(ThyBlackMan.com) As our community seeks to understand the tragedy that occurred in Ferguson, Missouri, this might be a chance to reflect on the life of the black male in America. We all want black men to survive, and most of us are sick of police coming into our neighborhoods, disrespecting us in front of our children and shooting us like dogs in the street. That is what drove the outrage in the police shooting of Michael Brown, the killing of Eric Garner and also the death of Trayvon Martin. In all three cases, you have people from outside of the black community using tactics that are designed to promote the terrorism and extermination of young black men. Most of the time, when black men die, nobody cares.
We can agree that this is a problem, and (using Malcolm’s words) all terrorists should be taken out by any means necessary.
But there are other terrorists from outside our community who do far more damage than George Zimmerman or the Ferguson Police Department ever could. They consist of mostly white media outlets who earn billions of dollars promoting black death, destruction and chaos with no accountability. I’m talking about companies like Clear Channel, who play the same violent music all over the country, promoting and bragging about the genocide of young black men.
I’m also talking about companies like BET, owned by a big white corporation called Viacom. These are the companies that give awards to artists who rap about all the Michael Brown lookalikes who’ve had their heads blown off, all for the sake of “keeping it gangsta.” The same way that a cop of often brainwashed to have an irritable and itchy trigger finger that could instantly lead him to murder a black man, we have millions of young black being brainwashed by music to explode and blow another black man’s brains out if he accidentally steps on his Air Yeezys.
Don’t believe me? Ask yourself: Why would BET, Clear Channel and other networks promote an artist (Lil Wayne is the example here, but he’s not the only one) with lyrics like these?
Check out this verse from the song “Gunwalk” (there are others too):
Uh, fuck that nigga, ho ass nigga
Leave that nigga with a toe tag nigga
Barrel so long, you can pole dance, nigga
Run up in ya house, where the dope at nigga
Murder she wrote on a notepad nigga
Light that nigga up, smoke that nigga
Stomp that nigga, roast that nigga
I walk around with this shotgun
And this bitch bigger than me nigga
Don’t open up yo fuckin’ mouth
Cause I’ll pull the trigger like teeth nigga
Shoot ‘em up, then leave nigga
I smell summer’s eve nigga
We shoot first, it’s better
To give than receive nigga
Now ask yourself another question: If these were lyrics being recited by the head of the Ferguson Police Department, would you stil dance to them? What if a white police officer, as a fan of hip-hop, were reciting lyrics like these on his way to work every morning? Would it make him more or less likely to shoot a young black man if confronted by a stressful situation?
Some might say that it’s just music and that music has no impact on the actions of human beings. Many psychologists I’ve spoken with, including Dr. Monikah Ogando, would beg to differ. Part of the reason that Madison Avenue spends billions every year on marketing is because they know that the messages we hear in media influence the actions that we take.
When I interviewed the rapper Dee1, who lives among the violence in New Orleans, he said, “When they were playing the music in the car on the way to kill my boy, I know they weren’t listening to long songs or country music.”
Is a bullet going through the brain of a young black man more acceptable because it was fired by his own brother? Don’t you think it’s counter productive and downright hypocritical to march, scream and yell about racist police terror, but then sing along to music promoted by racist companies that are seeking to glorify black-on-black terroristic homicide?
Have you noticed that almost no hip-hop artist has taken a prominent stance to speak up on behalf of Michael Brown (Chris Brown and Nelly are exceptions, from what I’ve seen so far), yet they are readily allowed by their corporate masters to produce volumes of music promoting black-on-black murder? How silly we must look to speak up and march when one black man is shot by police, yet remain entirely silent when big corporations are consistently promoting the murder of countless other young black men? Do you think that perhaps the reason the rest of America is insensitive to the death of young black men is because we support artists and companies that love to glorify our genocide? If you don’t give a damn about your own life, then don’t be surprised if no one else does either.
It might be time for us to seriously reflect. The truth is that when you compare the number of black men shot up by police vs. the millions of young black men who’ve been brainwashed to murder each other, there really is no comparison. Most of this homicide is driven by mostly white companies that either sell the guns we use to kill each other, or make money promoting the music that makes the violence seem cool. But our sons are the ones who are pulling the triggers, mainly because their parents (us) are not bold enough to speak out about this bullsh*t.
Nine times out of ten, a black man doesn’t have to fear the cops as much has he might have to fear his own brother, and that is the unfortunate truth in which we are living. After we march in Ferguson, we might also want to march in front of Clear Channel, BET and other corporations that are proudly promoting black male homicide. Hip-hop has become the ONLY genre of music in existence where so many artists are provided with financial incentives to market the murdering other people within their own ethnic group.
Do you understand how sick this is? Do you realize how silly we look to the world? Do you realize that this is probably NOT an accident? Let’s start using our heads.
It’s time to squash this nonsense altogether, it’s getting ridiculous.
Staff Writer; Dr. Boyce Watkins
Dr. Boyce Watkins is the founder of the Your Black World Coalition. For more information, please visit http://BoyceWatkins.com.
Dr.Watkins, I totally agree. But this is an intellectual viewpoint. It seems the intellectuals (Obama included) aren’t winning this war anymore. Whether it’s rap music, guns, economics, social problems, etc. it’s always the capitalists who win. Money trumps everything–values, humanity, life.
Maybe Marx was right; that capitalism will ultimately destroy us. It seems it only brings out the bad in people, causes divisiveness, and ultimately causes distrust and fear. That is where I feel we are heading now, after a period in the 70’s,80’s, and early 90’s where things seemed to be improving after civil rights. But since then, it seems I only hear the voices of the fearful and paranoid. The NEED for guns to protect oneself. Racial distrust and prejudice on both sides seems to be on the upswing. How will we ever turn this around? How can intellectual voices like your filter down, and make your views known to the very people you are talking about who are being affected by this music?
ROBERT: black american recorded/produced/written/preformed. Music has been marginalized plain and simple.
OVER the last 50 years the black AMERICAN community has been targeted and systematically undermined by our government and it’s agencies to the point now where we are at a point of complete destruction.
NOTHING clearly illustrates this more than what has happened to black music and black artist, because if you been alive awhile you would know that up until the 70’s and 80’s black AMERICANS were some of the most prominent musicians in the world and their music was everywhere and if you travelled the world you would know this.
AS hard as it to believe we must accept the fact that our artist and music have been weaponized and is now being used against us nothing else explains the type of filth and violence in this music unless someone is deliberately trying to destroy the minds of our children and many artist have said that this is what the record companies want.
CLEAR CHANNEL was mentioned in this article and that’s good place to start because if you look up who control it and what it controls you’ll get a big surprise!
The “tragedy” in Ferguson began when Michael Brown assaulted a store clerk for wrappers (used to smoke drugs) and some other medicore item. He’s captured on video committing (armed) robbery. Michael’s wearing the same clothes in the store and laying on the street. After the robbery, he and his partner-in-crime walked down the street as if nothing happened in that store. As if it was business as usual. They drew the attention of the police officer by standing in the middle of the street, blocking traffic, including the officer’s vehicle. Who does that?
Then Michael charges towards the officer. It’s being said that Michael had his hands up. Not while knocking the officer back into his car and attempting to get a hold of the officers’ gun. The first shot fired was during the struggle. How does a struggle occur when one person’s hands are in the air? A witness stated, “Dude (Michael) kept charging after the officer.” That means his hands were not up in surrender. It also means that Michael’s partner in crime lied. It could also be the reason why the officer fired six times.
Then there are the “gangsta” pics of Michael online. He’s a younger teenager in a couple of pics, flashing gang signs. He was proud to be a Vice Lord. Similar to Trayvon, who’s also shown sticking up his middle finger and smoking weed.
Michael Brown is dead because like many other black males, he felt as though he was invincible and should’ve been allowed to get away with whatever he wanted without suffering any consequences.
I wasn’t going to say anything about the Michael Brown, Trayvon Martin, Eric Garner murder because there isn’t much more to say besides the obvious, but I read an article comparing this tragedy to the Eve Carson crime and it struck a nerve. I’m not one of these fake ass political people who waits for a tragedy than goes into Martin Luther King mode, so I didn’t throw my hoodie up. Blacks love to “fight the power” one week out of the year, when it’s in vague, then spend the other 51 not giving a fuck about the injustices in their own backyard. Most of us come from the cities where the skinny ”niggas” die, and we don’t protest that shit. The self-cannibalization of Black people in the inner city is a much bigger problem than Racism. A lot of people reading this personally know people with more Black bodies under their belt than George Zimmerman, myself included, let’s keep it real. We fight other Black people, we listen to songs with punchlines about killing other Black people, and we watch our backs in public because we don’t trust other Black people. I don’t care if that Asian dude voted for Obama and brought front row tickets to that Kanye concert. When he sees a group of Black men at night walking towards him his mind is going to go the same place our minds go, “what are these niggas up to?” Black people racially profile each other, so of course other races are going to do it.
I am not mad at the racism, I am pissed at the depths people go to mask it. People are sick of hearing about Trayvon Martin, good… now get sicker because you NEED to talk about how that little boy makes you feel. Non-Blacks need to be beat over the head until they’re forced to admit Black America scares them with their hoodies, aggressive music, and mean mugs. Blacks need to be beat over the head until we realize we’re being judged because we do carry ourselves like savages in our own communities. Good or bad, there needs to be continued discussion about why this country is still the way it is. We are so damn politically correct that race relations have been lulled into a state of “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell”.
Why can’t people get past the beats and face up to it?? It’s like the Pied Piper story, except in the music industry people are creatively lured to destruction with music by one of their own.
I have disagreed with Dr. Watkins in the past on some of his commentary. In this case, I have say his thoughts on this subject are definitive. There is nothing more to add. Of course, this will be ignored by most….
I Can Hear Your Frustration In This Piece!
However, you must realize due to your sophistication and intellectual refinement, that the black community is at war with some elements within the majority population. There are folks in positions of authority in the business and public sectors who just don‘t give a damn about black people, the black family and the black community. And at the end of the day that’s their right! In wars you are attacked from multiple sides. The record industry is just one side. There are majority owned businesses and major corporations who are discriminating in terms of employment against black people – six years of double digit black unemployment vexing the black community represents that side. Then there are the attacks from out of control police departments.
The reason these attacks are troubling is because they come from institutions if not held in check could be devastating to our community if allowed to happen regularly. Think about how many majority white police departments there are across this country with the capacity to murder blacks. If left unchecked and not contested each and every time, we could be looking the early part of the 20th century in the face again, when many black killings and hangings went uncontested .
Additionally housing foreclosures by major banks are sapping what little black wealth there was storied up in terms of equity due to home ownership. Then there are the “stand your ground laws,” on the books of many states and the attacks on voting rights in different states. So where should the black race direct it resources, to what front should we move manpower? Whose job is it to determine the allocation of resources? Is there a strategy AVAILABLE that will allow us to go on the offensive? The other side is vulnerable but we as a group are unable to respond aggressively because brothers and sisters as a race, we lack a unified strategy.
Whites who have supported black causes in the past stand ready to help us! They have not gone anywhere. We can push back against the darkness of these multiple sided attacks if we coalesce around plan of response. We are in this position because we lack a “shared vision” of how to proceed. We have no singularity of focus. Many black leaders have not been able to articulate a path to the black community, which will lead us to the next level http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00MI3PD2M .
Totally agree! HipHop is so OBVIOUSLY shaping our culture, especially the youth, but virtually no one is left untouched by it. And if the songs aren’t about violence, they’re about SEX. EVERY SINGLE SONG is about bonin’, smashin’, lickin’, suckin’, ridin’, grindin’, droppin’, and beatin’ it up!!! It’s AUDIO porn. It’s shaping how we are relating to each other, which seems to be mostly on a BASE and shallow level. Just sex. No substance. Between violence and abortions and single-parent homes, HipHop seems to have us on lock, and STUCK.