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 Post subject: Hip Hppers Hate Freedom
PostPosted: Mon Nov 22, 2004 3:40 pm 
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Go Platinum
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Hip Hoppers Hate Freedom
Rap's blatant anti-Americanism is cause for concern--and terror

May 28 2004
patrioticamerica.net

Since our famed analysis of the hip hop terror connection, which generated much outrage amongst the very same rap-listening pseudoterrorist community it was intended to expose, the hip hop world has continued its trek along the feces-littered dirt road of anti-American senselessness.

After branding rappers as terrorists and unpatriotic solely for expressing marginally thoughtful attitudes and bringing up subjects other than whores, dollars, and Cadillac Escalades, we were outraged at how little the hip hop community had changed. Not only do the anti-freedom lyrics and monotonous, repetitious beats of terror keep bumping out of our children's subwoofers, but the rappers' tone continually gets harsher and the message gets clearer--hip hop hates freedom.

A track by two utterly unknown rappers, Sly Boogie and Saigon, has one of them rhyming, "I'm trying to make it through customs so I can dump what I'm smuggling/ fuck the whole Republican government, bitch I'm hustling and steady gunning". This spells it out clearly for America--if you smuggle drugs, 'hustle', and use guns violently, you're best off despising the Republican government. Clearly, hatred of the freedom-loving Republican Party is a prerequisite for criminal activity, which rappers such as these clearly endorse. It's no wonder that 85 to 90 percent of African-Americans vote Democrat1. It's also no coincidence that black 'hoods are thirty-five times more violent than white neighborhoods2.

The unpatriotic anti-Republican tone is taken further by socialist Talib Kweli, who, on "The Proud", raps, "the President's a Bush, the Vice President's a Dick, so a whole lot of f*ckin' is what we gon' get!". If the pro-terror ideology of the rap community was not already apparent enough, such silly terror-supporting statements expose it marvelously.

But general anti-freedom statements from innocent-looking rappers are the least of law-abiding American's worries. The threat to society gets serious when Southern hip-hopster David Banner, in a song titled "Bush", threatens the President's life: "Bush, I'm runnin' up in your sh*t like a track meet". Mr. Banner should be accosted by the Secret Service for such threats and held accountable for the damaging effects of these horrid words. How many children will listen to this song on their ghetto blaster and be led to believe that threatening America's courageous leader is an act of courage in itself?

Some in the rap community have felt so strongly against freedom and democracy, that they've taken time to assemble anti-American musical terror squads. Fred Wreck, a rap producer, has compiled a group of rappers (including Trey Deee, RBX ["I'm not bamboozled, it's all about the oil/ I sit back and watch their plots and schemes, tangled up strings to a puppet regime"], Daz, WC, and Dilated Peoples) to form the S.T.O.P. Movement, who have recorded an anti-liberty song, "Down With U.S." (the name alone clearly shows the rap world's intent to bring down the United States). One rapper rhymes, "this war's for oil, for religion, and culture, big business, dollars, and family honor, half world domination and half family drama/ the media just turned Saddam to Osama!". How exactly do outlandish lies like this help America's war on terror? Rappers whose minds have been damaged by drugs have a hard time understanding that Iraq was invaded solely to disarm Saddam Hussein. Yet hip hop takes the Al Jazeera/IraqTV approach by pushing totally false Arab conspiracy theories.

Unbelieveably, it gets worse. In the deep, dark depths of the hip hop underground, dwells a monstrous terror-loving beast, whose goal is to persuade America's children to strap bombs to their chests and go out in a blaze of anti-American glory. Or something along those lines, we think. This rapper's name is Paris (no surprise there from this socialist anti-American Chirac-kisser), the man behind the infamous song, "Bush Killa", which rivals the Dead Prez' "Know Your Enemy" in its terroristicity. Paris begins his latest single, "What Would You Do?", with a treasonous mocking of a Bush speech, transforming the Great President's words into what Paris thinks George W. actually means: "We're mounting a sustained campaign to crack down on every American, of every person of every faith, in every nation, to bring them to justice". Clever, but bordering on treason. In the same song, Paris raps, "who's the one with the most to gain (Bush!), before 9/11 motherf*ckers couldn't stand his name (Bush!), now even [negroes] waving flags like they've lost their minds...". More from this nerdy communisterroristical can be witnessed on an intellectual hotbed of hatred, anti-freedom, and terror, also known as his website, GuerillaFunk.com. It is our belief that this site, which serves dual function as a terrorist hatred handbook, represents the true feelings of the entire hip hop community. Paris' falsified, conspiratorial claims only enforce the real facts--hip hop is at the root of freedom-hating attitudes which lead to terrorism.

George Orwell, not a rapper (but still an early anti-American terrorist), said it right when he scribed the infamous phrase, "ignorance is strength". Apparently, the hip hop community has not yet received the message, as it continues on its musical journey of terror and hatred for everything America stands for.

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 Post subject: Re: Hip Hppers Hate Freedom
PostPosted: Mon Nov 22, 2004 5:52 pm 
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konstantinl Wrote:
George Orwell said it right when he scribed the infamous phrase, "ignorance is strength".



Couldn't agree more.

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PostPosted: Fri Nov 26, 2004 12:34 am 
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That Paris album is one of my favorite hip-hop albums.

What an article. Heh.


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PostPosted: Fri Nov 26, 2004 5:29 am 
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The Coup feels left out.

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