Azealia Banks Sparks Controversy Again, Reaffirms Support For Donald TrumpPhoto by Frazer Harrison/Getty Images)

Azealia Banks has never shied away from controversy, especially when it comes to Kanye West.

Over the years, the Harlem rapper has taken aim at West through a steady stream of incendiary tweets. Her commentary reached new heights this week after West made a shocking admission in a song snippet—claiming he had sexual encounters with a male cousin during his youth. Banks, who’s long questioned West’s behavior, wasted no time firing off her latest round of wild allegations.

In one especially charged tweet, Banks unleashed a chaotic theory tying West to several high-profile men. “Kanye and Virgil were lovers,” she wrote, referencing the late designer Virgil Abloh.

“Elon def got some head from Kanye off that ketamine. Kanye is on one of them Diddy tapes. Jay-Z was like no homo. Trump was like no homo. Travis was like no homo. Drake was like no thank you. Amber hit him with the strap. Kim thought she could, but vomited on his back and started crying. Kris yelled CUT!”

Her rant, as surreal as it was scathing, didn’t stop there. Banks called for other artists to push back on West’s antics, naming Taylor Swift as the one person who should finally confront him.

“Omg when is Miss Taylor just going to get this dude?” she tweeted, before deleting the post. “Taylor, snatch this shoe-boot-wearing man out the socket. I promise no one will accuse you of racism just because he’s Black and crusty. Do it for all the Black girls he steals from daily.”

West’s track, rumored to be titled Cousins,” is expected to appear on his next album CUCK, a project that has gone through several iterations, including a scrapped version known as WW3. Earlier this year, West leaked Bully, a track from the same recording cycle, on social media without offering a formal release date.

Meanwhile, Banks continues to fire from the hip. Though she occasionally expresses regret over past statements—such as voting for Donald Trump in the last presidential election—she rarely backtracks for long.