Afroman has made it known that he wants to build a micronation on a large plot of land he recently purchased.
In a recent interview with Andrew Callaghan, the rapper brought up his new property and what he envisions doing with it. "I bought 195 acres. I want a real hood," he said around the 1:05:30 mark in the video above. "I want a real country that I control, like, my land is my country. I’m the judge. I’m the president. I’m the army. I’m the police."
Callaghan suggested that the self-proclaimed independent nation, known as a micronation, would accomplish these goals, bringing up The Republic of Molossia, which was founded in 1977, initially under the name of Grand Republic of Vuldstein. President Grand Admiral Colonel Doctor Kevin Baugh has been the leader of this micronation in Nevada for nearly three decades.
When asked what rule he would implement for his own micronation, Afroman immediately said he would prohibit the use of the N-word.
"I would like to have a whole bunch of land, to fence it off, and all the Black people that don’t like using the N-word, they don’t refer to their brothers and sisters as the N-word, they don’t want the N-word being said to their children, I would set up a nation for them," he explained.
Afroman added that he would still work with and defend Black people who do not align with these specific views, even though he believes they "contaminate and poison the American Black soul."
"I would create an environment where a young Black person can grow up, know that they are a brother. They are Afro-American," he said. "I would nurture and raise a good citizen, and then I’d let them know, the people outside this fence are gonna address you with the most offensive word in the English language."
"But just know, that’s not you," Afroman continued. "Just know not to do nothing with these type of people. Don’t trust a person that calls you that."
The American flag outfit Afroman was wearing in his interview is the same one he wore in court last month when a jury sided with him in the defamation and invasion of privacy lawsuit filed by sheriff’s deputies following their 2022 raid of his home.