"The Secret Meeting that Changed Rap Music and Destroyed a Generation"

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waterproof

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A million things were going through my mind as I drove away and I eventually decided to pull over and park on a side street in order to collect my thoughts. I replayed everything in my mind repeatedly and it all seemed very surreal to me. I was angry with myself for not having taken a more active role in questioning what had been presented to us. I'd like to believe the shock of it all is what suspended my better nature. After what seemed like an eternity, I was able to calm myself enough to make it home. I didn't talk or call anyone that night. The next day back at the office, I was visibly out of it but blamed it on being under the weather. No one else in my department had been invited to the meeting and I felt a sense of guilt for not being able to share what I had witnessed. I thought about contacting the 3 others who wear kicked out of the house but I didn't remember their names and thought that tracking them down would probably bring unwanted attention. I considered speaking out publicly at the risk of losing my job but I realized I’d probably be jeopardizing more than my job and I wasn't willing to risk anything happening to my family. I thought about those men with guns and wondered who they were? I had been told that this was bigger than the music business and all I could do was let my imagination run free. There were no answers and no one to talk to. I tried to do a little bit of research on private prisons but didn’t uncover anything about the music business’ involvement. However, the information I did find confirmed how dangerous this prison business really was. Days turned into weeks and weeks into months. Eventually, it was as if the meeting had never taken place. It all seemed surreal. I became more reclusive and stopped going to any industry events unless professionally obligated to do so. On two occasions, I found myself attending the same function as my former colleague. Both times, our eyes met but nothing more was exchanged.

As the months passed, rap music had definitely changed direction. I was never a fan of it but even I could tell the difference. Rap acts that talked about politics or harmless fun were quickly fading away as gangster rap started dominating the airwaves. Only a few months had passed since the meeting but I suspect that the ideas presented that day had been successfully implemented. It was as if the order has been given to all major label executives. The music was climbing the charts and most companies when more than happy to capitalize on it. Each one was churning out their very own gangster rap acts on an assembly line. Everyone bought into it, consumers included. Violence and drug use became a central theme in most rap music. I spoke to a few of my peers in the industry to get their opinions on the new trend but was told repeatedly that it was all about supply and demand. Sadly many of them even expressed that the music reinforced their prejudice of minorities.

I officially quit the music business in 1993 but my heart had already left months before. I broke ties with the majority of my peers and removed myself from this thing I had once loved. I took some time off, returned to Europe for a few years, settled out of state, and lived a “quiet” life away from the world of entertainment. As the years passed, I managed to keep my secret, fearful of sharing it with the wrong person but also a little ashamed of not having had the balls to blow the whistle. But as rap got worse, my guilt grew. Fortunately, in the late 90’s, having the internet as a resource which wasn't at my disposal in the early days made it easier for me to investigate what is now labeled the prison industrial complex. Now that I have a greater understanding of how private prisons operate, things make much more sense than they ever have. I see how the criminalization of rap music played a big part in promoting racial stereotypes and misguided so many impressionable young minds into adopting these glorified criminal behaviors which often lead to incarceration. Twenty years of guilt is a heavy load to carry but the least I can do now is to share my story, hoping that fans of rap music realize how they’ve been used for the past 2 decades. Although I plan on remaining anonymous for obvious reasons, my goal now is to get this information out to as many people as possible. Please help me spread the word. Hopefully, others who attended the meeting back in 1991 will be inspired by this and tell their own stories. Most importantly, if only one life has been touched by my story, I pray it makes the weight of my guilt a little more tolerable.

Thank you.
 
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Disciplined InSight;4538665 said:
It was a thread already made on this H20Proof...

..but I believe this could be a major possibility on this shit happening.

WORD??? thanks for the heads up......MODS lock thread or move it with the original...... but yeah InSight i think there is a strong possibility that it happen....because you cant tell me that hip-hop just shifted overnight with bullshit
 
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i read the 1st thread made on this&this one 2. i hate to say it but no one cares not even trying to be funny. but the goverment won the day society decided to willfully be ignorant. even when people speak the true few actually listen because they like the dumb shit there into. no one cares to learn or be differnet anymore its always about the easy way now&being cool in music.
 
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Trill 5015;4538805 said:
i read the 1st thread made on this&this one 2. i hate to say it but no one cares not even trying to be funny. but the goverment won the day society decided to willfully be ignorant. even when people speak the true few actually listen because they like the dumb shit there into. no one cares to learn or be differnet anymore its always about the easy way now&being cool in music.

there's always sheeps but there always be a generation that comes along and buck against the system... but it's a beautiful struggle and dont take the shit that's being fed to them. this generation is a victim of a planned plot those 90's baby the trl generation who was raised by tv and popular fads was a project, the internet generation.
 
1996 Telecommunications Act signed by everybody's favorite "black" president Bill Clinton paved the way for this fuckery you see today. That piece of legislation allowed radio stations to own record labels and vise versa.
 
I'm gonna try and be unbiased as I can with this post; even though these classic albums/songs/movies been embedded in our Hip Hop psyches in the following years that highlighted the criminal behavior through the evil strategy of "the meeting"...

Albums like N.W.A: Straight Outta Compton and Efil4zaggin were the anti-thesis of the consciousness Hip Hop (Public Enemy, Poor Righteous Teachers, Brand Nubian, etc.) After those albums blew then Death Row came and blew it out the stratosphere with Dr. Dre's The Chronic and Snoop's Doggystyle.

Hip Hop hood movie classics like Colors (including the title track with Ice T) didn't make it any better highlighting the L.A. gang lifestyle. Menace II Society (which highlighted more of O-Dog being a nihilistic, hood psycho and anti-hero). Plus you had artists like South Central Cartel, MC Eiht/Compton Most Wanted, Spice-1 etc doing they thing...

 
While I think that this probably could have happened, I know plenty of niggas that aren't mentally deficient enough to try to emulate the rap music that they listen to. I think the current prison population is a reflection of the poverty level in the black community
 
Disciplined InSight;4539605 said:
I'm gonna try and be unbiased as I can with this post; even though these classic albums/songs/movies been embedded in our Hip Hop psyches in the following years that highlighted the criminal behavior through the evil strategy of "the meeting"...

Albums like N.W.A: Straight Outta Compton and Efil4zaggin were the anti-thesis of the consciousness Hip Hop (Public Enemy, Poor Righteous Teachers, Brand Nubian, etc.) After those albums blew then Death Row came and blew it out the stratosphere with Dr. Dre's The Chronic and Snoop's Doggystyle.

Hip Hop hood movie classics like Colors (including the title track with Ice T) didn't make it any better highlighting the L.A. gang lifestyle. Menace II Society (which highlighted more of O-Dog being a nihilistic, hood psycho and anti-hero). Plus you had artists like South Central Cartel, MC Eiht/Compton Most Wanted, Spice-1 etc doing they thing...

but see they was like the YING and YANG, on the east coast you had the NOI, Nation of the God's and The Earth's on the WEST COAST we had THE BLACK PANTHER PARTY, and GANGSTERS that was fighting THE Police, FBI, CIA, THE SCHOOLS, the church and our own brothers due to the years of social genocide against the blacks on the west coast.

NWA, ABOVE THE LAW, COMPTON MOST WANTED, SPICE-1 SOUTH CENTRAL CARTEL was social commentary that told the social ills of the community, even the Chronic was a socially commentary album. and they sold millions in the hood because it spoke to us it was our voice, the movie colors, boyz n the hood and meance 2 society had a message in the movie.

it was the bloodsuckers who seen the millions and came in and found and promoted ignorant shit, they found new artist who did what they said and pushed they shit. because i remember every month it was some ignorant new rapper or group came out rapping about 40s and hoe's and that was it.

 
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waterproof;4539902 said:
Disciplined InSight;4539605 said:
I'm gonna try and be unbiased as I can with this post; even though these classic albums/songs/movies been embedded in our Hip Hop psyches in the following years that highlighted the criminal behavior through the evil strategy of "the meeting"...

Albums like N.W.A: Straight Outta Compton and Efil4zaggin were the anti-thesis of the consciousness Hip Hop (Public Enemy, Poor Righteous Teachers, Brand Nubian, etc.) After those albums blew then Death Row came and blew it out the stratosphere with Dr. Dre's The Chronic and Snoop's Doggystyle.

Hip Hop hood movie classics like Colors (including the title track with Ice T) didn't make it any better highlighting the L.A. gang lifestyle. Menace II Society (which highlighted more of O-Dog being a nihilistic, hood psycho and anti-hero). Plus you had artists like South Central Cartel, MC Eiht/Compton Most Wanted, Spice-1 etc doing they thing...

but see they was like the YING and YANG, on the east coast you had the NOI, Nation of the God's and The Earth's on the WEST COAST we had THE BLACK PANTHER PARTY, and GANGSTERS that was fighting THE Police, FBI, CIA, THE SCHOOLS, the church and our own brothers due to the years of social genocide against the blacks on the west coast.

NWA, ABOVE THE LAW, COMPTON MOST WANTED, SPICE-1 SOUTH CENTRAL CARTEL was social commentary that told the social ills of the community, even the Chronic was a socially commentary album. and they sold millions in the hood because it spoke to us it was our voice, the movie colors, boyz n the hood and meance 2 society had a message in the movie.

it was the bloodsuckers who seen the millions and came in and found and promoted ignorant shit, they found new artist who did what they said and pushed they shit. because i remember every month it was some ignorant new rapper or group came out rapping about 40s and hoe's and that was it.

True...but they still promoted that criminal element but not in the event of being ignorant, but somehow those bloodsucking execs figured out to use it and make it profitable.
 
everybody should have know about the private prisons these companies invest in keeping niggaz locked up and followed by police.these record companies that sign these rappers give police info about them anyway thats why they know where rappers be at.it's deeper than rap like rick ross said.its up to us as black folk to shake the music industry up and deliver better music and become our own police force
 
ImTheKangRoundHere;4540045 said:
everybody should have know about the private prisons these companies invest in keeping niggaz locked up and followed by police.these record companies that sign these rappers give police info about them anyway thats why they know where rappers be at.it's deeper than rap like rick ross said.its up to us as black folk to shake the music industry up and deliver better music and become our own police force

How about these dumb ass rappers stay out of trouble and stop incriminating themselves?
 
Mad Jack;4540235 said:
Already posted faggit.

oh shit @madjack the bitch! the bitch from the cheap seats who thought he was some type of football know it all (and had some posters fooled) until i came in the cheap seats during the football season and schooled your ass about football.

SMARTEN UP @MADJACK you still try to kick football knowledge, lol...... i forgot about your bitch ass, but you being the bitch you that your are, you still holding grudges like a bitch....what a bitch

 

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