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Saturday, April 5, 2025
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Kanye West:

The Genius, The Villain, and the Fishbowl Effect

By Relentless Aaron


I have followed Kanye West’s career from the very beginning. As a fan of music and cultural movements, I gave Kanye his flowers. The early works—The College Dropout, Late Registration, Graduation—were undeniable. He shaped a generation. His production style changed hip-hop. His vulnerability opened doors for other artists. His influence reached far beyond music into fashion, media, and even politics.

But there’s a deep conflict in me.

Remember when ABC World News called me “the Kanye West of Urban Fiction“?

Well, that once-proud moment now feels fucking embarrassing!
While I have admired Kanye as an artist, I have also come to stand as his arch-rival, not through petty industry beef or creative competition, but because of the man behind the music. A man who, in my eyes, has crossed lines that no talent, no catalog, no billion-dollar valuation can justify.

Kanye sexually assaulted Niykee Hinton.
I won’t dance around it. Many won’t dare say it aloud, but I will. This is not just a “controversial” artist; this is a man carrying the weight of serious transgressions — ones that have largely gone unpunished. If Niykee is the only victim, that alone is one too many.

Now, watching this recent interview unfold, I see more than just erratic behavior or eccentric genius. What I saw was a man haunted. Haunted by guilt, by a crumbling legacy, and by the public fishbowl he’s created for himself.


Kanye’s Mental State, Exposed

Here’s what I observed in plain sight:

  • Paranoia: Kanye repeatedly fears for his safety, claiming he is being targeted for hospitalization or death.
  • Grandiosity: Declares himself the “only king,” “closest thing to God,” and the singular leader of culture.
  • Disorganized Thinking: Bounces between unrelated topics—fashion, conspiracies, betrayal, God, media—without clear logic.
  • Aggression: Hostile language towards former friends and business associates, as if he’s trapped in a permanent war.
  • Religious Mania: Obsessed with God’s wrath, divine missions, and the idea that he is an instrument of Biblical proportions.
  • Control Obsession: Fights for ownership of his children, his art, and his influence while accusing the world of stealing from him.
  • Isolation: Contemplates fleeing to Japan as the only “safe” place.
  • Emotional Volatility: Swings between anger, laughter, vulnerability, and suicidal references.

The Fishbowl Effect

Kanye isn’t just battling the media or corporations — I believe he is battling himself. The guilt, the unresolved wrongs, and the knowledge that his past is catching up with him. When you harm others, publicly or privately, you may escape earthly punishment, but you can never outrun the weight of truth.

Kanye lives in a fishbowl of his own making. Every move is watched. Every word is analyzed. And now it seems, every skeleton is starting to rattle.

His erratic behavior isn’t just “Kanye being Kanye.” It’s deeper. It’s darker. And as someone who once admired the art, but who stands opposed to the man, I refuse to call it “entertainment.”

This is a man unraveling under the weight of the life he’s lived.


My Voice of Reason
I am both a fan and a rival. I am someone who has vibed to the records, studied the genius, but also someone who will never ignore the harm done to women like Niykee Hinton, or whoever else may exist beyond the headlines.

Kanye is a case study in how power and unchecked trauma breed paranoia, broken relationships, and public collapse.
It’s no longer just about music.
It’s about accountability.

SIDE NOTE: Oh, and BTW, Niykee still has the ability to come forth and show up. She can still launch a civil suit in the SDNY, under the Survivors Act, and come for her retribution. So there’s that.

Good Luck, Ye!

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