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December 30, 1999 |
Barack History Month VS Sleep RAPnea?
February 11, 2009 Will the Election of President Barack Obama raise the Standard of Black
People in America, while Erasing the Hip Hop version of SLEEP RAPNEA?
Writing this days before the inauguration of Barack Obama as the 44th
President of The United States, it struck me we had a double remembrance
day of sorts coming up. Dr Martin Luther King's birthday holiday is
nationally recognized on January 19th this year, and the inauguration is
the next day, January 20th. These two days ring special to me, though this
ring has been tainted.
Some years I don't make resolutions: rather, I opt to make a plan.
Entering 2009 has led me to reposition myself in regard to the notion of
dealing with the 'truth'. Saying and telling the truth seems to have been
this thing that many of my black American-born people have side-stepped
these past 15 or 20 years, for the sake of maybe not being accepted into
white American mainstream society - which translates into simply not being
popular. I would say that the 'truth' in many cases simply is the truth
and not subject to interpretation. It belongs to everybody and not just
anybody. Here's my take, as a black man nearing the half-century mark next
year, who's seen and heard much in his time, and who's been fortunate to
have listened to many who have told me their experiences before my time.
Just on the man tip alone, my father, grandfathers, uncles, fathers of
friends, father-in-law and many a male voice that has reflected their
lives, opinions and times have all bent my ear and thus brain in a way
that has prepared me for being twisted by the lies, hype, and myths that
corrupt and damage the masses of people who look like me. That part of me
ain't never changed, and is never gonna change. There's been times that
I've been silent because I've been taught to let others speak, as if
recognizing we are all in this together. But sometimes I forget that not
everyone comes from the same dynamic that molded my senses in the first
damn place, and thus that is the time to speak: to put the nonsense
in check before it becomes 'common nonsense' - something that those that
knew better would endorse to wipe out what was left of 'common sense' in
the Clinton '90s.
I have been asked my opinion by many media across the planet about what I
think regarding BARACK OBAMA, just like they're asking droves of people
across the board in sports, entertainment, life itself. Some even connect
some of the hysteria to some degree of separation, like Barack and
Michelle's first date seeing SPIKE LEE's Do The Right Thing. OK. Or some
people say that the impact of Public Enemy was a possible inspiration any
black person in the late '80s and early '90s could not avoid, like maybe
the Jordan Bulls or something. Again, OK. While half-agreeing to some of
this pop culture residue PE left in our impression, the fact is that our
music was manifold, including the fighting for equal legitimacy for rap
music and hip hop, rebelling against one-sided government policies whether
it was R&B (Reagan and Bush), Margaret Thatcher, an imprisoned South
African - Nelson Mandela - the Berlin wall, a world history of black
diaspora slavery and oppression, the local New York one-sided racist
coverage and policies, and many things that required a mind and brain to
go with some voices on top of some funky James Brown shit.
I know President BARACK OBAMA remembers that standard being inspirational
in rap music. As a grown man meeting his future wife, Fight The Power
could've meant many things, but we know this for sure: it wasn't an
embarrassing aspect of culture for this grown man to take inside of
himself for possible mental, maybe physical, energy. This was'nt for kids:
although, unlike today's hip hop, you have the stupidity of 40 being the
next 30 being the next 20, feeding and pimping off young audiences like a
virtual paedophile. Even though he might say JAY Z and KANYE are on his
iPod, and THE FUGEES and LAURYN HILL are in his rap heart, he doesn't have
to say, nor state, that Public Enemy is somewhere in the back of his mind
or even in his soul. He doesn't have to mention it. It would be redundant.
He doesn't ever have to mention that he was inspired by Minister
FARRAKHAN's inspirational MILION MAN MARCH in 1995. Doesn't even have to
say he was there. His STANDARD does all the talking in the world. He is
entering the terrordome, and he is ready to deal.
Yes, the terrordome, for real: a hot seat that no other black man in the
universe can relate to. The pressure will be either coal-crushing or
diamond-making. He can handle it. He's made for it. And ready for it. But
who is ready for him? The STANDARD is high because the STAKES are, like DE
LA said.
I was commissioned by HIPHOP.COM to write my opinion as an international
voice. I figure both my experience and standard in the rap music end, and
my being a black man near 50, would rank as qualification here. Older than
BARACK by a hair, I would understand his timeline. Knowing those places
he's been - from Chicago, Hawaii and Wichita to Africa – would give me a
sense as well. Having integrated hip hop in my soul from 1975 to right now
allows me to speak here. With all that said, like I've pointed out in
other pieces and interviews, for the first time if I was ever to meet the
man I would salute him proudly and call him MR PRESIDENT sir, and not feel
an ounce of disappointment saying it - all the while knowing he is in a
position to make decisions that will batter some black individualism. Who
said that the individual needs to stand out beyond the team anyway, other
than self-accountability and responsibility? This is a test and a chance
for the black community to use this collective to connect and unite and
look within - the chance for the black and the brown to connect, then the
like-minded to come together and truly figure how, starting from a
possible new America, the human can finally be 'in'.
Knowing that this is an opportunity to liquidate 'inspiration', I know
that PRESIDENT OBAMA is not the messiah nor savior for a 'race'. He is the
President of The United States. For The United States. A United States
taking a desperation hurl to place itself up as being the TIGER WOODS of
nations. He will make decisions that will both make me clap and wince,
some of it at the same time. So this is a time to pay attention, and hang
on to the 'truth' as much as possible. This also means telling the truth
amid the blizzard of lies, and against the hyping that drives the
intelligent and the knowing to the point of silence. We are entering a
time where talk will be very cheap and no excuses will or should be the
rule.
I understand I might be called a hater here: I will wear the badge then,
because it's easy to hate something that shows the people no love. I would
rather be hated for what I am instead of loved for what I'm not. But in
this case, if you don't stand for something you fall for anything: and hip
hop has fallen because of negligence and somebody kicking its class down a
corporate American staircase.
What does the arrival of Obama do for hip hop? What do I think? Well, no
more excuses for the lies and the liars who have deceived the public into
believing much of the negative stigma and hype that gets attached to black
people. Hip hop's standards in integrity, respect and truth took a wrong
road. It followed the downward spiral of entertainment, or maybe
entertainment followed it in marketing sense, where you can always market
negative aspects of a people who have been downtrodden. In the early rules
of hip hop, the participants' collective thinking always meant that you
knew that there were taboo areas to trek into, thus cats always wanted the
tree to grow and the branches to spread when they were fed. This
individual-centered greed was prevalent in the 'get mine' 1990s, aka the
terrordome. Forget a standard, it was said.
It could've started when rap still didn't have the black industry or the
social backing in the '80s as being legitimate. The collective silence and
inability to say anything in the music could've happened after watching an
anti-Semitic attachment being applied to PE in 1989-1990, thus scattering
anyone black from that point approaching any truths or debatable facts
about white folks and their business or social/historical behaviors toward
black people. It has been hysterical to witness the amount of "bitch",
"ho", "nigger" uses, drug gaming, gang shootings in the last 15 years
promoted in rap, as opposed to any rapper saying the words "white",
"cracker", "kike", "Jew", while at the same time being contracted and
working under corporations dominated by members of those constituencies.
At the very same span the individual money rose on the bloodshed through a
Clive or an Iovine, into the Spooks of the negro hands to eventually bling
the culture out, and to say little of redeeming worth and value. Damned be
the negro intellectuals and journalists who co-signed a lifestyle of
downwardness in their one-sided biased coverage that they judged as hip
and mistakenly added hop to it. I remember certain writers from different
cities falsely locking into a New York state of mind or a California Love
and calling it by the standards that those cities' corporations set. Black
radio has failed terribly just chasing the falling dollar. EmpTy V,
Viabomb and BET has been a joke, a Booty En Thug fish-tank that would be
made more telling by turning the volume down and just flashing the images:
images transmitted across to OBAMA's KENYA, only to have somebody in
Nairobi scream out 'Yo My Nigga' in sick so-called love.
The President BARACK OBAMA and his family will hopefully set a precedent
because many like myself are tired of rap fronting and not saying what it
really believes. God, family, seeds, love, hood, moms, and loyalty is
always coming out of the mouths of many until the mixing of money. I
remember cats in London and Philadelphia being transformed into a '90s New
York mentality, only because the culture was falsely magnified from major
labels there who worked to squash all other voices, styles and forms of
hip hop from other places. The woman voice and opinion in rap was
diminished, although the body was used and abused with collective silence
amongst the violence.
With all of this said, even today, in the shadow of a dual day for black
inspiration, we have groupings of people flocking to the theatres to catch
the Notorious B.I.G story: a story of the tragic result of a brilliant kid
that was raised in a supportive West Indian protective way, who gets
social props for being the black nigger America wanted. A loss of a great
potential, but at the same time, very little inspiration other than to
stay far away from the radiation that lifestyle emits.
PRESIDENT BARACK OBAMA is an inspiration to the rest of the planet,
especially to those feeling disenfranchised in their second and so-called
third world situations. But to the black diaspora this is really B.I.G. -
beyond the movie and the rapper. This is reality. A new standard can be
recognized here.
The excuses are over. Those in this human race who are not considered
black that say they love hip hop should recognize the legacy of the people
largely exploited through the negative portals of this music. We will soon
see if all this support at hip hop's magnified worst will be backed up
when it takes the positive route. When the standard of black people is
raised it's interesting how the western world gets nervous. This has held
true about the continent of Africa and its independence. What attitude
will come with the standard being raised with black folk in America, as
they act upon PRESIDENT OBAMA's inspiration? And so to the last question:
will the black American rap and hip hop world re-emerge with the
knowledge, wisdom, understanding, class and respect of its President and
awake from its 'sleep rapnea'?
We will see.
We will hear.
PEace,
Chuck D
New Email
chuckd@publicenemy.com
Peep the new relaunch of www.SLAMjamz.com FEB 20
WITH SLAMTV and PETV On www.publiceney.com
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