Make no mistake, long before the tattooed twins Dennis Rodman and Tupac Shakur began to publicly lose their minds, Eazy-E was already the center of a swirling mess of self-contradictions and external allegations. Here was a man who once sold crack to make a living, yet eventually became an avid Republican who, in 1991, paid $2,490 to attend a GOP brunch where former President Bush was speaking. Here was a man who, along with the other four members of NWA, evoked swarms of controversy, protest and even fiery debates on Capitol Hill with their 1991 mega-smash single "Fuck the Police," and defended officer Timothy Bruseno, one of the Los Angeles policemen videotaped beating Rodney King.
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