Since race has been injected into the 2008 campaign and insinuations of deteriorating relations between the races in America have come forward, should it surprise us to hear that Gangsta Rap was a Government Ploy to encourage Blacks to kill each other?
Just such a statement has been made by talented and lovely singer/songwriter, Alicia Keys in an interview appearing in the March 2008 issue of Blender magazine.
The 27 year-old Grammy Award Winning artist was discussing her liking of rapper Notorious B.I.G. saying,
“My favorite Biggie song is ‘Me & My Bitch. That title doesn’t make you think he’s speaking about the love of his life, but he is. She throws his shit out the window, she flushes his drugs down the toilet, she’s crazy! But if you grew up like that, then you understood, that was love in that world.”
Asked what other Gangsta Rappers she liked, she threw the interviewer for a loop with the reply, “Gangsta rap was a ploy to convince black people to kill each other. Gangsta rap didn’t exist.”
Asked just who created Gangsta Rap and the ploy, she incredulously answered, “The Government!”
She additionally says that Tupac and Biggie were essentially assassinated, “by the government and the media, to stop another great black leader from existing.”
Surprising even her mother was that she now sports a gold AK-47 pendant around her neck “to symbolize strength, power and killing ‘em dead.” “Them” is not described.
For some time now, Government, more specifically White America, has received the blame for much of the trouble found in large city ghettoes. From rampant drug use, to AID’s, extreme poverty to high theft, down to the ever escalating gang activity and Black on Black crime, Government has gotten the blame, warranted or not.
Gangsta Rap in particular, with its lyrics of rape, demeaning women, killings, sodomizing and other such nefarious actions has been receiving condemnations from several sources, Right and Left, White and Black, Government and Civilian.
Defense of the genre has repeatedly come from the very ones Ms. Keys claims it was created to encourage to kill each other.
Black luminary Bill Cosby recently said, “disadvantaged Blacks should start by purging their own culture of noxious elements like gangsta rap,” citing a Pew study reporting, “71 percent of Blacks feel that rap is a bad influence.”
Gangsta Rap, with its lyrics of violence and heavy beats came on the scene in the early 1980’s, growing out of the popular Hip-Hop culture. Supposedly it reflected the “violent lifestyles of inner-city youth.”
This begs the question, who makes inner cities violent? Many a person has come out of these inner cities with an education to become successful, even if they had to work a little harder than someone else.
Alicia herself, born in Harlem and raised in Manhattans Hells Kitchen, had to work to be the success she is. Being biracial, if anyone knows of the prejudices of others on both sides, it should be her.
Raised by her White mother after her Jamaican father left, Ms Keys says,
“I never had to go through that in regards to, ‘You’re not black enough, you’re not white enough,’ the whole kind of white/black-mixture thing. I never had to go through that. I went through prejudices and all, surely. But I never had to battle with those two parts of me.”
What changed for Alicia? Possibly, could it be “I’ve read Huey Newton’s, Assata Shakur’s and David Hilliard’s [autobiographies],” all 3 founders of the Blank Panthers in their more militant days?
Perhaps Alicia Keys would have served herself better had she read Juan Williams’ book, “Enough: The Phony Leaders, Dead-End Movements, and Culture of Failure That Are Undermining Black America — and What We Can Do About It.”
Even he sees where the problems have been coming from. Like Bill Cosby has said, “We cannot blame the white people any longer.”
Although Alicia isn’t known as the brightest bulb in the chandelier, this type of thinking and rhetoric will not fulfill the dreams once stated as
“I say to you today, my friends, so even though we face the difficulties of today and tomorrow, I still have a dream. It is a dream deeply rooted in the American dream.
I have a dream that one day this nation will rise up and live out the true meaning of its creed: “We hold these truths to be self-evident: that all men are created equal.”
I have a dream that one day on the red hills of Georgia the sons of former slaves and the sons of former slave owners will be able to sit down together at the table of brotherhood.
I have a dream that one day even the state of Mississippi, a state sweltering with the heat of injustice, sweltering with the heat of oppression, will be transformed into an oasis of freedom and justice.
I have a dream that my four little children will one day live in a nation where they will not be judged by the color of their skin but by the content of their character.”
It just further divides an already divided people, Alicia.
Sphere: Related ContentYou Should Also Check Out This Post:
- Will Burris be seated? Bet on it.
- The Disappointing Chicago Bears, and the b.s. is flowing
- A Conversation with A Liberal
- Game ON Grizzly Growl for Jan. 06 2009
- It is not who votes. It's who counts the votes.
More Active Posts:
- More persecution re: Proposition 8 in California (195)
- Insanity in Cali: "Vote Yes" signs stolen, death threats issued (70)
- Dear friends and family (46)
- The Maid asked for a raise (42)
- Excited and Optimistic (33)
- Dumb Laws of Illinois (33)
- BREAKING: Obama Campaign Implicated DIRECTLY in Election Fraud (20)
- SacBee: Anti-War Bias Hidden in Tale of Iraqi Girl Getting New Legs from US Army (15)
- Obama's Pastor and the "So-called State of Israel" (14)
- Club GITMO and the Supreme Court (12)











No User Responded In This Article
Leave Your Comment Below