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    29 Kommentare

    1. CHOLO_ORACLE on

      Bot post.

      Who tf cares about rap when the Epstein class is running roughshod over society

    2. More like, “Stupid and affluent suburban try-hards continue to be posers as they have done historically.”

    3. Consistent_Boss_4192 on

      Lupe Fiasco helped me get thru college, not Gucci Mayne.
      Discerning minds know the difference between veggies and junk food.

    4. Prepped-n-Ready on

      For sure. I wouldve thought this was baseless theory until I learned more about modern eugenic experiments on black people. They’re sterilizing them in prison, they’re opening more planned parenthood than normal, they’re destabilizing the nuclear family, they’re intentionally creating economic deserts in black cities. I 100% believe that they are using drug trade to achieve more than one agenda. Securing funding from and simultaneous erasure of black Americans.

    5. pepe_silvia67 on

      Gangster rap culture was manufactured by Tavistock, as are most major astroturfed cultural movements.

    6. OppoObboObious on

      Yeah just listen to almost any gangster rap song. They make murder seem like a game and that it makes you cool.

    7. Does the music create the culture or does the culture create the music? Age old question.

    8. Mainstream Rap maybe toxic, when it’s all about sex, violence, drugs and money. Not the entire repertoire of Rap music.

    9. Most gangsta rap record labels are owned by the same people that own prison stocks 😂😂

    10. Automatic-Nature6025 on

      I am neither proud nor ashamed to admit that I did six years in the Virginia state prison system, and prisons are filled with men who bought into the gansta lifestyle. I used to scoff at the notion that music really influences young minds to that extent, but it’s so obvious. There are plenty of them, 40 and older who have used the same model to effectively destroy their own lives. They honestly believe that the only respectable path for them to take is to make money through crime and violence, which will inevitably result in prison or death, and the most disturbing part is that practically nothing can convince them otherwise.

    11. Strange_Hospital7878 on

      CIA and intelligence actively worked heavily in these spaces in late 80s. Wouldn’t be surprised its just straight up satanic now.

    12. nah. corporations did that. hip hop was a victim and the current state of it is the result.

    13. As someone who appreciates the second amendment and has several guns, I find rap culture to be especially despicable. The blatant flaunting of guns (often stolen guns), and with horrible firearm safety, was always painful to watch. I have never once fired a gun directly at another human and I hope I never need to. But it seems like the rap culture glorifies drive-by shootings and shooting at someone who disrespects you and all kinds of other ego-driven madness. Then you got them adding these illegal full auto switches and extended magazines so they can just spray mindlessly. Probably hitting all kinds of multiple victims if they are lucky enough to even land a shot with their poor technique and lack of training.

      As someone who has no criminal record, I would never install any illegal modification on my gun because I don’t want to go to jail. But for these people who already live a criminal lifestyle, it’s like no big deal and it seems that the ATF doesn’t really care too much to pursue them, even if they post photos of these illegal Glock switches on their social media. These are the people creating the bad statistics for gun ownership in America and giving the anti-gun activist most of their „ammunition“.

    14. The cia infiltrated hip hop movement in the 80’s and funded gangsta rap .

      Before that rap music was consciousness elevating and a threat by enriching black youth. 

      Now it’s prison pipeline culture. Barring a few exemptions who are aware of this . 

    15. codename_pariah on

      Gangster rap and it’s subsequent culture became more prevalent immediately after the introduction of designer drugs into the black community, which came to be immediately after the assassination of Dr. MLK Jr. 

      It’s no coincidence. 

    16. TheBobbyMan9 on

      There’s plenty of conscious/intellectual rappers out there who are really good and better than all of the mainstream stuff. The problem is the labels purposely elevate the gangster stuff and suppress the positive stuff.

      Look at 2pac, a lot of his early music is powerful stuff with deep messaging with lyrics that today you will still see on protest marches like ‘they got money for wars but can’t feed the poor’. Then he signed to Death Row which is a subsidiary of interscope which was owned by Jimmy Iovine and look at what happened, he starts just pushing out gangster shit because that’s what the big labels wanted.

    17. thegmoinusall on

      All I’m saying is, so has “abusive relationship” country, David Allen Coe’s albums of racism, brutal death metal, or any other music written by people expressing their lives 🤷🏻‍♂️

      Rap isn’t the only music that influences its listeners.

    18. Acceptable_Mind8833 on

      The music of my people was blues and jazz, when rap first came out it was fine, then those people got control of it and made it insanely worse/demonic. Any artist with no major label and those who create they own sound is who I listen to now

    19. South-Rabbit-4064 on

      Jfc I get tired of this. Poor people have always idolized outlaw culture. Before this there was Johnny Cash, who sang at prisons and pretended to be an outlaw shooting people to watch them die. Before that there was lots of other romanticism around figures like Robin Hood and Dick Turpin. It’s always been around

    20. It did not start out this way. Record labels and their overlords promoted this version.

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