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THUG CULTURE CELEBRATES THE WORST POSSIBLE EXAMPLES
Yahoo ^ | May 3, 2008 | Cynthia Tucker

Posted on 05/10/2008 8:32:26 PM PDT by forkinsocket

You've heard of resume inflation? You've heard of people who lie about having Ph.D.s or Ivy League pedigrees in order to get ahead?

The world of thug culture has its own perverse equivalent, in which middle-class men with minor legal transgressions exaggerate their bad behavior, claiming to be hard-core degenerates in order to impress youngsters looking for outlaw role models. In this destructive environment, the more violent and predatory you are, the more heroic you seem.

That helps to explain why a metro Atlanta hip-hop star known as Akon wove a tall tale of malevolence and criminal activity, claiming to have spent three years in prison for running a "notorious car theft operation," a story he's been telling for years. In fact, he has apparently never served hard prison time. A Web site called The Smoking Gun recently exposed Akon as a thug wannabe, a "James Frey with ... an American Music Award."

American popular culture has always had a tendency to romanticize hoodlums, whether Al Capone, Bonnie and Clyde or Tony Soprano. But the hip-hop world's celebration of savage violence, educational failure and misogyny by gangsta rap has been one of the worst influences on American youth, especially black youth, in decades. If you want to ruin a nation, a society or an ethnic group, persuade its members that the highest form of achievement lies in criminality.

Even before the 1980s, when gangsta rap oozed out of downtrodden black neighborhoods, too many black men were marginalized -- unlettered, unemployed, imprisoned. They were already the victims of a fratricidal cycle of violence, predator and prey. They were already disproportionately fathers in absentia, completely divorced from the lives of their children, providing neither material support nor moral guidance.

Indeed, the baggy britches that are now de rigueur in hip-hop circles grew out of jail rituals. When men are arrested, their belts are confiscated, so their trousers tend to droop. It's from that unfortunate facet of ghetto life that the ubiquitous sagging pants were launched.

Proponents of hard-core hip-hop claim that it is an artistic genre that merely reflects those unfortunate realities of underclass black life; they tout it as a pure form of folk art (in its original meaning, arising from the folk, or common people). Countless books and dissertations have disseminated that view.

But folk art has never been so popular -- or lucrative. The worst of gangsta rap has not merely reflected behavior but has also inspired it, much of it lawless and destructive. Its lyrics are paeans to murder and mayhem. It celebrates an outlaw culture that disrespects women, mocks middle-class values and preaches against any cooperation with police in catching criminals.

That's why Akon, whose real name is Aliaune Thiam, made up a criminal history, claiming that he was a carjacker who owned chop shops but was finally brought down because he was ratted out by jealous underlings. You gain respect in thug culture -- and millions of dollars in record and ring-tone sales -- only if you're a bona fide thug.

In fact, Akon's longest stint behind bars seems to have been five months in the DeKalb County jail on a stolen car charge that was later dropped, according to The Smoking Gun. The son of Senegalese jazz percussionist Mor Thiam, he grew up in a middle-class home, spending time in Senegal and New Jersey before moving to an Atlanta suburb.

If black men like Thiam enthusiastically abandon a passable reputation for the notoriety of a prison record, then black America is in serious trouble. If it is better to be an outlaw than to be a teacher or a chemist or accountant, then young black men will continue to go to prison in record numbers. If it is more acceptable to be violent and reckless than to be a responsible father and husband, then marriage will continue to decline in black communities.

While racism remains a potent force in American life, it doesn't hold the malignant power of gangsta culture. The upside-down value system represented by Akon's fabrications is helping to destroy a generation.


TOPICS: Culture/Society
KEYWORDS: akon; prison; thuglife; thugs
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To: forkinsocket

I cannot express in words how absolutely disgusted I am with “gangsta-rap culture”. Someone please flush it down the toilet...


21 posted on 05/11/2008 12:10:57 AM PDT by EnigmaticAnomaly (Proud member of the largest 'Hate Group' in the USA...The Vast Right Wing Conspiracy")
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To: pnh102
They ALL lie about how many times they “gots” shot and “gots” locked up and how many b*tches they “gots”.

It is ego and the thug game. They don't want anyone to think they are “soft” or someone who can be pushed around.

They unleash their own inner Nietzsche/nazi.

22 posted on 05/11/2008 1:08:02 AM PDT by weegee (Osama Obama claims to have visited 57 states now. Can you say Potatoe Head?)
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To: A CA Guy

Whoopi Goldberg (not her real name) has claimed to have had “6 or 7” abortions. She claims that it is a very serious decision that no woman comes to lightly but she’s repeatedly gone through it and lost count.


23 posted on 05/11/2008 1:09:51 AM PDT by weegee (Osama Obama claims to have visited 57 states now. Can you say Potatoe Head?)
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To: forkinsocket
The world of thug culture has its own perverse equivalent, in which middle-class men with minor legal transgressions exaggerate their bad behavior, claiming to be hard-core degenerates in order to impress youngsters looking for outlaw role models.


24 posted on 05/11/2008 1:26:32 AM PDT by metesky ("Brethren, leave us go amongst them." Rev. Capt. Samuel Johnston Clayton - Ward Bond- The Searchers)
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To: PallMal

Yet this very same Cynthia Tucker writes other articles and helps elect people who enable this type of behavior.


Bingo!!! She’ll get back on track next week....not to worry.


25 posted on 05/11/2008 1:40:44 AM PDT by chasio649 (sick of it all)
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To: primeval patriot

It is amazing. But you can see how pervasive this is: a 7 year old black kid here in Florida who stole a car (with help from an older kid) and smashed it up before being caught said he did it because he wanted to “be a hood rat and have fun doing bad things.” That a 7 year old would even use the words “hood rat” is depressing in itself. But the whole idea that is projected by this trash is that bad is good, wrong is right. And the kids pick it up very early (kids of any color who are exposed to it, btw).


26 posted on 05/11/2008 3:37:14 AM PDT by livius
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To: Prole

Who is that on Ludicris’ shirt?

It looks like Mike Huckabee with a hat.


27 posted on 05/11/2008 4:54:25 AM PDT by webstersII
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To: webstersII

It’s Ben Franklin.


28 posted on 05/11/2008 4:59:43 AM PDT by csvset
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To: weegee
6-7 abortions is a horrible thing.
This insult comedian was taking up the topic of the Thug Culture so I brought an example of the outrageous level of jokes she was throwing at all races, genders and religions.

The comedian is white and for three years had only a black boyfriend, so she wasn't really doing race hatred stuff from her heart, she was just being way out there making fun of racism.

One Asian person messed with her in the audience.
She then said, “I like my men like my coffee, not like my urine... SMELLY”.
She went all over the place. Very outrageous.

29 posted on 05/11/2008 1:55:25 PM PDT by A CA Guy ( God Bless America, God bless and keep safe our fighting men and women.)
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