
Meek Mill Challenges Hip-Hop’s ‘F*** the Streets’ Talk With Call for Accountability

Meek Mill is stepping into hip-hop’s latest cultural debate, using a string of candid posts on X to question how artists speak about the streets and whether their actions match their words.
On Dec. 20, the Philadelphia rapper reacted to the rising “F*** the Streets” language circulating across the genre. Rather than fully embracing or rejecting the sentiment, Meek offered a more layered take centered on responsibility and follow-through.
Addressing artists and public figures who continue to invoke street credibility, he urged them to look past image and security. “To the guys pushing that ‘street sht,’ make sure feeding and supplying resources and opportunities for your family and community,” he wrote.
He pushed the point further, adding, “Not just killers you paying to protect you. Make sure you didn’t put the streets before your ‘real family.’ A lot of n***s using the streets.”
Meek’s remarks came as several high-profile rappers have publicly distanced themselves from street affiliations. Instead of criticizing that shift, he framed his comments as a reminder that slogans mean little without tangible impact.
Pointing to his own history, Meek wrote, “I been up since 23. I’ve changed laws, took 10% of my hood around the world, gave verses to lift whole hoods up, gave the streets jobs.”
He followed with, “Went hood to hood year for year on the land. I don’t gotta explain myself.”
Meek also criticized how online conversations unfold. “Why take things out of context when we can better ourself,” he wrote.
Drawing a clear line around credibility, he added, “If you ain’t paying for no bails, lawyers or funerals don’t speak on this topic. This sh*t not for everybody.”
He closed with a warning about exploitation, writing, “Some people love watching the streets fail while they manipulate them.”