Rapper Busta Rhymes makes an anti-mask throw on a video railing resurfaced against the mandates of COVID-19: “F ** k your mask”
- A resurgent video of Busta Rhymes appeared on Tuesday showing the rapper doing an anti-mask throw on stage
- “F ** k your mask,” he said in the clip that was filmed during a show in St. Louis. Louis, Missouri, in June
- The video appeared simultaneously on YouTube, but only went viral on Twitter this week
- “COVID can suck the ** k ad. All these weird little ass and government policies and mandates are shit,” he said.
A video by rapper Busta Rhymes has gone viral showing the 49-year-old star doing an anti-mask throw amid the COVID-19 pandemic.
Busta, whose real name is Trevor Tahiem Smith Jr., jumped to light during a show in Missouri in June (which was then shared on YouTube), but only went viral on Tuesday.
In the clip, the hip hop legend faced the mandates of government masks that have been established over the past year and a half to curb the spread of the pandemic.

Anti-masking: A video by rapper Busta Rhymes has gone viral showing the 49-year-old star making an anti-mask run amid the COVID-19 pandemic during a program in June
“This is my second spectacle to human life in the last fifteen months. COVID can aspire to ** **,” he told the audience. “All these small and strange government policies and mandates are an unusual aspect.”
According to page Six, Busta was the surprise headliner earlier this summer at Seoul Taco’s tenth anniversary blog party in St. Petersburg. Louis, Missouri, where the video was filmed.
Local people can be heard cheering on the rapper when he stated that mask warrants “take away our civil liberties”.
“It’s called the right to freedom given by God, right?” he screamed. “No human being is supposed to tell you that you can’t even breathe freely. F ** k your mask.

“This is my second spectacle to human life in the last fifteen months. COVID can aspire to ** **,” he told the audience. “All these small and strange government policies and mandates are an unusual aspect.”

“It’s called the right to freedom given by God, right?” he screamed. “No human being is supposed to tell you that you can’t even breathe freely. F ** k your mask.
Busta added that he realized that “some of you might all feel different,” but went on to say “f ** k your mask.”
“We can’t eat food with an af ** king mask on,” he fainted. “We can’t even see each other’s smiles with a mask on.”
“All that energy is blocked when our mask is activated and energy is important,” Busta continued. “We are all drivers of good energy.”
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommends that anyone over the age of two who is not fully vaccinated wear a mask in an indoor public setting.


Bad looking: Although fans of the crowd applauded Busta’s run, many on social media expressed their disappointment
For a brief period of time, the CDC said it was okay for the vaccinated to go completely without masks inside, but because of the more contagious Delta variant, it now suggests that those people also keep masks inside. in places of high transmission.
While fans of the crowd cheered on Busta’s run, many on social media expressed their disappointment.
‘Envelope. People are dying, ”a Twitter user succinctly said.

“We can’t eat food with an af ** king mask on,” he fainted. “We can’t even see each other’s smiles with a mask on. All that energy is blocked when our mask is activated and energy is important.”
‘Now I’m not going to lie, I hate to wear it, but it’s definitely necessary and I wear it !!!!! It is very ignorant to say smh mainly because, as they said, he has friends who have suffered from it, it is like a slap in the face “, added another.
A third said blank: “You better keep that same energy when he or his loved one ends up in the ICU struggling to breathe.”
Several other social media users noted that Busta Rhymes himself suffered a COVID-19 attack. The Flipmode Squad star has yet to comment on the controversy.

Listen to the science: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommends that anyone over the age of two who is not fully vaccinated wear a mask in an indoor public setting.