First Post, were is the hip-hop nation when some real shit Pop OFF,Jena Six

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Damn, I feel mos def on this, the industry is quick to beef and get loud about some dumb shit, etc. how got more money, biggest house, some silly ass bitch or some dumb shit like that. When we have a chance to unify about the injustice that is going on, we sit on are hands and do nothing. I would have liked to have heard about Jay, puff or somebody else prominent in hip hop or just the black community in general participating but Mos def and Bun B were it, damn, I would not expect Oprah because we know she is not about African American Communities anymore money changes people, we have to do better,:(.:smh:http://www.defsounds.com/news/view/2544-mos-def-upset-at-jena-6-response.html
 
You are so true. The problem is that these guys don't want to lose their "white" people. The white label heads plus the white fans. The money is more important to them then their freedom. It ain't Hip hop VS. America, it's Hip Hop VS. BLACK PEOPLE!:smh: I admire how they went and got that money, but nigga's with that money ain't got no plans. No plans but to look out for self. See, they follow off example. They see the white man ain't helping no black person, so you know they going to follow suit. Nigga's just don't understand. They act like "BITCHES", just watch and let things happen. MOST OF THESE RAPPERS ARE FAKE!!!
 
You are so true. The problem is that these guys don't want to lose their "white" people. The white label heads plus the white fans. The money is more important to them then their freedom. It ain't Hip hop VS. America, it's Hip Hop VS. BLACK PEOPLE!:smh: I admire how they went and got that money, but nigga's with that money ain't got no plans. No plans but to look out for self. See, they follow off example. They see the white man ain't helping no black person, so you know they going to follow suit. Nigga's just don't understand. They act like "BITCHES", just watch and let things happen. MOST OF THESE RAPPERS ARE FAKE!!!

:yes:
 
You are so true. The problem is that these guys don't want to lose their "white" people. The white label heads plus the white fans. The money is more important to them then their freedom. It ain't Hip hop VS. America, it's Hip Hop VS. BLACK PEOPLE!:smh: I admire how they went and got that money, but nigga's with that money ain't got no plans. No plans but to look out for self. See, they follow off example. They see the white man ain't helping no black person, so you know they going to follow suit. Nigga's just don't understand. They act like "BITCHES", just watch and let things happen. MOST OF THESE RAPPERS ARE FAKE!!!

Cosign:dance:

I'll be glad when Black people wake up to the fraud that these fake ass rappers are. Modern day minstrel mother fuckers.
 
I'm glad somebody feels me, they can be bad as hell in the studio and on smack DVD but the white power structure is saying "bust a mothafuckin move" and Kat's is playing pussy, where is the old goodie mob that was on it for real, M1, the rest of dead pres, common and last but not least, Mister "George Bush don't Like Black People" himself ,Kanye, shit some money is good but the presence would have meant more, maybe im trippin but what if im not:confused:,:smh:
 
They aren't leaders, they're rappers. That is all. Were Chris Paul and Duece McAllister supposed to be involved? It would be nice, but they aren't obligated.

How many people were in Jena...around 50,000? How many were from Texas, Mississippi and Louisiana? Why do you expect them to give a fuck, when a lot of us don't give a fuck and aren't active in anything.
 
50cent couldn't go because he need 100 security officers just to go out. He couldn't hire enough security to protect him from 60,000 marchers out in the open like that.

JayZ too rich to march.

Puffy too busy gettin fucked in da ass.

Snoop was too high.
 
Most of these rappers are just black faces in the KKK hood and masks. Fuck them. They're cowards. What do you expect from a group of whores with no principle?
 
50cent couldn't go because he need 100 security officers just to go out. He couldn't hire enough security to protect him from 60,000 marchers out in the open like that.

JayZ too rich to march.

Puffy too busy gettin fucked in da ass.

Snoop was too high.

:lol::lol::lol::lol::lol::lol::lol::lol::lol:
 
One question, Did any of yall go to Louisiana?

You can't compare regular people to these rap stars. Some people can afford to take time off their jobs to make the venture and some can't. But for a rapper like Lil' Wayne, there is absolutely no excuse.
 
One question, Did any of yall go to Louisiana?

Co-Sign. Alot of people on here talking about what others should do and they havent done anything. I cant hate on somebody for not going becuz I didnt go myself. They arent obligated to go, they are just regular people like us. Much respect to all those that did go tho.
 
One question, Did any of yall go to Louisiana?
Did you? If you did (which you probably didn't) good for you, glad you represented.

You can't compare regular people to these rap stars. Some people can afford to take time off their jobs to make the venture and some can't. But for a rapper like Lil' Wayne, there is absolutely no excuse.
You are correct my man. Regular folks can't just take off of work like that, but these "I do what the fuck I wanna" rappers have no excuse. Salt n Pepa was there.

WHOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOSHHHHH!!!!!!!!!

That's the sound of that concept going right over the other guys head.
 
Mos Def and other Artists, Students and Activists Call for a Student Walk out on Monday October 1st To Support the Jena 6

Artist/Activist Mos Def, Idris Elba, Common, M1, Talib Kweli, MC Lyte, Pharoahe Monch, the Malcolm X Grassroots Movement, Sankofa Community Empowerment, Change the Game, the National Hip Hop Political Convention, The Hip-Hop Association, Color of Change and student leaders from over 100 campuses call for a National Student Walk-Out on Monday October 1 at 12 noon central time to support the Jena 6, who are being denied their human rights by the Louisiana criminal justice system.

September 26, 2007 New York – Black and Latino/a artists, activists and students across the country are organizing a national day of support for six Black high school students known as the “Jena 6.” Over 100 schools have joined in the call to walk out of classrooms at 12 noon, Central Standard Time on Monday October 1 and rally either on campus or at other designated areas to demand the immediate release of Mychal Bell from jail.

Mos Def, who spearheaded the campaign, said “This is the time for Black people to support the Jena 6, and call attention to the unequal treatment the criminal Justice system is dishing out not only in Jena Louisiana but across this nation…we all live in Jena.”

The Jena case began last fall, when two Black high school students sat under the "white" tree on their campus. White students responded by hanging nooses from the tree, conjuring up images of lynching and racial terrorism endured by Black people across the country. When Black students protested the light punishment for the students who hung the nooses, District Attorney Reed Walters came to the school and told the students he could "take [their] lives away with a stroke of [his] pen."

Racial tension continued to mount in Jena, and the District Attorney did nothing in response to several egregious cases of violence and threats against black students. But when a white student--who had been a vocal supporter of the student’s who hung the nooses, taunted a black student and called several black students "******"--sustained minor injuries from a school fight, six black students were charged with second-degree attempted murder. Last month, the first young man to be tried, Mychal Bell, was convicted. He faced up to 22 years in prison for a school fight until Black people began to organize and his conviction was thrown out by a court that rules he should not have been tried as an adult. However, the DA and the judge still refuse to drop the charges in this case and Bell, though released on $45,000 bail, is still subject to trial.

This case has become a symbol for the Black community of the disproportionate arrest and incarceration rate of Black people and the excessive punishment of Black students in schools across the country. Many local organizers say what is happening to the Jena 6 youth is similar to what happens in their cities.

Mos Def added, "Jena Louisiana is the same as ‘Jena’ New York. From Mychal Bell to Sean Bell our communities continue to be targeted.”

The group has created a list of demands that will be read at noon during rallies around the country.

Demands
Judge J.P. Mauffray and District Attorney Reed Walters have engaged in a string of egregious actions. We call for:

1. All charges against the Jena 6 be dropped;

2. The United States Department of Justice to convene an immediate inquiry into the circumstances surrounding the arrests and prosecutions of the Jena 6;

3. Judge Mauffray to be recused from presiding over Bell's juvenile court hearings or other proceedings;

4. The Louisiana Office of Disciplinary Counsel to investigate Reed Walters for unethical and possibly illegal conduct;

5. The Louisiana Judiciary Commission investigate Judge Mauffray for unethical conduct;

6. The Jena School District superintendent to be removed from office; and

7. That each local, state and federal criminal justice apparatus stop profiling the black community in general and specifically black youth for imprisonment and free labor.

For more information: www.mxgm.org and www.myspace.com/SankofaEmpowerment

To add your name and school to join this movement please contact:
Assata Richards at assata@pitt.edu or Shantrelle P. Lewis at SJPLewis@hotmail.com

List of additional endorsers: Cynthia McKinney, Immortal Technique, K’naan, April Silver/akilaworksongs, Kevin Powell, Brian White, NyOil, Goapele, Dwayne Wiggins, X-Clan, Wise Intelligent.
 
You can't compare regular people to these rap stars. Some people can afford to take time off their jobs to make the venture and some can't. But for a rapper like Lil' Wayne, there is absolutely no excuse.

I agree. I think the rappers should have been on the front line. I think they are a bunch of sellouts for not going. But that's not what I asked.

Did YOU go to Louisiana?
 
One question, Did any of yall go to Louisiana?

Co-Sign. Alot of people on here talking about what others should do and they havent done anything. I cant hate on somebody for not going becuz I didnt go myself. They arent obligated to go, they are just regular people like us. Much respect to all those that did go tho.

I agree. I think the rappers should have been on the front line. I think they are a bunch of sellouts for not going. But that's not what I asked.

Did YOU go to Louisiana?

NO. I wasn't able financial, but best believe. If I was, I would of been there first. Before anybody. Rappers, the ones with the money (and power), could have denounce that shit on T.V. Man, they preach about how they bout it bout it and shit. Teaching are kids how to worship guns, drugs, thug life, and all that other shit that ain't going to help the future of they lives. Like the supporting their kids and teaching their kids to try and avoid the pitfalls and traps that lay ahead. The pitfalls and traps that me and you are falling into. The disrespecting of the black woman, by us men and by themselves. The non-raising of our kids by both parents. And the list goes on, but shit yeah them nigga's should have been there. Bet it won't be a song about it, but they will rap about how they got Kilos and guns.:lol:
Kilos mean MONEY and guns mean POWER, and we truly have neither. :smh:
 
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