moedays;4855902 said:A question like this deserves a well thought out answer.
The problem is the we are the creators of the culture, but we are not in charge of bringing it to the masses. The power of people who are aware of their self worth and who are progressive is something the govt. can't have. Think about it. If the Public Enemies and the Dead Prez's, Mos Def's and Kweli's were the top selling rappers talking about bettering yourself an your community and the people were also down with it I know the black community would be different. Nobody brainwashed on bullshit. Imagine songs like that dominating the airwaves. Since music is so influential a change would eventually come. But we don't own any of the major outlets to push it out there. We who want better are out there and there are a lot of us, but we would need about a billion dollars to get controlling interest in a major media corporation, at least.
To answer the question, I think it's a mixed bag. I think was really the voice of the voiceless for the 1st 20-25 years of existence, bring together peoples of all colors and creeds, male and female, before it was hijacked by corporate interests and became grossly misogynistic, materialistic and just plain wack. Now I do think an appreciation for the art of lyricism has been creeping back into the fold and that's good, but negative messages are all that is put out there for the masses. They can't have people aware and coming together and doing for self, especially poor people. I don't know I'm kinda all over the place here. That's what happens when you smoke a blunt during.
tru@ da bold.....like i said we got blk rapperz scared 2 diss cracka rapperz cuz they dont wanna lose they white fanbase thatz y rapperz like P.E., Dead prez & etc aint top sellin rapperz cuz 2 sell recordz n hiphop 2 day u gotta b willin 2 kiss da white manz azz & let crackaz make racist tapez dissin blkz..,
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