"Are there any real niggas left!?" - Nick Fuentes
@Kaizerrev First rapper to sample this is a legend
@Kaizerrev Elon watching this one clip all over X.
@Kaizerrev The edits from this monologue are gonna be insane
@Kaizerrev I stand with Nick Fuentes
@Kaizerrev how tf is this dude such a great orator
@Kaizerrev 😭😂 how does he expect anyone to take him seriously. The way he says nigga is beyond cringe.
@Kaizerrev I’m a real nigga understanding what he’s saying. They are threatening his life or making him feel uneasy in some capacity that he doesn’t want to address. Worrisome how he keeps mentioning “when he’s not around” or if they “do something”.
@Kaizerrev You know what, I ain’t even mad, You can tell her ain’t fully comfortable saying it, but at this point, he’s not lying A lot of ppl are fake and not real niggas
@Kaizerrev I personally like to think of myself as an officially certified RN.
@Kaizerrev If only The Boondocks show was rebooted
@Kaizerrev I want to eat Nick Fuentes ass. I am that real nigga!
@Kaizerrev I’m a a black Jewish trans lesbian. I’m probably the realest nigga I know aside from Obama
@Kaizerrev Real niggas are busy minding their own business. Also, if he was a real nigga then he certainly would be wearing two pairs of basketball shorts underneath that desk
@Kaizerrev Nick might be a lot of things, but a Christian isn’t one of them. Matthew 12:36 But I say unto you, That every idle word that men shall speak, they shall give account thereof in the day of judgment.
@Kaizerrev The only real NIGGA we both know is… @kanyewest
Because that era is over you have a few left, but we don’t call ourselves that in word. That played out a long time ago. Ethiopian Title: Negus is a Ge’ez word meaning “king” or “ruler,” used historically in Ethiopia to denote regional kings or the emperor. It derives from the Semitic root “ngś,” meaning “to reign.” The title was often bestowed by the Negusa Nagast (“king of kings”) on governors of key provinces like Gojjam, Begemder, Wello, Tigray, or Eritrea (where the ruler was called Bahri Negasi, or “Sea King”). Notable figures like Emperor Haile Selassie I and Menelik II held this title, symbolizing sovereignty and nobility. In Islamic tradition, it’s referred to as Al-Najashi. The title fell out of political use after the Ethiopian monarchy ended in 1974 but retains cultural significance, especially in Ethiopian and Eritrean communities and the Rastafari movement.