“Every brother ain’t a brother/ ’cause a color could just as well be undercover” – “Welcome to the Terrordome”, Public Enemy
They had procrastinated for years, but unable to ignore the
issue any longer, the Hip-Hop Supreme Court put the hottest rapper in
the game, Fake Graham a.k.a. Frizzy, on trial for hate crimes against
the Hip-Hop community. The rap justices ran off a list of charges
against the artist, including tarnishing the legacy of real Hip-Hop,
disrespecting women. and most damaging, excessively using the N-word,
when, technically, he wasn’t even Black. While the charges were being
read, Frizzy just yawned and nodded in agreement. It took five minutes
for the justices to come up with a guilty verdict. But when it came time
to decide what the punishment would be, they argued and debated so
long, that finally Frizzy told them to call his people when they reached
a decision, got in his limo, and sped away…
People have been complaining about the atrocities done in the name of
Hip-Hop for decades, and how the rapper of the month has sold out to
corporate interests at the expense of the culture. However, when the
question becomes, “ So, whatcha gonna do about it?” there is never a
definite answer.Perhaps the best example, today, is Hip-Hop’s glamour
boy, Drake. The issue here is not the former kid show actor’s lack of
“street cred,” nor whether you find his music irritating to the eardrums
– but the fact that he drops the N-bomb in so many of his lyrics. Even
on his latest track, “Enough Said” with the late Aaliyah , Drake seems
to have a certain affinity for the word.
In all fairness, rappers have been saying ‘n*gga’ since the first Hip-Hop park jams, and you would be hard pressed to name one Hip-Hop artist that doesn’t use the derogatory term. But the difference with Drake is – he ain’t Black.
If you look at the Jewish mother rule, if your mama is Jewish, that makes you Jewish. And since Drake’s father is an AfricanAmerican but his mother is a white, Jewish Canadian, that makes him the latter. (I didn’t make the rule, I’m just telling you what it says.) This is also compounded by the fact that you would be hard pressed to see where Drake even identifies with the dark side of his family tree, unless you consider hangin’ out with Lil Wayne and excessive use of the N-word as evidence of his African roots.
Although, one may argue that the one drop rule and the dominance of melanin in his skin may make Drake racially “Black”, that has nothing to do with what that makes him culturally. So, what we are dealing with here is not race but the politics of cultural identity.
Who can and cannot say n*gga has long been debated in Hip-Hop. Latino entertainers like Fat Joe and Jennifer Lopez have gotten by on the “Latino’s are n*ggas, too” argument, and White women like V Nasty and Gwyneth Paltrow, supposedly, have obtained signed ghetto passes from Hip-Hop’s elite, allowing them to use the word. However, it is an unwritten rap rule that, while a Black rapper can use the word at will, a White rapper is subject to a beatdown for even using “nickel” in a sentence without clarifying his statement.
And most white Hip-Hop artists aren’t that stupid. Although, they may hire Black rappers to use the word on their CDs, they will never utter the word themselves.
In all fairness, rappers have been saying ‘n*gga’ since the first Hip-Hop park jams, and you would be hard pressed to name one Hip-Hop artist that doesn’t use the derogatory term. But the difference with Drake is – he ain’t Black.
If you look at the Jewish mother rule, if your mama is Jewish, that makes you Jewish. And since Drake’s father is an AfricanAmerican but his mother is a white, Jewish Canadian, that makes him the latter. (I didn’t make the rule, I’m just telling you what it says.) This is also compounded by the fact that you would be hard pressed to see where Drake even identifies with the dark side of his family tree, unless you consider hangin’ out with Lil Wayne and excessive use of the N-word as evidence of his African roots.
Although, one may argue that the one drop rule and the dominance of melanin in his skin may make Drake racially “Black”, that has nothing to do with what that makes him culturally. So, what we are dealing with here is not race but the politics of cultural identity.
Who can and cannot say n*gga has long been debated in Hip-Hop. Latino entertainers like Fat Joe and Jennifer Lopez have gotten by on the “Latino’s are n*ggas, too” argument, and White women like V Nasty and Gwyneth Paltrow, supposedly, have obtained signed ghetto passes from Hip-Hop’s elite, allowing them to use the word. However, it is an unwritten rap rule that, while a Black rapper can use the word at will, a White rapper is subject to a beatdown for even using “nickel” in a sentence without clarifying his statement.
And most white Hip-Hop artists aren’t that stupid. Although, they may hire Black rappers to use the word on their CDs, they will never utter the word themselves.
Case in point is when Dave Mays and Benzino, formerly of The Source Magazine went
on a wild, witchhunt to find evidence of Eminem saying something even
remotely disrespectful about Black people years back, and came up with
nothing really tangible besides a lyric in a long lost unreleased track.
But, what if the person has dark skin, but, culturally, is a card
carrying member of another ethnic group? Should he be given a pass to
use racial slurs without being called on it?Herein lies the Drake
dilemma.
There is a certain amount of hypocrisy surrounding Drake’s use of the
word. Although he will, undoubtedly, use the Black half of his genetic
makeup to justify using the N-word, I doubt very seriously if he would
ever use his Jewish half to justify using the “K” or “H” word. Nor would
he hide behind the First Amendment and get a swastika tatted on his
arm. Nor should he. However, if Drake did use anti-Jewish terms with the
same frequency as he uses anti-Black terms, he would not be celebrated
in the media as the greatest thing in Hip-Hop since Run DMC, but would
be demonized in the press for “spewing venomous hate speech “ and
forever condemned as an anti-Semite on some organization’s hate group
list. To date, nobody has tagged him an “anti-Hamite” or “anti-Khemite.”
Every ethnic group has the God-given right to defend its culture; that is the only way to secure its survival for future generations. However, it becomes problematic when the blatant disrespect of a culture is roundly applauded on one side but, vehemently, condemned on the other.
Ultimately, it is not Drake’s fault for disrespecting the Black community. Nor does the fault fall at the feet of any individual commercial Hip-Hop artist. The blame lies with every rapper who grabs a mic, every Hip-Hop writer with a laptop, and every Hip-Hop fan who listens to the radio…because we co-sign the madness.
Even the most militant critic who continuously blasts the state of Hip-Hop would become a 13-year-old teenage girl if Drake just looked in his direction.
“OMG…Like…did you see the way that Drake just smiled at me? Awwww!”
At some point, we have to begin to stand on principles.
Every ethnic group has the God-given right to defend its culture; that is the only way to secure its survival for future generations. However, it becomes problematic when the blatant disrespect of a culture is roundly applauded on one side but, vehemently, condemned on the other.
Ultimately, it is not Drake’s fault for disrespecting the Black community. Nor does the fault fall at the feet of any individual commercial Hip-Hop artist. The blame lies with every rapper who grabs a mic, every Hip-Hop writer with a laptop, and every Hip-Hop fan who listens to the radio…because we co-sign the madness.
Even the most militant critic who continuously blasts the state of Hip-Hop would become a 13-year-old teenage girl if Drake just looked in his direction.
“OMG…Like…did you see the way that Drake just smiled at me? Awwww!”
At some point, we have to begin to stand on principles.
Let’s be clear. No one should use the N-word, whether it be the hate speech of White people or the self-hate speech of Blacks.
And until we come to a general consensus as to what should be done
to those who diss Black culture, we will still be talking about this 100
years from now.
Like Drake asked on the Aaliyah song, “Is this even still a discussion?/ don’t you ever wake up disgusted?”
‘Nuff said.
TRUTH Minista Paul Scott’s weekly column is “This Ain’t Hip Hop,” a column for intelligent Hip Hop headz. He can be reached at info@nowarningshotsfired.com or on his website, www. NoWarningShotsFired.com. Follow Paul on Twitter (@truthminista).Source allhiphop.com
‘Nuff said.
TRUTH Minista Paul Scott’s weekly column is “This Ain’t Hip Hop,” a column for intelligent Hip Hop headz. He can be reached at info@nowarningshotsfired.com or on his website, www. NoWarningShotsFired.com. Follow Paul on Twitter (@truthminista).Source allhiphop.com
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