Posts Tagged ‘jesse jackson’
Saturday, August 2nd, 2008

Today’s students can put dope in their veins or hope in their brains. If they can conceive it and believe it, they can achieve it. They must know it is not their aptitude but their attitude that will determine their altitude.
- Jesse Jackson
Tags: jesse jackson, quotes
Posted in Quote of the day | No Comments »
Friday, July 11th, 2008

So what does Nas have to say?
“I think Jesse Jackson, he’s the biggest player hater. His time is up. All you old n****s, time is up. We heard your voice, we saw your marching, we heard your sermons. We don’t wanna hear that s**t no more.
“It’s a new day. It’s a new voice. I’m here now. We don’t need Jesse; I’m here. I got this. We got Barack, we got David Banners and Young Jeezys.
“We’re the voice now. It’s no more Jesse. Sorry. Goodbye. You ain’t helping nobody in the ‘hood. That’s the bottom line. Goodbye, Jesse. Bye!”
Now let me wrap my head around this statement. Did Nas just say ““It’s a new day. It’s a new voice. I’m here now. We don’t need Jesse; I’m here. I got this. We got Barack, we got David Banners and Young Jeezys.” Like does that even make sense. This ego of yours has got to stop my brother, Nas you must have forgotten that your credibility waned when you pulled your recent “NIGGER” stunt. You remember don’t you, naming your album Nigger knowing it would create heavy backlash and then changing it at the last minute because of fear of record stores not carrying it. Wasn’t that obvious!
So goodbye Cornel West, and Kevin Powell, we have Nas, Jeezy and David Banner. What we have to realize is that all of our voices count for something. We can not look to rappers to be the voice of the people because far too often they are the voice of their own pocket. But we do have to acknowledge their presence, their thoughts. Their minds click just like the rest of ours do, in order to reach true equality to promote true change we must combine all of our voices and put action to OUR agenda.
But I mean do we really have to throw Jesse Jackson under the bus. Do we reallly have to play the ignorant younger generation role and discredit the great things Jesse has done in the black community. Let’s be serious!
And why is it when we have a problem we run to the media, is this a ploy to sell albums. This is the pot calling the kettle black; the older generation discredits the younger and the younger discredit the older. Is this not the same system that was created to destroy black communities in the first place that you so eloquently rap on your new album.
Tell me what’s better; white supremacy or black supremacy. Neither, they both look to do the same thing, they just change the beneficiary. So Our generation versus the Civil Rights Generation is no different and the countless bickering takes away form the bigger picture at hand. It is clear that the slave/ master mentality is still in place; althought we are slaves to money and attention, not just hegemony and institutionalized racism.
Tags: cornel west, Hip-Hop, jesse jackson, kevin powell, nas, slave and the master
Posted in Hip-Hop | 4 Comments »
Thursday, July 10th, 2008

Man I tell you, living in Technology world, you have to watch what you say! I mean every other week we are hearing people’s personal phone conversations, voicemails, sound bytes from closed affairs. So in the words of T.I. “Watch what you say” Brother Jackson!
I hear the infamous Bill O’Reilly will air Jackson’s comments later on this evening, I will find the youtube link and then post the comments. But let’s be serious Jesse Jackson was probably ticked off like every other black man that Barack Obama used Father’s Day as the day that he would condemn the absence of fatherhood in the black community. Black men all over the nation are irate about this because quite frankly they do not see Barack addressing other issues head on that deal with the black population.
He was not very vocal about Jena 6, his remarks were watered down when he spoke of the Sean Bell incident, he was absent from the State of the Black Union; so people feel that Obama does not have the right to condemn black fathers and not look to condemn the absence of fatherhood as a whole across racial lines. I mean that has been his strong point thus far so black men across the country were angered by Barack’s statement.
It’s not that I disagree with Obama’s statements about irresponsible fathers or that I feel he should have addressed all absentee fathers. My issue with the speech was highlighting the negative which is already known. It’s like the bad child in the classroom, they get more attention than the students who actually do their work further making those “good” students feel under-appreciated. The same can be said for fathers like mine who work two jobs to provide for their families. Men who provide for their families should be honored on father’s day and less emphasis placed on the dead beat dad’s. Let’s lift up the brothers who are doing the right thing. Maybe our selfless praise of these men will inspire the men who are not effectively handling the business of their children as fathers.
For the rest of this story click here
UPDATE: HERE IS THE CLIP
UMM Jesse “I wanna Cut His Nuts Off” umm yea I’ll let you all be the judge!
Tags: anger, bar, barack, barack obama, be, bill o'reilly, black, black community, black man, black men, brother, brothers, business, child, children, cia, cnn, community, father, father's day, fatherhood, good, hand, hear, honor, jE, jena 6, jesse ja, jesse jackson, k, king, lies, light, man, men, NY, nyt, O, obama, politics, pop, praise, rap, res, sean bell, sin, State, STUDENT, students, t.i., the infamous, unity, us, voicemail, word, words, work, world
Posted in black men | 4 Comments »
Wednesday, June 25th, 2008

Ok first, this is a message to all the young black males and females in America who struggle when their class mates say that they are talking white because they choose to speak proper English.
This fallacy has gone too far, in fact there is nothing “white” about being an articulate and intelligent individual. And now we have to hear these same type of attacks from Presidential hopefuls who know they have no chance in hel of ever becomig the President of these United States.
I am sad that Cornell West once endorsed your run Mr. Nader for you are the epitome of ignorance and you have taken upon yourself to promote discension and misunderstanding throughout the land with your careless remarks.
Recently Nader said, “”There’s only one thing different about Barack Obama when it comes to being a Democratic presidential candidate. He’s half African-American,” Nader told the paper in comments published Tuesday. “Whether that will make any difference, I don’t know. I haven’t heard him have a strong crackdown on economic exploitation in the ghettos. Payday loans, predatory lending, asbestos, lead. What’s keeping him from doing that? Is it because he wants to talk white? He doesn’t want to appear like Jesse Jackson? We’ll see all that play out in the next few months and if he gets elected afterwards.”
So to speak to blacks or about black issues is only to speak about what is going on in the ghettos. Are both whites, blacks and latinos alike not the victims of predatory lending, payday loans, asbestos and lead.
And what is this “talking white” you speak of. Barack Obama often speaks of changing politics, changing America and creating a better world for people of all ethnicities to live in. Is that talking white Mr. Nader. Deep down Nader has the same white supremacist attitude that others before him have had and will inject race into this equation or election whichever you want to call it whenever he can.
I just wonder how does it feel to go down in history as the quintiessential loser. As the man who helped put George Bush in office, who has destroyed the reputation of America and kept us in a bloody war with Iraq where Iraqi officials kill U.S. troops.
Beat it Ralph Nader!

Tags: africa, america, art, bar, barack, barack obama, be, BET, better, black, che, cia, cornell west, crack, election, english, female, george bus, george bush, ghetto, ghettos, hear, help, history, hope, iraq, jE, jesse ja, jesse jackson, k, king, live, loser, man, men, NY, O, obama, official, pa, paper, politics, president, presidential candidate, race, ralph nader, reputation, res, Stand, State, struggle, talkiing white, troops, united states, unity, us, war, white, whites, word, world, young
Posted in politics | 2 Comments »
Monday, June 9th, 2008

“The Rev. Jesse Jackson said today that Sen. Hillary Clinton has made “a powerful case” for her candidacy for vice president.
Sen. Barack Obama should take his time choosing a running mate, Jackson said in an interview with the Associated Press today, but Clinton offers some major advantages.
“As he surveys the field, it must be someone who is compatible with him philosophically, someone who is loyal to his agenda and someone who brings a constituency that matters and the capacity to become the next president, as the Constitution requires should disaster strike,” Jackson said, and Clinton meets those requirements. “She may not be the only one who does, but she certainly does.
“She starts with 18 million votes,” he said. “She starts having gained a following among Latinos and she has substantial support among African Americans. … Women will be looking to her place in the scheme of things.”
Tags: africa, african american, america, art, bar, barack, barack obama, be, black, che, cia, clinton, constitution, hillary, hillary clinton, jE, jesse ja, jesse jackson, k, king, men, O, obama, obama 08, pa, president, res, sin, star, support, THE NEXT PRESIDENT, us, vice president, vp, women, word
Posted in Uncategorized | 2 Comments »
Monday, April 28th, 2008

Photo courtesy of New York Times
Wear all black on Monday for the injustice verdict in the Sean Bell case Please pass this on to anyone who can receive a text.
I received this text message numerous times throughout the course of the weekend and again I ask “Is wearing all black the new activism”. Has wearing all black taken the place of such notable activism as the Montgomery Bus Boycott. I remember back when the Jena 6 movement was thriving and we were all wearing black as a means to show the masses our “black solidarity”. I participated and heard many say that they felt good walking into their corporate offices and seeing other people of color representing the injustice that was being served in Jena. But does our action stop there, does what we wear really signify that an injustice has been done?
So today I woke up and threw on my black shirt and my black Chuck Taylor sneakers in memory of the brother Sean Bell. I walked into my classroom and unlike that glorious Jena day, barely any people of color were wearing all black. What does wearing all black mean anyway; do the people who we want to see our solidarity even know that we are wearing this color to represent the fact that a brother was murdered by the NYPD. That yet again the NYPD walked out of a court of law not guilty of all charges. My own Constitutional Law professor had no idea who Sean Bell was and that this verdict had drastically affected the lives of many people. He was unaware that many young brothers and sisters had taken to the streets and were seeking Justice for the loss of yet another young talented black man. He definitely had no idea why one of his students had on black today; all he wanted to know was if I was familiar with the material that will be on his exam next week.
I checked through my usual news media outlets hoping that I would see something in the headlines about the injustice the Bell family was served this past Friday. Instead, I was inundated with news of the Reverend Jeremiah Wright and the Democrat Primary’s, but there was no sign of any measures that would be taken towards the Bell family finding JUSTICE. And why should their be, a brother is dead and we all go back to our regularly scheduled lives. More concerned with celebrity gossip than the fact that black men can be killed in this country and their murderers receive absolutely no punishment.
The NY Times had a brief article about this issue however, and it largely dealt with the few people who were outraged by the verdict and were protesting in Harlem yesterday. One of the brothers on the bull horn asked “why aren’t more people out here”. The days of marching and blocking traffic for a day or two didn’t work then and they will continue not to work now. All the police do is re-direct the traffic and the protest becomes more of a nuisance than a movement that affects change. So what my generation has come up with as a means of fighting injustice is wearing all black; then we are really fighting institutionalized racism and brutality, we’ll show em!
Wrong, we need a strategic effort on a variety of fronts to fight the injustices that are facing our people. I refuse to believe that we are as lazy as the Civil Rights Guard of Leadership paints us. No we are not lazy at all, we are the internet generation; the text message generation. All of that to say we have the fastest and often most effective modes of communication to get messages across to our peers and move in a organized manner. We have to fight these different injustices on many different fronts. The Judge who rendered the verdict; we have to find out if he was elected or appointed; if elected we make sure that those who are eligible to vote in that district show up in record numbers to relieve him of his position.
Let’s take it back to the boycott days since the loss of revenue is the only thing that makes politicians and businessmen understand that we are angry about something and are seeking some type of remedy. This shouldn’t be hard to do because we are spawning into a recession anyway and people are already strapped for cash. We need to find out exactly what businesses that if we stopped patronizing would affect Michael Bloomberg the fastest. Once those major businesses are affected they will call up their high powered friends ad say “hey we have to do something about this’ its affecting my pocket”! You see when when we start to use our creativity and organize our efforts we begin to fall upon the ears who really create change in our cities. Maybe then the NYPD will stop believing that it is perfectly fine and legal to kill young black men. But if all we are doing is wearing black; trust me the courts, the politicians, the police and definitely the law are not hearing our voices.
We need to tap into the resources in our communities who have the know how and ability to propose legislation for stricter monitoring practices over the police departments who brutalize communities of color. All cops are not the scum who murder and harass people of color so we need to reach out to those who are fed up with their colleagues behavior and off the record find out what we can do to upset their internal situation that will help us make the changes we wish to see. I could write on for days about different measures that we could take however my one voice will not create this change. Our collective voice will not change these scenarios but our collective voices coupled with our strategic collective actions will create this change. In memory of Sean Bell and all of the other forgotten fallen soldiers; please let’s Make It Happen!
ps. I will be at the Black and Male In America Conference the weekend of June 15 - 17 in Brooklyn, NY. I think we all need to be there!

Tags: 50 shots, al sharpton, america, art, bar, be, black, black man, black men, brooklyn, brother, brothers, business, cara buckley, change, che, cia, civil rights, communities of color, constitution, cops, courts, creativity, democrat primary, family, friday, gescard isnora, good, harlem, hear, help, hip, hope, ice t, injustice, internet, jE, jeff johnson, jena 6, Jeremiah, jeremiah wright, jesse jackson, justice, justice cooperman, k, kevin powell, king, law, leadersh, leadership, live, man, marc cooper, media, men, Mos Def, murder, nas, New York, news, news media, not guilty, NY, ny times, nypd, nyt, O, pa, pain, perfect, police, primary, queens, racism, rap, res, revere, sean bell, sin, sister, sisters, soldiers, solidarity, Stand, star, streets, STUDENT, students, talib kweli, thoams j. lueck, trust, us, war, work, young, young black men
Posted in Race Relations, black men, politics | 10 Comments »
Wednesday, April 23rd, 2008

What it means to be a Nigger continued!
Rewind the clocks back before the Civil Rights Era, after the Red Scare, where if you were communist you were a nigger. No, I am speaking of World War II, a defining moment in this country’s history where we joined forces with our allies overseas and toppled the Axis Powers who viciously slaughtered those of the Jewish faith and anyone else in their quest for world domination. Let us look into our backyard at today’s most successful minority, looked upon as intelligent, reserved, model citizens of this great nation; the Asian. Yes in 1942 here in America the Japanese were considered NIGGERS! Stripped of their land, businesses, and personal possessions, some 120,000 Japanese Americans were forced into relocation centers into the interior lands of this country. Placed in prison camps with little to no food to eat and cramped living quarters for large families were just some of the conditions the Japanese had to experience. Propaganda spread through the media about the “Japs” as they were called, “good riddance to the spy’s and traitors”. These were some of the messages about the people who had only a few years prior been trying to assimilate into American culture. They too were in search of the roads paved of gold people from other countries associate with our great America. White farmers benefited with the Japanese farmers gone, they were then able to take over their profit share and make more revenue for themselves. Even the Supreme Court of the United States permitted this racist behavior holding that this exclusion did not violate the constitution arguing “it is permissible to curtail the civil rights of a racial group when there is a “pressing public necessity.” So much for Justice!
Check back Friday for Part three of “what it means to be a nigger”!
[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hhp3KWMEhJU&hl=en]
Tags: al sharpton, america, art, be, bill clinton, bill o'reily, business, che, cia, civil rights, communist, communists, constitution, countries, def jam, discrimination, experience, faith, farmers, friday, good, hannity & colmes, hillary clinton, history, jamanese americans, japs, Jay-z, jE, jesse jackson, jewish, jimmy iovine, justice, k, kedar massenberg, king, lies, lyor cohen, media, men, nas, nigger, NY, O, oppression, pa, prison, racism, racist, red scare, res, rip, russell simmons, sin, State, supreme court, traitor, united states, universal, us, US government, US Supreme Court, war, white, world, world war II, young
Posted in politics | 1 Comment »
Monday, April 21st, 2008
[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hhp3KWMEhJU&hl=en]
What it means to be a NIGGER
A few weeks back as I sat and watched the red carpet section of the Grammy’s I saw my fellow Virgo grace the camera with his wife donning a t-shirt that said “NIGGER”. Wait a minute rewind that back, I saw Nasir Jones better known as “Nas” and a group of supporters of different ethnicities in “NIGGER” Fashion. This is clearly a sign that the times have changed, television has become so liberal, when I was a child they would have blurred out the image at minimum to say the least. Nas was interviewed about his “message”, there were no censors over the word and things went relatively normal. I mentioned earlier that Nas is a Virgo because they are the thinkers of the zodiac and very strategic in their movements, so maybe Nas is titling his album NIGGER and grappling after the publicity that it is causing so that we can have intelligent discourses like the one we are about to have.
Wait one second, before you lose interest in fear that I am about take you on a historical voyage enduring the plight of black people and the socialization of the term Nigger and how we need to accept it to empower ourselves, I promise you I will not. This is not the typical discussion of whether this is a term of endearment or mental slavery. But to understand what the concept of the term nigger we must first look to one of the great writers of the Harlem Renaissance, James Baldwin.
Baldwin says, “What white people have to do is try to find out in their own hearts why it was necessary to have a nigger in the first place. Because I’m not a nigger, I’m a man! But if you think I’m a nigger it means you need it. If I’m not the nigger here and you, the white people invented him then you’ve got to find out why?”
Baldwin paints us such a vivid picture when he speaks about the system needing a nigger. You see the term nigger is about an institutionalized inferiority complex. The system, those proponents of white supremacy need a nigger to belittle, they need a nigger to make themselves feel better than another group of people because they lack self-esteem. The nigger is needed in order to perpetuate systems of control, a hierarchy within this great land from sea to shining sea. Unfortunately today the term nigger has become synonymous with black people. However this is not the case, this is not the fate of black people; this has been the position of various ethnic groups in America. I will chronicle the stories of three niggers who have been bastardized by a system of oppression and blatant racism in this country without ever painting the picture of a black face!
If you are of Middle Eastern decent, or even look like you could possibly be of the Islamic faith after 9/11, I regret to inform you but the United States has declared you a NIGGER! Your rights were stripped from you; you became the victims of police brutality, random search and seizures, and you are always pulled aside at the airport for more questioning. Why is this; because you fit the “description”, you look suspicious? But none of this is true; it is merely the pigment of your skin and the religious affiliation that you are suspected of practicing which garners you such attention. You watch your faith and belief system ridiculed daily on television, you have become the butt of all jokes. You’re fearful when your children go to school because other children will torment them; forgive them for they know not what they do. You came to this country with hopes of reaching the American dream however you are now living the American Nightmare! The ultimate insult is no longer to be black but it is to be Muslim. Your beautiful, peaceful culture has been tainted by slander; you are now judged by the few who make it tough for the many. Welcome!
Tune in tomorrow to see who else is a NIGGER!

Tags: al sharpton, america, american nightmare, arabs, art, bastard, be, be a nigga too, belief, BET, better, black, black men, black people, change, che, child, children, cia, controversy, def jam, easter, esteem, faith, fashion, fear, grace, grammys, harlem, harlem renaissance, hear, heart, Hip-Hop, historic, hope, islam, jam, james, james baldwin, Jay-z, jesse jackson, jokes, k, light, louis farrakhan, man, men, michael eric dyson, music, Muslim, muslims, nas, new music, nigga, nigger, NY, O, oppression, pa, pain, peace, police, police brutality, race, racism, rap, res, ridicule, rip, self-esteem, sin, slavery, Stand, star, State, support, tavis smiley, united states, us, US government, white, white supremacy, wife, word, writer, young, young men
Posted in Hip-Hop | 6 Comments »
Tuesday, April 8th, 2008
The following video is very disturbing; please proceed with caution! I pray that we can have a productive dialogue about this very serious issue that is affecting people of all colors and ethnicities. While I sit here watching this video in disgust, I hope that it is a joke to awake the masses of people engaging in unprotected sex. Please pass this video along because this type of reckless behavior can affect and infect each and every one of our lives.
Tags: AIDS, al sharpton, asian girls, barack obama, be, bill o'reilly, black girls, black men, bling bling, chylamidia, cnn, concerts, crabs, death, fox, george bush, gold diggers, gonorrhea, hannity & colmes, health awareness, help, hillary clinton, Hip-Hop, hispanics, homicide, hope, jesse jackson, john mccain, k, latino girls, latino men, live, man, materialism, murder, O, pa, presidential race, Roc, sex, sexually transmitted diseases, state of emergency, std's, teenage daughters, teenage girls, terrorism, the clap, unprotected sex, us, video, white girls, white men
Posted in black men | 12 Comments »
Saturday, March 15th, 2008

We ain’t thugs for the sake of just being thugs. Nobody do that where we grew at nigga duh. The poverty line we not above so out comes the mask and gloves cause we ain’t feeling the love. We ain’t doing crime for the sake of doing crime, we moving dimes cus we ain’t doing fine. 1 out of 3 of us is locked up doing time; you know what that type of shit can do to a niggas mind. My mind on my money, money on my mind if you owe me ten dollars you ain’t giving me nine. Yall ain’t give me forty acres and a mule so I got my glock 40 now I’m cool and if al sharpton is speaking for me. Somebody get him the word and tell him I don’t approve. Tell him ill remove the curses, if you tell me our schools gon be perfect. When Jena 6 don’t exist tell em that’s when ill stop saying bitch, biiitchhhh!!!!!
Jay – Z “SAY HELLO”
American Gangster
In the 2003 Fade to Black DVD, Jay-Z referenced taking time out in his music to address what’s going on in the hood, asking his peers, “am I wrong to do that, to have those feelings.” Well on the last verse of Say Hello from Jay’s latest album American Gangster, Jay addresses many inherent issues within the black community, its duality is indescribable, just vibe with me!
We ain’t thugs for the sake of just being thugs….. True but false, we live in environments where many feel that they have no other options but to resort to a criminal lifestyle because of the lack of resources to education, and job training to achieve that American Dream. However, we also live in a time where the commercialization of hard times has become intriguing to many youth. In fear of not being respected our youth are imitating thug lifestyles in an effort to replicate what they see on television and hear in songs.
The poverty line we not above so out comes the mask and gloves…….. True indeed, many of our families are living below the poverty line, suffering, living from check to check. So out comes the mask and gloves…. Wait a minute, who is this mask and glove being used to hide? Who is the victim of these tools the perpetrator you so vividly paint chooses to use while committing his crime that he’s not doing for the sake of committing crime? More than likely, people who look just like you, live in similar conditions as you, creating a vicious cycle of survival of the fittest in our communities!
1 out of 3 of us is locked up doing time…………. Oh I know what that type of thing can do to a brother’s mind, to a young man’s self esteem. When your peers are being hauled away in record numbers to institutions of enslavement, better known as prisons! However, thread this story together; already Hov has answered some of his own questions, showing you the circumstances which desperately rape our communities of our brothers.
Yall ain’t give me forty acres and a mule……….. So you got your Glock 40 now you’re cool. No….. Not cool, that’s misplaced anger. They did that to us, well who is they, is this “the proverbial man” who keeps his foot on top of the black man’s throat? No! This is a historical reference, reflective of the United States and promises that were made to people of color that were not fulfilled. Moreover, it’s institutionalized racism that Jay is talking about and how it affects the neighborhoods we live in. The lack of resources and awareness on how to achieve in this land of American opportunity. Back to this Glock 40, this gun, our anger and despair for a system that oppresses us is quite valid but to then take out that same anger on our own people only furthers a system of destruction upon us as a community.
And if Al Sharpton is speaking for me………. Say no more my brother; many feel that the Old Guard of leadership is out of touch with the issues of today’s generation. A few months ago I saw Sharpton attacking Nas over his new album title “NIGGER”. I thought, we have to get better communication within our community of leadership! Nas shouldn’t have to hear via MTV news that Al Sharpton has a problem; Sharpton should contact Nas directly and feed him some knowledge and wisdom as a younger brother. We should respect our elders and in turn they should respect us and what we are trying to create as an innovative and creative group of young people.
Instead, we need to openly communicate about issues respectfully and provide viable solutions to these problems. Because once again, I hear anger within ourselves when we truly should be coming together to fight against systems of inequality and their injustices. Sharpton can’t make the schools better and neither can Jay, but with an agenda targeting urban public school systems WE Can. Targeting legislation used to fund educational programs in underserved communities, using our right to vote, utilizing our freedom of speech against the ills that plague us, We Can. By reinvesting in our own communities and not spending our dollar in everyone else’s the minute it’s earned, we can create economic prosperity and create opportunity within our neighborhoods. Then the mask and gloves don’t have to come out because they are only hurting us. There’s an awareness issue in the hood, there’s misplaced anger in the hood, it’s time now that we unite together and build with each other to create an agenda and Make It Happen! 1
C. Shine
Tags: al sharpton, america, American Gangster, anger, be, BET, better, bitch, black, black community, black man, brother, brothers, che, cia, community, crime, dollar, education, equality, esteem, fade to black, fear, freedom, full, fun, hbo, hear, hip, Hip-Hop, historic, hov, hurt, injustice, Jay, Jay-z, jE, jena 6, jesse jackson, justice, k, king, knowledge, leadersh, leadership, lies, life, lifestyle, live, love, man, men, money, mtv, music, nas, nationalism, neighborhood, news, nigga, nigger, NY, O, opportunity, Our Youth, pa, pain, perfect, poverty, prison, prisons, prosperity, racism, rain, rap, rape, reality, res, respect, sin, State, suffering, thug life, thugs, tv, united states, unity, us, violence, war, wisdom, word, young, young man, young people, youth
Posted in Avenue Report, Hip-Hop | No Comments »