He was the gravel-voiced outlaw of hip-hop, a man whose bark matched his bite but now, DMX’s fiery words from beyond the grave are echoing louder than ever.

For years, Earl “DMX” Simmons raged against the machine, blasting the music industry as corrupt, predatory and rotten to its very core. His targets? None other than Sean “Diddy” Combs and Shawn “Jay-Z” Carter — the two men who shaped an empire.

At the time, his warnings were brushed off as the rants of a troubled star. But in the wake of Diddy’s shocking fall from grace and the renewed scrutiny around Jay-Z’s past, DMX’s once-dismissed prophecies are starting to look like chilling truths.

“I’m Not an Industry Artist”

DMX made no secret of his disdain for the business. “I’m an artist in the industry,” he declared — a rebel navigating a snake pit. He accused executives of treating rappers like disposable commodities, selling out their souls for platinum plaques.

His Fury at Diddy

DMX’s blasts against Diddy were vicious — and now, eerily prophetic.

He accused the Bad Boy mogul of manipulating artists like Craig Mack, whose career crumbled after refusing Diddy’s demands.

He claimed Diddy “bent over” his signees, taking everything from them — words once thought to be metaphorical, but now laced with sinister meaning in light of today’s sex-trafficking allegations.

And when Def Jam came knocking, DMX proudly refused Diddy’s contract, insisting he already knew “too much about the rot at Bad Boy.”

The Jay-Z Sabotage

If Diddy exploited, Jay-Z schemed — at least in DMX’s eyes.

The two New York titans clashed for years, but things turned brutal in 2004 when Jay-Z became president of Def Jam. DMX was convinced the appointment wasn’t about business — it was about burying him.

He believed Jay deliberately sabotaged his album Year of the Dog… Again, starving it of promotion to clear the way for Jay’s own comeback.

Jay-Z shrugged it off as rivalry. DMX called it a calculated hit job.

“The Industry Is Filth”

But it wasn’t just about two men. DMX slammed an entire system.

He attacked label bosses like Lyor Cohen for coldly exploiting artists.

He condemned pay-to-play radio deals and DJs “bought” by executives.

And he exposed the “soulless” mentality at the top — a truth confirmed when Cohen called him a “gremlin” in a funeral message after his death in 2021.

The Reckoning Arrives

For years, DMX’s words were overshadowed by his addictions and legal troubles — easy reasons to dismiss him.

But now, with Diddy battling federal indictments and Jay-Z facing lawsuits and scrutiny, the “filth” DMX screamed about is being dragged into the light.

What once sounded like paranoia now reads like prophecy.

A Prophet in Pitbull’s Clothing

DMX may be gone, but his ghost looms large over hip-hop’s biggest scandal. His voice, once dismissed as a growl of rage, has become a chilling reminder:

The industry’s rotten core is real. The wolves he named are finally being hunted.

And his warning — “I’m not an industry artist, I’m an artist in the industry” — may yet define the reckoning tearing through music’s most powerful empires.