Juelz Santana says that the beef between Cam and Jim isn’t something he “condones” and that he refuses to add fuel to the fire because “no one wins when the family feuds.” “As men, things happen, and social media is so powerful and so strong now that sometimes things spill over,” Santana shared before opening up about the night he supported Jones as he performed with 50 Cent during his first rift with Cam in the late 2000s. The topic, discussed on Cam’s It Is What It Is podcast with 50, is what prompted Jones to tell both Cam and 50 to “get off my d**k” and their subsequent shots at one another. In fact, Santana believes that such podcast conversations can lead to issues with those who don’t care to be mentioned, like Jones. “Everybody be on some sh*t, they don’t want people saying they names in interviews, but now people got these platforms where they asking people, so it’s like a thin line,” Santana explained. “So then you got Jim…even though Jim wasn’t attacked, his name was mentioned. So now, it opens the door for Jim to say something back, that’s what happens with these podcasts and sh*t like that. So, it opens the door, and Jim chose to, you know, say why ni**as was on his d**k. That’s how Jim chose to carry it.”In addition to telling Cam to “get off his d**k,” Jones dissed Cam’s podcast partner, Ma$e, which resulted in Cam laying into the “Ballin'” rapper on the show. He accused Jones of being from The Bronx — not Harlem — and of being a “fan” who worked his way into the circle. Jones responded by dropping the snippet to a Cam’ron diss, “JOMO, Capo hopped on Instagram to reveal that his diss track, “JOMO,” is on the way, but his label told him to “slow down” on releasing it at the moment.
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