Hip hop legend hits back at 'creepy racist weirdo' who challenged him to boxing match
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Rapper Talib Kweli is not interested in stepping into a ring with a man who has been publicly daring him to fight, but the online standoff between them has only escalated, with each accusing the other of stoking threats.

It began when a Facebook user named Jay Artem posted what he billed as "day one of tagging Talib Kweli and challenging him to box me until he accepts," signing off with "Let's throw hands" and a fist emoji. Kweli, the veteran Brooklyn MC who has spent years feuding publicly with figures across the right, did not let it slide.

In a lengthy response, Kweli labeled Artem "a white nationalist" who "hates Black people" and "hates gay people," a characterization that is Kweli's alone. There is no public record establishing that Artem holds those views, and the rapper offered no documentation beyond his own assertion. Kweli has a long history of confronting white nationalism, including a 2018 essay on free speech and hate, alongside an equally long history of combative social media battles.

Kweli said he would not accept the boxing challenge, then issued a warning of his own. "I do not agree to participate in a contest of physical dominance with this creepy racist weirdo," he wrote, adding that "the quickest way to lose the use of their hands is to try to place one on me" and "He gonna learn today."

By his next post, Artem claimed the feud had spilled onto his family, writing that Kweli "couldn't take a challenge and asked his fans to come after me and now he's got people threatening my 5 year old." He paired that grievance with a threat of his own, warning that "anyone who comes on my property will cease to exist," and gave Kweli "til the end of today to tell his fans to stop this."

The claim that Artem's young child has been threatened could not be independently verified, and it is his account alone. But it marks how quickly a boxing dare curdled into something uglier: two men trading menacing language online, each casting the other as the aggressor, with a five-year-old now invoked in the crossfire.