans, Kuwaitis, Iranians. And then you got some Africans, like Somalians, Nigerian, Egyptians. All these people was the people in jail. So when I come in, the first thing Iām seeing is like, How am I going to communicate with these people? I donāt know what to do.
One of the guys who could speak a little bit of English, he was saying, āU.S. Embassy, call the U.S. Embassy.ā But I donāt know how to get my U.S. Embassyās number, how to get a calling card to call them, what kind of money they use. I donāt know nothing. Iām just in here.
The next day you go see a prosecutor. Thereās no rights. When they arrest you, they donāt have to say you have a right to this, you have a right to an attorney, you have a right to remain silent. Thereās no judge, no jury. They assign you to a prosecutor, and the prosecutor can just do what he wants with you. They donāt have to tell you anything. They donāt even have to explain what the charge is.
You get a piece of paper, and the paper is in Arabic. I still donāt know exactly what it said to this day. But I would go find somebody who could read Arabic and knew a little bit of English. It said something like: You gotta go to court on such and such date and youāve been charged with drugs. It couldāve been cocaine, it could have been heroin, it could have been marijuana, they treat it all the same over there. So Iām in there with people who had 10, 12, 20 kilos of cocaine from Brazil. Thereās an old man in there right now, 67 years old, he stole a box of candy from the airport, and he still in there. Heās still in there right now because his paper just said he stole something and now heās in the same category as the people who stole 850,000 Dirhams. So thereās an old man in there right now, I can see his face, and heās going crazy over a chocolate bar!
So they give you this paper that tells you in seven days you gotta go to court, but then you only get to say one word. They ask you, did you bring a drug into this country? You donāt get to explain. You just get to say yes or no, and you have to say yes because if you say no, then thereās a whole ānother case going on. So you say yes, and then they give you another paper for 14 days. Then you get thrown in Dubai jail. I donāt care what you did, how minor it was, you canāt do anything for the first 21 days, no matter what.
Photography Karim Sahib / Getty Images
It took three days to get the U.S. embassyās number because the guards wouldnāt give it to me, because thereās a language barrier and they really aināt trying to help you like that. I found out the third day that you had to hit 1-3-3 on the prison phone and then they give you embassy numbers. So I called the U.S. Embassy, and Iām like, āYo! Iām American and Iām in Abu Dhabi prison, get me out of here!ā And they were like, āAight, we gonna send somebody down. Visit days are Tuesday, weāre gonna have somebody down there no later than Tuesday.ā
So now Iām like, Okay, Tuesday itās going down. My U.S. Embassy, they coming, and Iām getting out of here. People was like, āHeās American! Heās American! Heās gonna be outta here in three days.ā Everyone keeps saying this because theyāve never seen an American here. Itās like Iām a fucking unicorn, for real. Theyāve never seen an American where they can walk up and touch him. Itās like Iām an extraterrestrial.
Tuesday the Embassy comes. Two people show up, andāfirst of all, I almost broke down because Iām just happy I see an American thatās talking English. Iām sitting there like, āYou guys came to get me right? So, whatās the fastest I can get out of here?ā And Iām thinking theyāre gonna tell me, like, now. But then theyāre like, āWell, with cases like this itās probably gonna take eight weeks.ā
Iām like, Hold up. Eight weeks? You canāt tell me nothing better than this?! I think I blacked out. My whole body went numb and I was just thinking my life is gonna be over. Thereās no way I can survive eight weeks in here, mentally. I cuss out both people from the U.S. Embassy, and then I walked back devastated ācause thatās when it hit meāIām not getting out of here. Every night I was having dreams that I was doing something else, then I would wake up back in jail. Waking up used to be the worse.
In the jail itās two sides. Thereās the Arabic side and the other side is predominantly African. and itās like a war between both sides. But I could go on both sides ācause I wasnāt neither. When I first moved in, both sides were tryna see who was gonna get the American. And Iām like, I know Iām gonna be cool with them Africans over there, but I need to make sure Iām cool with the Arabic side too. We had one dude in there whoād been in the Taliban, and he was celebrated. He got caught because he fell asleep when he was supposed to be detonating a tank. He was waiting so long that he fell asleep, and the U.S. found him with this bomb in his hand and he said he got tortured by the CIA for 40-something days. With no clothes on, in the cold. And he never gave no names, so the U.S. let him go. This was his little legend.
All of the people there were so far from what Iāve ever known. People carrying kilos of coke in their stomach. Stuff I wouldnāt even imagine doing, these people are doing to try to make it. These folks was living crazy, but I learned from them. Like, thereās a difference between North and South Pakistan. I didnāt know that in Cameroon they speak French. You learn about Islam. In prison they pray five times a day. They just put me on. I talked to everyone about their government and their language. Like, while Iām here, I got to figure it out.
The only thing you could really do is try to make yourself exercise, like on some Rocky shit. You gotta do push-ups, sit-ups off the cell bars. People were making dumbbells out of six liter water bottles. I wanted some books, something to get my mind off the situation. But the embassy couldnāt even get my books in. I stopped talking to the embassy. They were always two steps behind.
I used a whole lot of money on phone cards, I was talking to my mom all the time. Otherwise I didnāt want to talk to anyone else from America. It makes you think about what you miss. You think of the food you was missing, you think of the club, the drinks. And it just really makes it worse.
āFor that moment everyone was just on the same level. Everyone was the same. Everyone was just happy to see me walk out.ā
Photography Instagram @escomoecity
To make a long story short, the warden blessed me. He took a liking to me, taught me some things about Islam and we ended up growing our own relationship. Heās the one who ended up helping me when my lawyer told me it might be six months, a year, or four years. I was sitting there in a daze after my lawyer left, thinking bout what Iām gonna do for the next year or whatever in here, and the warden came in and he was like, āItās not in my job description and I really donāt care about your case, but Iāve come to like you as a person. Iām not suppose to do this, but Iām going to call your prosecutor.ā I couldnāt even get the U.S. Embassy to call the prosecutor!
The warden said, āGimme 10 minutes and Iāll let you know.ā He called me and was like, āHey I just talked to your prosecutor, I think you might be going home in a week.ā I just gave him this big ass hug. And the inmates, they not even used to seeing that. That canāt see an inmate giving the warden a hug. I called my mom and I was like, āMom, I think I might have good news. The warden just did me a whole favor.ā And she was like, āI knew it! I knew it! Everybody been praying.ā Weād been on an up and down roller coasterāI was supposed to be there for Thanksgiving, and then we thought I was gonna be there for Christmas.
When I left it was real dope. Everybody from the African and the Arabic side came out of their cell and walked me to the door. Everybody was like āAmerica! Going home, America!ā Everyone from both sides was clapping. That shit was dope, ācause for that moment everyone was just on the same level. Everyone was the same. Everyone was just happy to see me walk out.
The first thing I did was walk into the airport paranoid. I bought some headphones, because after no music for all those daysāand they donāt know nothing about hip-hopāI wanted to listen to music so bad. So I bought some headphones, then I went up to the escalators and bought some ice cream and some cookies and I was like, I canāt believe this. Like, what just happened?

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*indecipherable*
When you hungry af but the microwave is taking forever
Haaaaaaaaaaaaa!
Full Video of Racist White Girl Brutally Beaten for Calling Black Student a Porch Monkey and Other Racist Names
This girl called this boy a porch monkey, a jigaboo, and so many other racist names. The girl clearly says āIāve called you like 20 names already and you havenāt done sh*tā and he says āSay it againā then she says āPorch monkeyā then the boy beat her.
She deserved every bit of those connecting fists.
Doing the Lordās work.
YOOOOO WHEN THAT PUNXH CONNECTED, I WAS FINISHED
yeeeee

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