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mstaphd
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Blog title: Words That Kill
Blog description:above average rantings from an average student...of life
My blog address: http://InterracialMatch.com/blog/mstaphd
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The Ni**a That Killed A King pt.1 Jan 16 2007
90 Views          06/21/10





Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. is dead. King is dead, and I fear he's being forgotten.It aint easy being A King, or even BEING King...not even for King himself.









Although he's been dead since 1968, his name continues to live on. There are statues and buildings that have been erected in his honor. There are also scholarships, plaques and awards presented in his name, and of course, who could forget what Chris Rock calls the most dangerous place in any city, any street named MLK.









Dr. King lives on in name and spirit in the hearts and minds of many people, myself included. As a black/negro/african-american/afro-american/brother/homey I fear that his legacy may be fading in the wake of the rise of the bad elements of the hip-hop generation, and it's eroding effect on Black America as a whole.











I mean hip hop in general no ill will, but the lowest lifeforms of bull** that continue to permeate the airwaves and earwaves of so many, are doing nothing to further the cause of a dying people.









  Art itself, and the art of expression, has served mankind in so many ways since he first tread  the land of this fragile planet. As someone with some musical aspirations myself, I fully understand the creative process and I realize that said process can differ from artist to artist...stick several different musicians in a studio with the same equipment, and obviously you'll get different sounds derived from that same equipment. The art lies within the artist himself and not necessarily within the genre or the tools used as a means of creation. Having said that I DO feel that there is room for all who dare to express themselves musically, but as a proud liberal, I must take a somewhat conservative stance on how we choose to express our 1st amendment rights.









  If a group of 'Deadbeat Dads' got together and released a CD of songs that glorified the lifestyle of fathering kids out of wedlock, and then refused their parental duties which may include paying child support, how would the public respond?









  How about a posse of 'Homeeees', who's sole mission in life is to undo all advances made in the area of Woman's Rights, and who've  not only named themselves after the sleeveless T-shirts, 'Wifebeaters', that they clad themselves in, but also choose to engage in wife beating as a sport, and then depicted said sport in audio and video form ...wanna camp out for tickets?









  If a group of 'Pedophiles' and or 'Child Predators' banded together to spit at a mic and release their efforts on CD, how many peeps out there would adopt their lifestyle?









  Then why have so many people, LARGELY black and  some whites as well as hispanics, adopted the negative and criminal elements of hip hop as a lifestyle?









  It has been said that art imitates life, and this is true a lot of the time. I would agree that while life is hard, it can be, and a lot of the time IS harder for some than others. Turning our heads away from this fact is NOT the solution to this problem. For those who live the struggle, telling their story via rap is a legitimate means of expressing their views and communicating the message to an outside world which might not hear their tales otherwise.









  What frustrates me, is the endless glorification of the ghetto standby professions of Drug dealing, Armed Robbery, Pimping and Prostituting as well as the startup industries of Drive By Shooting, Auto Detailing, Clubbing and, Getting Crunk. ( In the interest of full disclosure, there's nothing I love more than a good booze buzz, crunk, dancing to music, clubbing, seeing a live band, or performing in a live band setting, all of which I'm prepared to do as a living on a moment's notice...so I don't want to come off as someone who's riding a high horse here). The subject matter has done nothing to advance the cause of a people. Instead of being an escape, Modern Hip Hop has become a blueprint of sorts, causing a lot fans of the genre to bring into real life what they've seen and heard as fantasy in music format.









  High unemployment, high dropout rates and low test scores aren't the fault of hip hop, but high incarceration and murder rates due to drug dealing are. Some argue that high teen pregnancy rates and unwed single mothers are too. The point is all the Thug Life sh*t is getting us nowhere but dead and or in jail or both.









  Assassin James Earl Ray's bullet may or may not have killed Dr. King in Memphis on that morning in April, (even the King family think the govt. had a hand in the plot), but it's the Ni*ga of the hip hop generation that's killing his legacy.


 

 




(see pt2)





 

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The Ni**a That Killed A King pt.2 Jan 16 2007
84 Views          06/21/10
I understand that Jesse Jackson and Al Sharpton etc., don't speak to the generation of today, but who does? Chuck D is someone who has A LOT of good things to say but who's listening to talk radio in the community? Some of the early pioneers of hip hop and gangsta rap aren't even in the game nowadays. I'll bet that a lot of peeps nowadays have never heard Ice Cube and NWA or Ice T on the mic, and have no idea how important they are, or how ground breaking their music and the music of Public Enemy was and is.
Cosby rightfully tried to speak out against what the black community has been morphing into, but he got dissed back into hiding when no one else would dare to say what needs to be said.  
After catching some flack for opening a school for poor girls in South Africa and not here in America, Oprah explained that kids here are just not interested and are unenthusiastic about education so she's sick of trying. You mean the all powerful O has finally found a dragon that even SHE can't slay?!! Incedentally, Oprah has had a long standing feud with the hip hop community because she refuses to delve in negative stereotypes, so score one for the ego O.
The Dr. Kings', Malcolm X's and Rosa Parks' of the civil rights era did not fight so hard, and even sacrifice their lives, just so that we could ride on some 'rims', get our hair and nails did,  and get gold teefs and platinum grillz, and you know dat fa shizzle mah nizzle. I do have to admit that as a big fan of the A-Team, Mr.T was way ahead of all of us on the bling thing.

 

Chris Rock again was right. There is a war raging in the black community, there's Black People, and then there's Ni*gas.

 

After only 40 years of civil rights in this country, we've managed to undo in about a decade, what had previously taken several generations to achieve. We're going backwards in time folks, faster than Marty McFly ever did in that stainless steel Cokewagon. At this rate a 6th grade education will be a status symbol in a land full of  Obese Ni*gas, phat from being phorce phed a diet of negative hip hop.

 

The victim mentality is not working so we need to stop blaming everyone else for our kids falling behind other kids in school. Dumb fa king kids come from dumb fa king parents peeps, it's just that simple. Children learn a lot in their formative years from imitating their environment. If you can't speak well or choose to speak slang, then so will your kids.This won't serve them well in a world that doesn't function on CP time. If you can't read or read well, or never read to your kids, then your kids may have trouble reading as well. If you choose to bump dem dope trax filled with all dat phat mature subject matter in front of your kids, then how do you think they'll respond?

 

Grown peeps are gettin' teefs, rims and hanging out at clubs, but are nowhere to be found on Parent Teacher night at school.


It took millions of people hundreds of years to get us where we were even in 1964. Here in early 2007, I fear that even on the eve of the day where Barack Obama has announced that he's formed a presidential exploratory committee, we as a people may have squandared some of the gains we made through the civil rights struggle. We may have fallen prey to the worst enemy to blacks as a people, ourselves. The negative hip hop lifestyle is the disease that is eating us from within and there are NO Dr. Kings today, or in the future that can save us from ourselves....or are there?

So like all things in life, please remember do enjoy things in moderation only. Don't be that guy or gal who drops the baton of the King Legacy this early in the race.

Don't you be the one. Don't be the Ni*ga that Kills King.

 

peace
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OLE SCHOOL RULES
104 Views          06/21/10
Monday, August 07, 2006
Ole School Rules
Current mood: curious
...so I'm chatting online like I do and naturally the question of musical likes and dislikes arises...I barely take a second to gather my thoughts and blurt out Hip-Hop has killed R&B! As sacreligious as that statement is, I feel it's justified.
To all of the fresh MC's and DJ's out there,where is the next Sly Stone,James Brown,Quincy Jones,Stevie Wonder, Commodres,Isley Bros. or Kool and the G? Who's the next Parliament/Funkadelic or EWF? Who could hold a candle to the Jacksons or my alltime favorite Prince and all of his side projects? It seems that kids nowadays are not learning to play instruments so several generations of song writers/composers are being lost. Sure The Roots are holding it down somewhat as are the Neptunes,but other than that Dr. Dre is the only other person I can think of that can actually PLAY instruments,not play at them.
I'm not dissing hip-hop at all,but really the state of modern black radio in general.Today songs are written without REAL emotions...getting crunk is not an emotion nor is getting dressed up and looking good...or being able to dance, fire shots,or hold it down for your man/or bitch.
What's true of radio today was true of yesterday...we fail to embrace the whole of our community...Bob Marley was rarely found on ole school radio and no one has ever heard of Toots and the Maytals,the Skatellites or Ska in general although the genre is featured in a ton of commercials and bumpers in today's world.
Don Cornelius hated rap so the true pioneers were rarely featured,but what the ole school did bring us was REAL people writing about REAL situations.Even all the thoughts about space travel/the future in general at least showed imagination.
The next time you're diggin' a hit song at the club,on the radio or at a stop light,do yourself a favor and do the research and find the sample,or at least the original version which your cut was based on....then go buy some lessons for your kids...while they're still paying off the debt of the current administration,in the midst of hating us for allowing this to happen,future generations will thank you.
peace
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