Cannon's father opens up about his son's divorce on Facebook

Aug 26, 2014 07:02 GMT  ·  By
Nick Cannon divorced Mariah Carey because she got fat, had an abortion and lied to him
   Nick Cannon divorced Mariah Carey because she got fat, had an abortion and lied to him

Mariah Carey might have issued a confidentiality agreement to Nick Cannon, but the same rules do not apply to Cannon's father, who has now begun a smear campaign against the singer, trying to make it seem like the divorce is her fault.

Taking to his Facebook account, Cannon's dad, who is apparently a preacher, according to Radar, began a series of rhetorical questions that not only sound like he's giving a sermon, but also dish out some serious bad stuff about Mariah.

The first question is “Here a thing to talk about if the wife love [explicit] and the man can’t stand making love to her. What should that women do? (sic)” What indeed. The answer is left up to the reader. From this we are led to believe that Mariah would have asked Nick to spend the night when he was actually fed up with making love to her.

But wait, it gets better, “Heres a thing, if the husband say no lies, and the wife lies all the time, what should that man do? (sic)” This time, he's accusing Mariah of lying to Cannon all the time, which is pretty much the opposite of what the press has been saying about the divorce.

And the best part is this, “Here a thing, if the wife put on 200 pounds and the husband like a nice slim wife what should that man do? (sic).” This is hinting at the fact that Cannon hates the idea of Mariah having put on a lot of weight. This would also explain why he won't sleep with her anymore.

So far, Cannon's father is painting a pretty gruesome picture of Carey, but he's not even half done. He goes on to indirectly accuse her of not wanting to have more children, despite the fact that Nick asked her numerous times, and also of having an abortion, despite Nick telling her not to do it.

When asked about the rhetorical questions on his page, the pastor denied vehemently that they were about his son's marriage and claimed that they were being interpreted by “small minded people” who thought that he “was talking about another man's business.”

The elder Cannon explains that the questions are taken from his 2011 book called “The Calling.” He is careful to point out that he doesn't get involved in his children's relationships and that “[their] business is [their] business and [their] relationship is there [between] them and God (sic).”

While that may be the case, it's still very uncanny how some of the questions he posted apply so well to Nick and Mariah's divorce and how convenient it is that he posted them right during their messy divorce.