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Election Year Ignites Hip-Hop Activism (This is a news story??)
Reuters/Billboard ^ | Apr 3, 2004 | Janine Coveney

Posted on 04/04/2004 6:46:19 AM PDT by Keltik

NEW YORK (Billboard) - Today's hip-hop constituency possesses even greater media access and financial clout than when Public Enemy first exhorted the hip-hop generation to "Fight the Power" in 1989.

Rap artists have since tackled gang violence, South African apartheid, drugs, police abuse and more. Now they want to play an instrumental role in this year's presidential election.

Political groups are tapping hip-hop to engage not just young people but all disenfranchised people of color, hoping their votes will unseat President Bush.

"Most hip-hop followers come from struggle. There's a common agenda for all of those who are locked out," says Russell Simmons, chairman of the Hip-Hop Summit Action Network (HSAN). "Maybe they will vote in a way that will help not only young people but all of those who are in struggle."

HSAN has registered more than 500,000 new voters at its series of star-studded summits in major cities since 2001 and thousands more through its Web site, hsan.org.

As the election nears, follow-up phone calls will remind new registrants to vote. HSAN hopes to register 2 million voters by the end of 2004.

Its 19th summit in Chicago attracted 30,000 new young voters for its ongoing Hip-Hop Team Vote project. The March 27 event invited attendees to participate in a panel discussion featuring such musical luminaries as Kanye West, Ludacris, Twista and Common. Topics ranged from voting and rap profiling to the HIV (news - web sites)/AIDS (news - web sites) epidemic.

"The majority is under 30 in a lot of communities. That in itself becomes a potential swing vote or voting block," Davey D notes. The Bay Area journalist and political activist reports extensively on hip-hop and politics through his daveyd.com site.

HSAN is the most visible hip-hop organization. President/CEO Dr. Benjamin Chavis works with a board that includes Roc-a-Fella partners Jay-Z and Damon Dash, Bad Boy's Sean "P. Diddy" Combs and former presidential candidate the Rev. Al Sharpton (news - web sites).

In addition to its voter campaign, HSAN is fighting New York's Rockefeller drug laws, which impose lengthy sentences on first-time offenders.

The group is also rallying support for poet Sarah Jones. She filed suit against the Federal Communications Commission (news - web sites) after it fined a Portland, Ore., radio station for airing her anti-misogyny spoken-word song, "Your Revolution."

FIRST POLITICAL CONCLAVE

Hip-hop culture will serve as a platform at the inaugural National Hip-Hop Political Convention, set for June 16-19 at Rutgers University in Newark, N.J. Organizers say the conclave will be more inclusive and wider-ranging than HSAN.

"The aim is to bring together a diverse roster of local grassroots groups -- men, women, activists, artists, educators, workers and professionals -- and create a national political forum for the hip-hop generation," says Bakari Kitwana, a convention co-founder and author of "The Hip Hop Generation: Young Blacks and the Crisis in African-American Culture."

Convention organizers also want to move beyond registering voters and calling on rap/hip-hop artists to represent the issues.

"We want to force the powers that be and the middle-class elite leadership to notice that we are a powerful block," organizer Rosa Clemente says of the Malcolm X Grassroots Movement. "We make up over 15 million to 20 million people in the U.S. We won't be taken for granted, nor will our issues."

The National Hip-Hop Political Convention (hiphopconvention.org) is modeled on the precedent-setting Gary, Ind., convention of 1972. Facing a second term under then-president Richard Nixon, political, civic and educational leaders convened to strategize.

The upcoming confab's invited guests include Simmons, Chuck D, Dead Prez, activist Ras Baraka and representatives of activist groups from across the country.

Agenda topics encompass economic empowerment, criminal justice, education, health care, foreign policy and unifying the civil-rights and hip-hop generations.

Reuters/Billboard


TOPICS: Culture/Society
KEYWORDS: bias; city; ghetto; hip; hiphop; hop; ilovebigbutts; innercity; rap; urban
>>> Political groups are tapping hip-hop to engage not just young people but all disenfranchised people of color, hoping their votes will unseat President Bush, <<<

This is news story?? Every time I think I can't be shocked by the media's left-wing bias, I'm shocked by the media's left-wing bias.

1 posted on 04/04/2004 6:46:20 AM PDT by Keltik
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To: Keltik


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Please visit the Fundraiser thread.
It's on the Breaking News Sidebar


2 posted on 04/04/2004 6:50:00 AM PDT by glock rocks (Only YOU can stop fundraisers. Small monthly donations from each of us can do it !!)
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To: Keltik
HSAN is the most visible hip-hop organization. President/CEO Dr. Benjamin Chavis works with a board that includes Roc-a-Fella partners Jay-Z and Damon Dash, Bad Boy's Sean "P. Diddy" Combs and former presidential candidate the Rev. Al Sharpton (news - web sites).

From http://www.cln.com/archives/atlanta/newsstand/011197/agwinn_cont.htm (web page since removed): "Although the 88-year-old NAACP is the oldest civil-rights organization in the country, it is still recovering from the events between 1989 and 1994. During that period, the NAACP was rocked by a number of revelations involving the misconduct and spending of top officials. Benjamin Chavis, the NAACP's national president, was fired after he spent $300,000 to settle a sexual-harassment suit. He also spent $25,000 on personal items and $100,000 for limousines used for work. A former chairman, William Gibson, ran up $111,930 in 'questioned expenses,' including hotel suites and tuxedos."

3 posted on 04/04/2004 6:56:28 AM PDT by martin_fierro (Bling! Bling!)
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To: Keltik
This election is more and more lining up as the productive America vs the moocher America. Those who produce value will vote for Bush. Those who do not, whether because they are suckling on socialisms teat, or have married into inherited wealth, will vote french.
4 posted on 04/04/2004 7:02:33 AM PDT by blanknoone (End the occupation! Bring the Troops Home! (from Germany)
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To: Keltik
Let's see. A sociology of Hip-hop Nation:

The oppressed; rich suburban white kids suffering from self-righteousness the sme way other people suffer from bad breath.

The downtrodden; angry black poverty pests making a life and living off the misfortunes of others.

The intellectuals; college bohos dressed in black to show how gloomy the world is when you're a nineteen year old rich kid.

The disenfranchised; young, would-be hippies dressed exactly the same way old hippies used to dress. (It's funny how behind the times the avant garde has gotten.)

5 posted on 04/04/2004 7:08:15 AM PDT by NaughtiusMaximus (I could never vote for a guy with a chin like that.)
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To: Keltik
That's great. Even more ignorant street trash deciding the nation's future. But I guess Democrats have to get their constituency SOMEWHERE. And until the Felon Voting Rights Act passes, they'll settle for MTV morons. Why not? They have for decades.
6 posted on 04/04/2004 7:12:16 AM PDT by IronJack
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To: NaughtiusMaximus
Hey! Give P.J. credit for those lines! (they are well worth posting tho!)
7 posted on 04/04/2004 7:26:05 AM PDT by CrazyIvan (Death before dishonor, open bar after 6:00)
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To: Keltik
"We make up over 15 million to 20 million people in the U.S. We won't be taken for granted, nor will our issues."

Not content with just being ignored and taken for granted by Democrats, she apparently wants Republicans to care about a group that gives over 90% of its votes to the oppositon.

Brilliant.

8 posted on 04/04/2004 7:35:38 AM PDT by Rome2000 (Foreign leaders for Kerry!!!!!)
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To: Keltik
John "Jay-Kay" Kerry showing off his new "hip hop" look:

-Eric

9 posted on 04/04/2004 8:00:06 AM PDT by E Rocc (Democrats are to the economy what Round-up is to grass.)
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To: Keltik
Rap artists have since tackled gang violence, South African apartheid, drugs, police abuse and more.

I knew about the end of apartheid, but I was unaware that the other problems had ceased to be so, let alone because of rap music.

10 posted on 04/04/2004 9:56:59 AM PDT by coloradan (Hence, etc.)
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To: Keltik
Topics ranged from voting and rap profiling to the HIV (news - web sites)/AIDS (news - web sites) epidemic.

Rap profiling? Is "rap profiling" the new racial profiling?

11 posted on 04/04/2004 12:25:39 PM PDT by NYCVirago
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To: Blue Jays
Bump, yo. Commentary to be added later.
12 posted on 04/04/2004 12:33:03 PM PDT by Blue Jays (Rock Hard, Ride Free)
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