Tupac Is Alive and Probably Living in Cuba: A Conspiracy, Explained with logical facts.
Tupac Public Enigma
On Me Against the World, the 1995 album from Tupac Shakur,
the prodigious rapper foretells his death. "I'm having visions of leaving
here in a hearse/ God can ya feel me?/ Take me away from all the pressure/ and
all the pain/ show me some happiness again," he raps on "So Many
Tears." Eighteen months later, while riding in the passenger seat under
the iridescent glow of the Las Vegas strip with Marion "Suge" Knight
at the wheel, Tupac was gunned down and mortally wounded. Or was he?
Here's how his death supposedly went down. Just past 11 p.m.
on September 7, 1996, at the intersection of Flamingo Road and Koval Lane (then
just a few steps from the Maxim Hotel), Tupac and Knight were idle at a red
light when a white Cadillac rolled up to the passenger side and opened fire.
Tupac, whose career had been on a steep ascent since getting out of prison the
year before, was hit four times; one bullet critically punctured his lung.
Knight, for the most part, was unharmed.
A week later, on September 13, while on life-support in the
critical care unit at the University Medical Center of Southern Nevada, the
25-year-old rap phenom died from internal bleeding.
The drive-by shooting was reported to be gang-related,
spurred by a physical altercation involving Tupac, Knight, and Orlando
"Baby Lane" Anderson, a Crip gang affiliate from Compton, the night
of September 7. (A 2011 investigation by the FBI showed several threats were
also made on the rapper's life by the Jewish Defense League).
Dr. Ed Brown, the Clark County coroner investigator,
determined Tupac's death a homicide. " I found no apparent life
signs," he detailed in his report, "and trauma was observed to the
right hand, right hip and right chest under the right arm, apparently caused
from gunshots.'' Tupac was pronounced dead at 4:03 p.m. on Friday, September
13, 1996.
But if the old saying is true, legends never truly
die—perhaps quite literally in Tupac's case.

The Most Common Questions Surrounding Tupac's Death
The picture above, said to be the last photo taken before
the shooting, raises two interesting questions: If Tupac was shot on 9/7/96,
why does the photo indicate it was taken on 9/8/96?
Why are there no keys in the car's ignition?
14 shots were fired, four of which hit Tupac. Knight, who is
a considerably large man (around 6'4, 260 pounds) was not hit once. He was said
to have sustained minimal injures from bullet fragments, but no serious wounds
were recorded. Did Knight mastermind the shooting? (Believe what you will, but
nobody's luck is that good.)
Since being shot at Quad Recording Studios on November 30,
1994, Pac wore a bullet-proof vest almost everywhere. It seems odd, on such a
high profile night, that he'd forego protection.
The BMW from the photo does not match the BMW from the
police investigation video.
The shooters were never found. As one former Outlawz member
noted in a 2014 National Geographic documentary that explored Tupac's still
unsolved murder, "This is America. We found Bin Laden." So why has it
been so difficult to find the men who shot Tupac? What are the police not
telling us?
The streets of Las Vegas are typically jam-packed—with an
assortment of cars, people, and entertainers trying to earn a living. Tupac was
shot two hours after the Mike Tyson/Bruce Seldon fight, and the streets, the
strip especially, were likely congested with traffic that night. And yet,
nobody spotted the white Cadillac?
The official coroner's report lists Tupac as 72 inches tall
(6 feet) and 215 pounds. But the rapper's driver's license identifies him as
5'10 and 168 pounds.
Afeni Shakur (Tupac's mother) and medical staff are the only
people who saw the rapper once he was admitted into the hospital. Years later,
in a video interview, Afeni says, "In the end, he chose to leave
quietly." What did she mean by "leave quietly"? Was she implying
Tupac had a hand in his removal from the spotlight?
Tupac was reportedly cremated, and the man who cremated him
retired after doing so. He has not been seen since, which, at the very least,
is a little suspicious.
Since Tupac's death, seven albums have been released under
his name, more than when he was alive. (All the tracks were said to be recorded
before his death, but that seems questionable at best.)
So, Is Tupac Really Dead?

If we are to follow the reasoning provided by the above
Yahoo message board user (we are!), then certain developments within the last
few months add up perfectly.
Here are some facts:
In December 2014, President Obama restored "full
diplomatic relations with Cuba," easing "restrictions on remittances,
travel and banking" between the US and Cuba.
Tupac's aunt is Assata Shakur, the political activist and
former Black Liberation Army member who escaped prison and fled to Cuba after
she was convicted for the 1977 murder of a New Jersey State Trooper. She has
been living in Cuba since 1984, where she was granted political asylum.
Kendrick Lamar's new album To Pimp a Butterfly, released
March 16 (1 + 6 = 7!) of this year, features a conversation between the two
rappers on the final track, "Mortal Man."
Powerade's new "Rose From Concrete" campaign uses
Tupac's vocals.
You're thinking, what does all of this have in common?
Tupac's continued existence on this earth.
Proof Tupac Is Alive (and Most Likely Living in Cuba)
Tupac was the consummate rap artist: overflowing with steely
bravado, wildly intelligent, beloved by those who knew him best, and lyrically
assertive and self-aware on tape. A platinum-selling political provocateur, he
was a true rap iconoclast. His legend, even before the night of September 7,
was already written into the history books. He was, as Vibe editor Alan Light
said in November 1996, the only rapper who "had come to embody all
contradictions and confusion that have grown up around hip-hop."
Pac was a public enigma—a man you could never grasp
completely, even as he stood right in front of you. "[H]is life was about
juggling plums while bullets nipped at his ankles," Danyel Smith wrote in
the introduction to the 1997 book, Tupac Shakur. "It was about defiance,
women, paranoia, ego, and anger—and going out in a blaze of what he imagined to
be glory." No musical artist—not Jay Z, Eminem, or Kanye West—has captured
the attention of the public quite like Tupac, who played both villain and hero
with a certain tattooed aplomb. Even now, he is your favorite rapper's favorite
rapper (see: Kendrick Lamar). So it is understandable, maybe even expected,
that fans believe Tupac, arguably the biggest cultural and artistic force of
the last 25 years, is still alive. Not even bullets could stop this
larger-than-life man.
So, my theory is; Overwhelmed by fame and seeking
"happiness again" (as he yearned for on "So Many Tears"),
Tupac faked his death and fled to Cuba to stay with his aunt, Assata. Free from
the reach of American media and 90's rap beef, Tupac knew he'd be safe and go
mostly undetected in the one place the US government wanted nothing to do with.
As the rapper began to re-emerge last year—anticipating Obama's move to open
diplomatic channels to Cuba before the end of his presidency—Tupac put monetary
safeguards in place. After 18 years away, the rapper's funds were nearly
depleted, so he sold audio rights to Interscope (the label that released
Lamar's album) and Coca-Cola (the company that owns Powerade) to ensure his
financial survival. It all makes perfect sense, really.
As more details have emerged in the last decade, fans and
conspiracy theorists have scrutinized September 7, 1996 and the series of
events surrounding the shooting with greater resolve. Maybe celebrity really
was too much to bear, many have speculated, and Tupac faked his death (In a
2012 radio interview, Knight suggested that Tupac was still alive. "Nobody
seen Tupac dead," he said). Maybe the police are covering up some bigger
truth none of us can handle. Or maybe it was Knight who masterminded the
attack, hoping to profit from the rapper's passing. Whatever the answer, one
certainty persists: the night's events did not happen as we've long been told.
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