
Dave Blunts is not holding back. After private texts between him and Kanye West leaked, the 25-year-old Iowa rapper released a diss track that rips into Ye with wild allegations. Among the shots he fires is the claim that Kanye West kissed a transgender woman. Blunts names Kanye by name, drags their broken collab, and throws in personal jabs about grooming, false friendship, and betrayal.
Blunts alleges Kanye promised love, respect, and loyalty but never meant any of it. He frames it as feeling used, saying Ye treated him like a friend when it suited him, then switched up once public eyes were on. Blunts also slams Kanye’s past antisemitic controversies accusing him of hypocrisy and of being “fanned out.”
The issue of kissing a transgender woman enters the track in lines that recall Kanye supposedly confessing to Blunts that he kissed someone who was trans, and that it happened more than once. Blunts uses this to question Kanye’s sincerity, integrity, and the way he handles relationships, loyalty, and truth. He spins the allegation into a larger narrative about secrets, image, and how fame can distort trust.
This battle seems to come from a place of real frustration. Blunts was part of Kanye’s creative camp earlier in 2025, writing songs for Ye’s upcoming album In a Perfect World. But things soured. Blunts says he cut ties. He claims Kanye misled him, didn’t respect him, treated him like a project instead of a person.
What this moment shows is that beef in Hip-Hop is never just about lyrics. It is about trust, power, identity, public image, and who gets to define someone’s story. Whether the allegations hold up or get refuted, Blunts has already shifted the narrative. He made this personal. He made it loud. And people are listening.



