50 Cent has recently declared that he doesn't agree with Kanye West's statement that said "Bush doesn't care about black people".
He replied instead that "The New Orleans disaster was meant to happen. It was an act of God" and "people responded to it the best way they could."
It's not the first time 50 Cent opens a dispute with Kanye. He even said, joking about that: "I feel like Kanye West is successful because of me."
After 50 Cent, (hip-hop fans) was looking for something non-confrontational, and they went after first thing that came along. That was Kanye West, and his record took off."
West's second album, "Late Registration", has remained near the top of the charts since debuting in August.
As to the Bush dispute, Kayne West was only one of many to attack the US President.
Filmmaker Spike Lee, who has set his mind to make a documentary about the Katrina aftermath, declared in an interview for Reuters: "I wouldn't put anything past the U.S. government when it comes to people of color.
There is too much history ... going back to when the U.S. army gave smallpox-infested blankets to Native Americans", he added.
50 Cent can be seen starting November 9 in "Get Rich or Die Tryin," a film about the rapper's life.