Dirty is speaking to a period of time when welfare was on the tip of many a politician's tongue. President Clinton made welfare reform a central part of his 1992 campaign — claiming that his proposal would “end welfare as we have come to know it.”
Although ODB had collected a $45,000 advance from Elektra for his debut album, Buddha Monk asserts that because ODB had never properly filed taxes, he was, in the eyes of NYC, still qualified for benefits.
"People in the hood understood what Dirty was doing," Buddha Monk wrote, "but to welfare's critics he'd just reinforced the stereotype of the welfare cheat that they were using as a platform to try to get rid of the system.
After the MTV segment aired, ODB's caseworker cut off his aid. In turn, ODB struck back at the system on the song "Diesel" from the Soul in the Hole soundtrack, rapping, "To the president, you say I'm a welfare fraud/You motherfucking right! Let's burn this dark house white!"