Ja Rule refuses to put an end to his social media warpath against longtime rival 50 Cent.
Following the release of Diddy-focused Netflix documentary Sean Combs: The Reckoning, Rule has zeroed in on domestic violence allegations against 50 Cent and accused him of being hypocritical.
On Wednesday (Dec. 10), the "Clap Back" rapper continued revisiting abuse accusations involving the G-Unit founder and trolled him on X, formerly Twitter.
One screenshot showed a headline from a July 2025 Bloomberg Law article centering plaintiff Jahaira Rodriguez, who attempted to move forward with a $20 million lawsuit against the media mogul.
The woman says she suffered personal injuries from Fifty "well prior" to his Chapter 11 bankruptcy, which was filed in 2015 and granted the following year.
"Let’s not be selective with our outrage!!! If you support Curtis you support DOMESTIC VIOLENCE… Now run this woman her coins!!!" Rule tweeted.
Ja Rule said he was calling out Fifty for being "an abuser" and compared his actions to Diddy's.
In a separate tweet, Ja Rule shared a screenshot of an article from former reporter Sara Hammel, who previously alleged that an unspecified but “very famous” man had assaulted her, prompting her departure from journalism nearly 10 years ago.
"You got some explaining to do here Herman!!! An open letter to @netflix WOW…" Rule tweeted.
Rule now says he wants to produce a documentary about Fif, with whom he's feuded for nearly 25 years. He alleged a previous tweet that the "Many Men" artist has a vendetta against Diddy.
"Let's be real that n***a dgaf about the victims we ALL know why he did the doc," Rule tweeted on Sunday (Dec. 7). "Herman's a cancer to the culture if he cares so much then donate the profits to charities for domestic violence."
50 Cent, meanwhile, has maintained that he doesn't have personal issues with Diddy, who's currently serving a 50-month sentence for violating two counts of the Mann Act.
"There’s no place for me, I didn’t make the docuseries,” Fifty told GQ. "I got the best possible people to make one. That’s why you don’t feel anybody’s energy when watching."