The lyrical war between Malie Donn and Chronic Law has officially intensified. Just days after Chronic Law’s fiery counterattack, Malie Donn has clapped back with Still a Bleeed, a gritty diss that spares no punches and pushes the feud into darker territory.
From the outset, Malie sets the tone with confidence, reinforcing his gangster persona and mocking Law as nothing more than a pretender. The title itself directly taunts Chronic Law by echoing one of his better-known tracks. Malie insists that while he lives the life of a thug who regularly uses guns, Chronic Law is a fraud who once shot himself.
Throughout the track, Malie paints Law as disloyal and unstable in the dancehall fraternity. Using sharp wordplay, he ridicules Law’s past affiliations, asking sarcastically if he is a “6, 7, 8, 9… or probably 10 or 11.” This is a dig at Chronic Law’s shifting alliances, with Malie accusing him of being a camp-hopper with no real loyalty.
Malie takes personal shots, dismissing Law as a “bitch” and “sketel” while going as far as to insult his mother and girlfriend. He alleges that Law’s partner had a train run on her and flips one of Law’s earlier accusations back on him, claiming it’s Law, not him, with bad breath. The song gets even more cutting when Malie throws out a homophobic slur and accuses Law of having a sexual relationship with his own manager, Bashy.
Adding to the fire, Malie calls Chronic Law “the Jamaican Diddy”, rejecting Law’s claim of golden showers and turning the insult on its head. He also questions Law’s finances, accusing him of scraping for “chump” change and falling off musically.
The track escalates with shocking allegations that Law is a “friend killer” who paid for a murder, and Malie even suggests that Squash, the 6ix Boss, slept with Law’s partner, and Law has been bitter about it since then.

In response, Chronic Law brushed off the track on Instagram Stories, calling Malie delusional. Still, fans are buzzing, urging Law to drop another diss to keep the lyrical battle alive as debates heat up over who currently has the upper hand.