Posted on 02/11/2003 9:30:32 PM PST by prman
Rap music should be outlawed even if it takes an Act of Congress to do it.
As a child of the fifties, Im well aware of the fits that popular music caused my parents generation. Rock and roll was blamed for everything from teenagers Brylcreem ducktails to lewd dancing to juvenile delinquency.
Fifties rock and roll, though, seems high art compared to what saturates the airwaves today.
Back then, religious and civic leaders fulminated from pulpit and public square alike in condemning the devils music. In a famous and widely seen newsreel clip, the president of a citizens council from a Southern state insisted that We shouldnt allow our children to be brought down to this level.
After listening to an hours worth of current rap music as represented by a performer who calls himself 50 Cent, however, Im beginning to think that this guy was unfortunately way ahead of his time.
I see nothing whatsoever to recommend this music to anyone; in fact, I think it is highly damaging to young people, and certainly subversive to art and civilization in general. Its a bad rap for blacks to have this pernicious influence in their neighborhoods, and for this they have the media, venal businessmen and a gaggle of black leaders to blame, who do nothing to condemn it.
Among others, I accuse the major metropolitan newspapers, magazines and TV programs, particularly mediocre producers, editors and writers of the entertainment and features sections, who run story after story about the uneducated decadents who perform in and control this drug-infested industry. By doing so, they glorify this no-talent slime, unwittingly putting them in positions of successful role models for impressionable youth.
Eminem, Dr. Dre, Tupak Shakur, Ludacris, Jam Master Jay, P. Diddy, Snoop Dogg and the rest of the sorry lot are essentially a Sopranos-like organization of thugs who act and do business just like Tony, Ralphie and Uncle Junior. They lust after each others swag, cut into each others territories, and whack each other if someone gets dissed, all the while purveying noxious products.
Instead of Cosa Nostra dealers hanging around schoolyards, peddling coke and crank to school age children, rap moguls Suge Knight, Russell Simmons and lesser luminaries traffic in vulgar, immoral filth infecting kids minds instead of their bodies.
Last Sunday, the Detroit Free Press spent five columns and a photo describing the star power of this 50 Cent, noting that before he made it big in the music business, he was a crack dealer from Queens. Yet in the same issue, columnist Mitch Albom inveighed against rap vulgarity as entertainment. Didnt this strike the editor as schizophrenic?
Americas newsrooms and TV studios are populated mainly by middle-aged scribblers, the overwhelming majority of whom, I would wager, have never listened approvingly to any rap music in their lives. If they did, we would question their intelligence and their sanity.
But they continue to give ink and air time to these artists because they think its somehow a trend that must be reported and they think it will interest their audiences. They mistakenly presume that educated persons who read their newspapers and watch their programs want this trash paraded before them.
In their heart of hearts, if these people dont think this music has any merit, their attitude can only be compared to that of the drug-dealing don in Godfather I who reasons that its OK to peddle drugs only in certain neighborhoods: Let them lose their souls.
In other words, If I dont allow it in my house, who cares if others want to listen to it? They are thus blind to its destructiveness.>{?
Has our culture become so debased that righteous people will not take a stand for what is patently immoral, degenerate and childishly posturing? Do we want young children to talk like they live on the wharf? Do we want them to regard women in lewd and degrading ways? Do we want to forgo inspiring youth to higher forms of artistic merit and expression by celebrating the untalented dregs?
Is there any other business where employees gain advancement by exhibiting and bragging about their crude, thuggish and criminal behavior?
In the fifties, certain novels were Banned in Boston because of their salacious language and sexual content. As misguided as these efforts may have been, they were based on a widely shared belief that there do exist bad influences on the moral fabric of society.
I challenge you, dear reader, to listen to the music of 50 Cent and tell me that a diet of this stuff cant rot childrens minds or perhaps give them brain cancer, or if nothing else, wont certainly deaden their souls.
Barrett Kalellis is a columnist and writer whose articles appear regularly in various local and national print and online publications.
Yep, just as banning guns doesn't solve gun violence. Different proponents, same concept - that legislating away the symptom somehow cures the underlying disease.
Hmmm ... so because we did it in the past, it was automatically a good thing? Such as slavery, segregation, internment of Japanese-Americans and other such happenings? Outlawing rap music would do nothing to change inner-city problems. But I'm sure it would make you feel warm and fuzzy that you were actually doing something, pointless or not, just as the Million Mom types get all soppy over their dream of banning guns in America because they think it would end gun violence.
OR at the least the venue ought to regulated where all this sh*t isn't one-click-away accessible or foisted upon the masses as "art," for the consumption of all -- regardless of age.
Yeah! Just like gun owners should be required to use trigger locks so kids don't shoot themselves! With enough legislation, we can make sure that nothing bad ever happens to our children...
Amazing how some delusional folks think the Republic was actually founded (for real) either at the time of Johnson's socialist program in 1965, OR upon the other socialist red-letter date and decision marking the legality of murder (Roe v. Wade) in '1973.
Apparently ALL pre-1964 history, mores, and values were lies.
Forget left wingers. The next political battle is conservatives vs. libertarians...
Yeah right...
So if we did things your way, do 8 year old kids get to sit on a bar stool next to you, smoke a cigar, buy you a round, then get a lap dance?
To some of these people, anarchy is only goal for true freedom.
I haven't heard any rap music in ages. Exactly how were you forced to listen to it?
No, current law makes that illegal as it is. However, the path you propose would open the way for busybodies to deny ADULTS the ability to smoke a stogie and down a round, as they will take your desires to control porn and use the mechanisms to control their pet peeve.
Perhaps for some of you people the point a chimp is engaged in fellatio in Macy's front window; For others, it's the same scenario during a school play...
Maybe some of you didn't get the memo of 1776-1965 before America was hijacked by moral relativists.
I guess some cretins fail to apprehend the detriment of "rap" music's glorification of raping "bitches" and killing cops to the minds of nine-year olds.
Baloney.
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