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Meek Mill’s Cosmic Payback Plan: How Prison Fueled His Fiery Quest to Shake America’s Foundations!

Added on November 30, 2025 inEntertainment News Cards

So, Meek Mill just dropped a bomb on social media that’s got everyone talking—and honestly, it’s got me thinking about cosmic justice. I mean, with Mercury retrograde messing with communication and Jupiter expanding everything (good and bad), could the stars be nudging Meek to finally cash in on the universe’s long-awaited balance? The Philadelphia rapper’s fiery vow to repay America a billion dollars for a past stolen by poverty, violence, and a system that locked him up for things as minor as riding a bike—it’s raw, real, and, well, let’s say astoundingly vindictive in the best way. Is this just a rap battle with the justice system, or a stellar cosmic reckoning? Either way, Meek’s message hits with the force of a supermoon eclipse—impossible to ignore and destined to shake things up. LEARN MORE

Meek Mill unleashed an impassioned message on social media targeting the U.S. justice system and vowing financial retribution for the years he says were stolen from him due to poverty, violence and incarceration.

“Ima pay America back in a billion dollars for making me grow up around murder and poverty…I had weed on me and got found guilty for point a gun at a cop! Locking me in cells with random killers .. locking me 23/1 for riding a bike! Ima get back before I die I swear to god!” Meek Mill posted on X.


The Philadelphia rapper has long been vocal about his turbulent history with the criminal justice system. His tweet references a 2007 arrest involving gun and drug charges that led to a decade-long legal saga.

At just 19, Meek was convicted of carrying a firearm without a license and drug possession, resulting in an initial sentence of 11 to 23 months in county jail followed by years of probation. He was even ordered to take etiquette clase.

That probation would later become the center of national attention.

In 2017, Meek Mill was sentenced to two to four years in prison for violating probation, including popping a wheelie on a dirt bike in New York City, a move that prosecutors argued was reckless and violated the terms of his release.

The arrest for the wheelie, which was captured on video, drew widespread criticism and ignited a larger conversation about how the justice system disproportionately punishes Black men for minor infractions.

The judge in that case, Genece Brinkley, faced scrutiny for what many believed was excessive punishment. Brinkley had previously denied requests to end Meek’s probation early and was accused of having a personal vendetta against him.



After spending five months behind bars, Meek’s conviction was overturned in 2018 due to credibility issues with the arresting officer. The Pennsylvania Superior Court granted him a new trial, and the charges were later dropped.

That legal victory paved the way for Meek to co-found the Reform Alliance alongside Jay-Z, Michael Rubin and others, with a mission to overhaul probation and parole laws across the country.

Meek’s tweet reflects the weight of those years, lost time, missed opportunities and the trauma of incarceration. While his message was emotional, it was also a declaration of purpose.

He’s not just talking about revenge; he’s talking about redemption, on his own terms.

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