Monday, May 5, 2014

Pushing Black Youths to the Drug Culture


"Move That Dope" is a rap song that presently has roughly 10,700,000 views at Youtube. Listening to such music negatively influences youths by glamorizing drug pushers and fast money, particularly in African American communities. See the opening lyrics below:

Real dope dealers for real!
Haha! Hahaha

Young nigga move that dope
Young nigga move that dope
Aye move that dope, aye move that dope
Young nigga move that dope
Young nigga, y'all nigga move that dope
Young nigga move that dope
Aye move that dope, Aye move that dope
Young nigga move that dope


"Move That Dope" was sung by Casino, Pharrell Williams and Pusha T. It was produced by Mike WiLL Made It. The video on Youtube opens with a police chase. Drug dealers fleeing to escape prosecution have zero chances of escaping and add years to their prison sentences. The song speaks to young people about owning a Maserati and being their on bosses by chopping up drugs "straight off the boat" and "moving that dope." Actually living that lifestyle leads to long prison sentences and decades of slavery, if not death during arrests or while incarcerated.

Felony drug charges and convictions prevent hundreds of thousands of people from voting, obtaining government subsistence assistance, grants and scholarships for college educations or trade schools, and create a barrier to employment even as minimum wage earners. Many "young niggas" who are ensnared in the very criminal justice system have never graduated from high school or held a job, in part because they spent much of their teen years behind bars. Juvenile detention is their "preparatory course" for serving hard time in federal prisons later, but not much later. Although it can be done, few drug pushers escape becoming drug users and eventually addicts, depending on the drugs being handled. Drug addiction shatters people's lives and can destroy one's physical and mental health. It also destroys families and communities. 

Young people have an unfortunate tendency to choose their heroes from among those who are accomplished singers, dancers and actors. It is not unusual for youths to imitate what they perceive to be their heroes' lifestyles to the degree that they are able. Impressionable children also copy their heroes' mode of dress and mannerisms. Despite their inclination to deny it, starstruck children want to look and act like people they admire in movies and on music videos, even if the images are frequently inaccurate portrayals of the stars' real lives.

Pharrell Williams, 41, is a singer and fashion designer from Virginia Beach. He is the oldest of three sons of Pharaoh Williams, a handyman, and Carolyn, a teacher. He is an accomplished man from a middle class background who looks years younger than his actual age. He and other rappers who glorify drug dealing, promiscuity, and daring escapes from the police contribute to drug addiction, mass incarceration, and early deaths of impressionable black youths. After listening to such lyrics repeatedly, young men dream of owning Maserati cars, wearing heavy gold chains, and attracting many pretty "hoes" to twerp for them. They seek to become successful entrepreneurs who risk their freedom and lives to "move that dope."

Pharrell's most successful recording is "Happy." In November, the DC ONE.org office was seriously obsessed with an interactive video for “Happy,” the first 24-hour music video ever made. This prisoner activist believes that no matter how catchy the lyrics and beat are to the song "Happy," Ferrell Williams and other such rappers forfeited the right to be honored by invitations to the White House, as such an honor can only advance their hero status in the minds of impressionable children and young adults.

Some people deny that children are negatively influenced by seeing and hearing people they admire selling drugs and fleeing to avoid arrest on videos, living elaborate, promiscuous lifestyles, and yet being honored by the highest levels of government. However, businesses spend hundreds of billions of dollars annually to advertise their products, goods and services precisely because advertising really does work. Whether or not it is intentional, songs like "Move That Dope" attract prison commodities, which the prison industrial complex uses to extract more than $80 billion per year from taxpayers for warehousing 2.3 million American inmates. Prison profiteers are further enriched when inmates are used as inexpensive or free laborers to work jobs that were removed from the public workforce because using prison slavery is substantially cheaper. Inmates may work for many years behind bars doing jobs that their felony convictions prevent their eligibility for upon gaining prison release.

White youths listen to the same music and are also negatively influenced by it, but there are safeguards in place to protect them from enduring criminal prosecution and lengthy prison sentences. Even though Caucasians use and sell drugs to the same or a greater degree than blacks, several U.S. Drug Enforcement Agents revealed that they were told not to enforce drug laws in white communities. Racist laws were also passed that favor whites by targeting drugs blacks prefer for seriously longer sentences, including the old cocaine sentencing law (100 to 1) as well as sentences under the so-called Fair Sentencing Act (18 to 1). Furthermore, police, prosecutors and judges tend not to arrest or fully prosecute and sentence white youths to the same degree as young black people. Unlucky whites who are sentenced to prison despite the safeguards are less likely to be denied jobs and relegated to lifelong poverty after prison release because of family members and friends who are in a position to hire them, even without a drug test or background check. In fact, a recent study showed that white felons are more likely to be gainfully employed than black people are who have no criminal backgrounds.

Considering all of these factors, this prisoner rights advocate objects to songs like "Move That Dope" and the celebrities who push unwholesome lifestyles onto African American youths with particularity. We object to such persons entertaining or being entertained at any government-sponsored events, even if they do also produce acceptable songs like "Happy" that have wide appeal. Such celebrity is potentially ruinous to scores of young, black observers. We hereby request an immediate cessation of public invitations to entertainers whose music advances lawlessness among black children and young adults, especially recordings that advise "young niggas" to "move that dope." See information and videos at the eight(8) links immediately below:

1.  The DC ONE.org office was seriously obsessed with video for “Happy,”
http://www.one.org/us/shareworthy/dc-one-staffers-dance-to-happy-by-pharrell-williams/

2.  All the lyrics to "Move That Dope" are available at this webpage:
http://rapgenius.com/Future-move-that-dope-lyrics

3.  A Youtube video for "Move That Dope" is at this link:
http://youtu.be/wHguy4xHGSg

4.  DEA agent told not to enforce drug laws in "white" areas, really
http://youtu.be/72Lf9ZQK8t0


5.  Is Hip Hop Destroying Black America?
http://raprehab.com/is-hip-hop-destroying-black-america/


6.  Study: Whites More Likely to Abuse Drugs Than Blacks
http://healthland.time.com/2011/11/07/study-whites-more-likely-to-abuse-drugs-than-blacks/


7.  Employers Prefer White Felons Over Blacks With No Criminal Record
http://rollingout.com/politics/employers-prefer-white-felons-over-blacks-with-no-criminal-record-so-how-will-blacks-feed-their-families/


8.  Teen Dead After Alabama Police Cut His Throat to Remove Drugs (none found) 
http://blog.al.com/breaking/2014/04/city_of_huntsville_denies_wron.html

First paragraphs repeated: "Move That Dope" is a rap song that presently has roughly 10,700,000 views at Youtube. Listening to such music negatively influences youths by glamorizing drug pushers and fast money, particularly in African American communities. See the opening lyrics below:
Real dope dealers for real!
Haha! Hahaha
Young nigga move that dope
Young nigga move that dope
Aye move that dope, aye move that dope
Young nigga move that dope
Young nigga, y'all nigga move that dope
Young nigga move that dope
Aye move that dope, Aye move that dope
Young nigga move that dope

*******
Thank you for participating in the "Human Rights for Prisoners March" across the Internet to demand respect for all people.
Human Rights for Prisoners March
Blogtalkradio - Monday nights at 9pm PST
Mary Neal, director 
Angola Prison, 21st Century Slavery
My Facebook friends had interesting comments and differing viewpoints
about this photograph of prison slaves at
https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=2972705133320&set=a.1582554220416.46459.1732555634&type=1&theater&notif_t=photo_comment

5 comments:

  1. First paragraphs repeated: "Move That Dope" is a rap song that presently has roughly 10,700,000 views at Youtube. Listening to such music negatively influences youths by glamorizing drug pushers and fast money, particularly in African American communities. See the opening lyrics below:
    Real dope dealers for real!
    Haha! Hahaha
    Young nigga move that dope
    Young nigga move that dope
    Aye move that dope, aye move that dope
    Young nigga move that dope
    Young nigga, y'all nigga move that dope
    Young nigga move that dope
    Aye move that dope, Aye move that dope
    Young nigga move that dope
    *******
    Thank you for participating in the "Human Rights for Prisoners March" across the Internet to demand respect for all people.

    Human Rights for Prisoners March
    http://HumanRightsforPrisonersMarch.blogspot.com
    Blogtalkradio - Monday nights at 9pm PST
    http://www.blogtalkradio.com/nnia1/
    Mary Neal, director
    MaryLovesJustice@gmail.com

    ReplyDelete
  2. Added after initial publication:
    (photo)
    Angola Prison, 21st Century Slavery
    My Facebook friends had interesting comments and differing viewpoints
    about this photograph of prison slaves at
    https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=2972705133320&set=a.1582554220416.46459.1732555634&type=1&theater&notif_t=photo_comment

    ReplyDelete
  3. Very interesting article. Why does youtoube nothing against that ?
    Go on writing about those topics...
    GirlsandGentlemen

    ReplyDelete
  4. luxurywatcheslover, thanks for commenting. Free speech probably should not include advising people to break the law, but one has to be careful with censorship. Martin Luther King, Jr. advised his followers to ignore "illegal injunctions" against their protests. We can and should, however, influence children and youths to recognize the error in such messages by excluding artists who publish lyrics that glorify drug dealing and use.

    ReplyDelete
  5. http://www.change.org/petitions/record-companies-and-rappers-stop-degrading-black-people

    PETITION: Record companies and rappers stop degrading and disrespecting black people in your songs. You would never make songs degrading JEWS or GAYS.

    This petition is for our future children and grandchildren. This petition is for our ancestors that sacrificed and died to make things better for us.

    We have to let our ancestors know that we will not allow our legacy to be destroyed by corporate America, and we will not allow our legacy to be destroyed by a few greedy music artist that value money more than they value their own people.

    When you see bad things happening and don't say anything it will continue forever. Bad things will only stop when good people take a stand against it.

    Record companies the rappers are your EMPLOYEES and you would never allow your EMPLOYEES to make songs that disrespect or degrade the Jewish people, and you would never allow your employees to make songs that disrespect Gays, but you allow your employees to make songs that disrespect and degrade black people.

    Record companies you make a profit by allowing rappers to call black people n!gger and n!gga in their songs. Record companies you would never allow rappers to make songs that glorify the killing of Jews or Gays, but you allow rappers to make songs that glorify the killing of blacks, and you profit from it.

    The negative rappers value money and material things more than they value the betterment of their own people, they don't even care about the damage that their music is doing to us as a people. We would never allow whites or any other groups to make songs against us, and we shouldn't allow blacks to do it either.

    People will only do what you allow them to do, and as black people we are at fault to a large degree because for the last 20 years we have allowed record companies and rappers to degrade us as a people and get a way with it.

    Just like other groups of people would never allowed themselves to be disrespected it's time for black people to show the world that we love ourselves as well.

    We must send a clear message to those that have exploited us and harmed us as a people. The best way is through legal action or class action lawsuit against any record company, record distributor or music artist that continues to put out those kind of songs.

    Stevie Wonder has sold over 100 million records and he never called us n!ggers in his songs. He always called us brothers and sisters in his songs.

    Black people we gave the world great music, we gave the world Soul music, Jazz and other forms of music. I refused to stand by and watch our great music legacy be trashed and destroyed before the whole world.

    99% of rappers are signed to these record companies and distributors below, this petition is against these companies and their rap artist. These are the names of the executives that run these record companies that degrade blacks.

    Universal Music Group CEO Lucian Charles Grainge

    Sony Music Entertainment CEO Doug Morris

    Warner Music Group CEO Stephen F Cooper

    Island Def Jam CEO Barry Weiss

    Island Def Jam President Steve Bartels

    Interscope Geffen A&M Records President John Janick

    RCA Records CEO Peter Edge

    Virgin EMI Records President Ted Cockle

    Atlantic Records CEO Craig Kallman

    Young Money President, Dwayne Michael Carter Jr

    Cash Money Records CEO'S, Bryan and Ronald Williams

    Capitol Music Group CEO Steve Barnett

    The FCC is going to be asked to play a major role in this.

    Federal Communication Commission (FCC) president, Tom Wheeler

    Tell everyone that you know to sign this petition, please.

    ReplyDelete