Beyoncé fan page. Yes, we are back! Backup @IChoseViolencee Co-Founder @Nicrinzetech for your AI workflows and automations.

Melbourne, Victoria
Joined September 2016
Beyoncé been in the game for 20+ years. Paid her dues, toiled, performed in the shittiest of places. Built a solid career and y’all are here comparing her to the new girls. I ain’t even mad coz it’s a testament to her talent, longevity and relevance, which your faves don’t have
According to the top Concert Producer in Kazakstan, Malik Khasenov, “Beyoncé, Eminem and Shakira are the most frequently requested artists by fans in Kazakhstan” They are gonna have to keep waiting for Beyoncé 😂 nur.kz/showbiz/career/230670…
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Sweet Honey to Summer Renaissance to Buckiin was such a moment at the Cowboy Carter Tour! A highlight!
I’m not sure people on Facebook are real people. They make TikTok conspiracy theorists seem like normal people.
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II HANDS II HEAVEN is the wedding song of the Decade!
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Beyoncé had the world in a chokehold with TEXAS HOLD ‘EM. The song was everywhere! It was played at weddings, line dances, malls, radios, etc. people started complaining that they hear it every where. 😂🤣🤣 Truely one of the biggest global hits in the last 10 years!
NotBeyoncebutViolence retweeted
Beyoncé and Jay Z at The Boy is Mine Tour
Beyoncé and Jay Z at The Boy is Mine Tour
NotBeyoncebutViolence retweeted
Anybody attacking you on this is just a hypocrite or having panic attack because you spilled
Beyoncé and racism is always such an interesting topic. It depends on the side you’re viewing it from. It’s complicated. She drops a Black empowerment song: Black community: “We’re tired of this Black empowerment music, Mufasa jams, drag queen music.” A non-Black person dances, covers, or appreciates the music: Black community: “This isn’t for them. Why are there white people at Club Renaissance? Why are they at Club Cowboy Carter? Do they even understand the theme of the music? We can’t have anything.” A song you said you didn’t hear, an event you didn’t attend. You’re mad that non-Black people are appreciating it? So what would you rather? Beyoncé drops music reclaiming Black genres that were whitewashed: Black community: “She’s so performative. She only cares about money. She’s using the Black community to stay relevant. I’m not streaming that.” Non-Black person: “That album healed me. I learned so much history. I’m writing an essay about it.” Black community: “This isn’t for y’all. Stay out of Black people’s business.” So why are you mad they’re appreciating music you don’t even want to support? Beyoncé releases Cécred: Black community: “She’s such a capitalist. Another cash grab. It’ll pack up in three months. We need to talk about consumerism.” White person: “Cécred is the truth. It’s the best hair care line I’ve used in years. Beyoncé did her thing.” Black community: “We can’t have nothing. It’s for Black hair. Stay out of our business.” So what’s the issue? I don’t remember Beyoncé ever saying Cécred was only for Black hair. Beyoncé drops merch: Black community: “Now’s not the time. With everything going on, she’s greedy. Another waste for the planet. She and her husband only care about money.” White person: “I love the merch. I bought five.” Black person: “Buying merch you don’t even understand the theme of? Imagine a white person wearing Cowboy Carter. I’m sick.” So why are you mad they bought merch you weren’t going to buy anyway? In conclusion, y’all don’t support Beyoncé but still want to gatekeep her products from those who do. Deep down, it’s not about race or art. You just want her to flop. Her success makes you angry, so you hide behind whatever pseudo-puritanical narrative is trending that year. And that brings me back to my earlier point- how can we even discuss racism around Beyoncé when some of the people in her own community are at the forefront of the hate she gets? And to be clear, this isn’t me excusing racism from white people, and it’s not me saying every Black person does this. But some of y’all will say it is.
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NotBeyoncebutViolence retweeted
Black people prayed for Cécred to flop, even said she was putting demons in the shampoo... Then when white people started to use it and it went viral, all of a sudden black people want to gatekeep Cécred talking about some "we cant have nothing" 😑
Beyoncé and racism is always such an interesting topic. It depends on the side you’re viewing it from. It’s complicated. She drops a Black empowerment song: Black community: “We’re tired of this Black empowerment music, Mufasa jams, drag queen music.” A non-Black person dances, covers, or appreciates the music: Black community: “This isn’t for them. Why are there white people at Club Renaissance? Why are they at Club Cowboy Carter? Do they even understand the theme of the music? We can’t have anything.” A song you said you didn’t hear, an event you didn’t attend. You’re mad that non-Black people are appreciating it? So what would you rather? Beyoncé drops music reclaiming Black genres that were whitewashed: Black community: “She’s so performative. She only cares about money. She’s using the Black community to stay relevant. I’m not streaming that.” Non-Black person: “That album healed me. I learned so much history. I’m writing an essay about it.” Black community: “This isn’t for y’all. Stay out of Black people’s business.” So why are you mad they’re appreciating music you don’t even want to support? Beyoncé releases Cécred: Black community: “She’s such a capitalist. Another cash grab. It’ll pack up in three months. We need to talk about consumerism.” White person: “Cécred is the truth. It’s the best hair care line I’ve used in years. Beyoncé did her thing.” Black community: “We can’t have nothing. It’s for Black hair. Stay out of our business.” So what’s the issue? I don’t remember Beyoncé ever saying Cécred was only for Black hair. Beyoncé drops merch: Black community: “Now’s not the time. With everything going on, she’s greedy. Another waste for the planet. She and her husband only care about money.” White person: “I love the merch. I bought five.” Black person: “Buying merch you don’t even understand the theme of? Imagine a white person wearing Cowboy Carter. I’m sick.” So why are you mad they bought merch you weren’t going to buy anyway? In conclusion, y’all don’t support Beyoncé but still want to gatekeep her products from those who do. Deep down, it’s not about race or art. You just want her to flop. Her success makes you angry, so you hide behind whatever pseudo-puritanical narrative is trending that year. And that brings me back to my earlier point- how can we even discuss racism around Beyoncé when some of the people in her own community are at the forefront of the hate she gets? And to be clear, this isn’t me excusing racism from white people, and it’s not me saying every Black person does this. But some of y’all will say it is.
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NotBeyoncebutViolence retweeted
Tenho certeza que Bey guardou versões diferentes pros filmes, ela fez isso no SELF, Lemonade, BIK. Versões que tivemos no Renaissence: Cuff It live junto do remix com outros elementos (versão clean tem uns vocais adicionais), Energy na interlude. Jolene, THE remix tbm, 2H2H. Fora as versões live que são de outro mundo, parecem outra gravação. Essa melodia dramática que não entrou em THIQUE é muito suspeita, me lembra muito as melodias de Scooby-Doo, animações de suspense como a casa monstro,Coraline, filmes de terror/suspense, aliens. Mas o que será que Beyoncé está fazendo durante os visuais de THIQUE?
Hit-Boy in the studio producing ‘THIQUE’
NotBeyoncebutViolence retweeted
OMFG I LOVE THIS SMMMM 😩 IS THIS ALLIE'S?
I want this Xmas decoration! This is beautiful.
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NotBeyoncebutViolence retweeted
You can’t gaslight me cuz we see the shit in real time. Black ppl were just on here co-signing a Black man viral tweet saying Kelly was always prettier than Beyoncé. Black ppl the ones who call everything Bey does “Solange coded.” Black ppl say she killed Aaliyah. Prove me wrong.
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NotBeyoncebutViolence retweeted
Real IMPACT👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾
Beyoncé Homecoming at the San Antonio Spurs game last night!
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NotBeyoncebutViolence retweeted
Today is the day
One day I’m gonna open a can of worms about race and Beyoncé on this app. Especially the way some of yall act whenever she drops music, merch, or any product. And it won’t be good I’ve been trying to stay out of the way for obvious reasons. But some of y’all keep pushing it.
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NotBeyoncebutViolence retweeted
Because Beyoncé has it all, she makes people feel so insecure that their first reaction whenever they see any news about her is to feel the need to humble her. What makes it even more painful for them is that she refuses to give them any reaction, so they keep trying constantly.
Beyoncé and racism is always such an interesting topic. It depends on the side you’re viewing it from. It’s complicated. She drops a Black empowerment song: Black community: “We’re tired of this Black empowerment music, Mufasa jams, drag queen music.” A non-Black person dances, covers, or appreciates the music: Black community: “This isn’t for them. Why are there white people at Club Renaissance? Why are they at Club Cowboy Carter? Do they even understand the theme of the music? We can’t have anything.” A song you said you didn’t hear, an event you didn’t attend. You’re mad that non-Black people are appreciating it? So what would you rather? Beyoncé drops music reclaiming Black genres that were whitewashed: Black community: “She’s so performative. She only cares about money. She’s using the Black community to stay relevant. I’m not streaming that.” Non-Black person: “That album healed me. I learned so much history. I’m writing an essay about it.” Black community: “This isn’t for y’all. Stay out of Black people’s business.” So why are you mad they’re appreciating music you don’t even want to support? Beyoncé releases Cécred: Black community: “She’s such a capitalist. Another cash grab. It’ll pack up in three months. We need to talk about consumerism.” White person: “Cécred is the truth. It’s the best hair care line I’ve used in years. Beyoncé did her thing.” Black community: “We can’t have nothing. It’s for Black hair. Stay out of our business.” So what’s the issue? I don’t remember Beyoncé ever saying Cécred was only for Black hair. Beyoncé drops merch: Black community: “Now’s not the time. With everything going on, she’s greedy. Another waste for the planet. She and her husband only care about money.” White person: “I love the merch. I bought five.” Black person: “Buying merch you don’t even understand the theme of? Imagine a white person wearing Cowboy Carter. I’m sick.” So why are you mad they bought merch you weren’t going to buy anyway? In conclusion, y’all don’t support Beyoncé but still want to gatekeep her products from those who do. Deep down, it’s not about race or art. You just want her to flop. Her success makes you angry, so you hide behind whatever pseudo-puritanical narrative is trending that year. And that brings me back to my earlier point- how can we even discuss racism around Beyoncé when some of the people in her own community are at the forefront of the hate she gets? And to be clear, this isn’t me excusing racism from white people, and it’s not me saying every Black person does this. But some of y’all will say it is.
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A man we all deserve! CÉCRED >>>>> Cecred.com
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NotBeyoncebutViolence retweeted
This is so true and accurate. Her biggest haters are also her biggest fans
Beyoncé and racism is always such an interesting topic. It depends on the side you’re viewing it from. It’s complicated. She drops a Black empowerment song: Black community: “We’re tired of this Black empowerment music, Mufasa jams, drag queen music.” A non-Black person dances, covers, or appreciates the music: Black community: “This isn’t for them. Why are there white people at Club Renaissance? Why are they at Club Cowboy Carter? Do they even understand the theme of the music? We can’t have anything.” A song you said you didn’t hear, an event you didn’t attend. You’re mad that non-Black people are appreciating it? So what would you rather? Beyoncé drops music reclaiming Black genres that were whitewashed: Black community: “She’s so performative. She only cares about money. She’s using the Black community to stay relevant. I’m not streaming that.” Non-Black person: “That album healed me. I learned so much history. I’m writing an essay about it.” Black community: “This isn’t for y’all. Stay out of Black people’s business.” So why are you mad they’re appreciating music you don’t even want to support? Beyoncé releases Cécred: Black community: “She’s such a capitalist. Another cash grab. It’ll pack up in three months. We need to talk about consumerism.” White person: “Cécred is the truth. It’s the best hair care line I’ve used in years. Beyoncé did her thing.” Black community: “We can’t have nothing. It’s for Black hair. Stay out of our business.” So what’s the issue? I don’t remember Beyoncé ever saying Cécred was only for Black hair. Beyoncé drops merch: Black community: “Now’s not the time. With everything going on, she’s greedy. Another waste for the planet. She and her husband only care about money.” White person: “I love the merch. I bought five.” Black person: “Buying merch you don’t even understand the theme of? Imagine a white person wearing Cowboy Carter. I’m sick.” So why are you mad they bought merch you weren’t going to buy anyway? In conclusion, y’all don’t support Beyoncé but still want to gatekeep her products from those who do. Deep down, it’s not about race or art. You just want her to flop. Her success makes you angry, so you hide behind whatever pseudo-puritanical narrative is trending that year. And that brings me back to my earlier point- how can we even discuss racism around Beyoncé when some of the people in her own community are at the forefront of the hate she gets? And to be clear, this isn’t me excusing racism from white people, and it’s not me saying every Black person does this. But some of y’all will say it is.
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So easy!
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Beyoncé at Vai Que Cola! A hit Brazilian comedy show!
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