*Hip Hop Republican*

Friday, August 31, 2007

Wintley Phipps-Old Negro Spiritials



Probably the most powerful version of "Amazing Grace" ever recorded. Wintley Phipps at Carnegie Hall

Hearing Wintley Phipps sing gospel music has brought tears to the eyes of presidents, celebrities, and even Mother Teresa. Now through the U.S. Dream Academy, Wintley is using the power of his voice to reach out to the children of prisoners and give them a chance to achieve their dreams.

"Our motto is a child with a dream is a child with a chance," says Wintley. "And the opposite is also true. A child without a dream does not stand a chance in this world."

Singing to Save the Next GenerationTwenty years ago, a friend brought Wintley to a prison to sing to the inmates. Wintley was alarmed and haunted by the number of African Americans in prison. When he encountered his wife's pregnant niece in a prison, Wintley says he started to think about the children of people in prison and became very concerned about their future.

"All of my wife's seven brothers and sisters have either been in jail or incarcerated at some point in their lives," says Wintley. "Between 60 and 70% of children of prisoners will become prisoners themselves. I had to do something about it."

Academic EnrichmentIn 1998, he created a program to help break the cycle he had seen play out so many times in his own family life. Wintley formed the U.S. Dream Academy to give children who have had a family member behind bars mentoring, academic tutoring, and exposure to computers and the Internet. "Just the computers themselves are not going to transform the lives of these kids," Wintley says. "The most important part of our program is really the caring, loving adults who surround them."

Teaching Children to DreamDue to the fact that 80% of people in prison are high school dropouts, the program also focuses on at-risk children in grades two through five, to try to reach them when they are academically most vulnerable.

The Dream Academy's first priority is to raise these children's self esteem. The mentoring component gives many children the positive role models they are lacking. Mentors shower the children with love and positive reinforcement.

Wintley says, "I believe that I'm helping children to live out their own dreams, to find their own voice and their own path in life."

Wednesday, August 29, 2007

RIHANNA-REHAB



Rihanna was born in Saint Michael, Barbados to Ronald and Monica Fenty. Her mother is of Guyanese heritage and her father is of both African and European heritage.She has two younger brothers named Rorrey and Rajad. Rihanna went to Charles F. Broome Memorial School, a primary school in Barbados, and then on to one of Barbados' Grammar (older secondary) schools, the Combermere School, where she formed a musical trio with two of her classmates. In 2004, she won the Miss Combermere Beauty Pageant and performed in the Colours of Combermere School Show, singing Mariah Carey's "Hero". At the age of 15, Rihanna received her big break when one of her friends introduced her to music producer Evan Rogers, who was vacationing in Barbados with his wife. Rogers, along with his partner, Carl Sturken, helped Rihanna record material in the U.S. which was sent to various recording companies.

One copy of Rihanna's work was sent to Jay-Z, who eventually signed her to Def Jam Records. Rihanna cites Alicia Keys, Beyoncé Knowles and her Caribbean background as major musical influences.[9] Rihanna also stated in an interview that her friend and former Island Def Jam record label artist Fefe Dobson was someone that she admired and looked up to, having a fellow artist writing, singing, and performing the music she truly loves

Senator Craig… For the Love of God… Shut Up!

The blogger Gay Patriot has a wonderful post about Senator Craig and the
scandal!



So I’ve been traveling since 4am on Tuesday. So as I spent yesterday away from TV and the internet, the most I knew about the world was that both Sen. Larry Craig and QB Michael Vick had admitted guilt for respective crimes. End of story (for now), I assumed.And then last night at a work event, I turned to a colleague who is also politically-connected and asked, “So what do you think about Larry Craig?” He just shook his head and said, “Wasn’t his press conference today unbelieveable?”

My jaw dropped.


“No he did NOT!”, I protested. My friend: “Oh yes he did. He must have said ‘I’m not gay’ three times.”“No he did NOT!”, I said. This time I continued: “And let me guess, his wife was standing next to him?” Well, of course!

I just shook my head. “So by the end of the week, I bet he is an alcoholic, goes to rehab, and was molested by his priest,” I deduced. Unreal.



Yes, I feel sorry for Mrs Craig and the family, too, but come on, the Senator’s statement in Boise this afternoon invites only a wholly deserved contempt. What was all that stuff about there being a “cloud over Idaho”? There’s no cloud over Idaho, there’s a cloud over him. The State of Idaho wasn’t in the stall of the men’s room at Minneapolis Airport, and the State of Idaho didn’t choose to cop a plea. If you’re going to dissemble, at least try not to be so pompous and narcissistic when you’re doing it.

And what was all that business about blaming it all on the “strain” brought about by The Idaho Statesman? What kind of excuse is that? “I wouldn’t have wound up in that men’s room if you guys hadn’t been investigating my secret gay sex life.”

This was a ridiculous performance.

The funny thing was, not having even watched or known about the press conference last night, I concluded the same thing!

The other immediate thought I had was… don’t these Washington politicians understand that this isn’t the 1960s and 1970s where people were either scared or in awe of US Senators and Congressmen? Now, we have a collective borderline hate/disdain for them all…. so there ain’t no one gonna protect ‘em anymore.


My next revelation, along those same lines, was: “Hmmm… if Ted Kennedy drove home drunk, wrecked a car, and left a body at the scene of the crime in 2007…. he’d not only be out of the Senate, but most likely in jail.”
Ah, the 21st Century. Good times.



In my first post on Larry Craig which I had to write in a rush as I was chairing a meeting that evening, I wrote that I expected I’d have “more to say about this at a later time.” Well, as I was collecting my thoughts, Pajamas Media asked me to write a piece on the situation which is now up on their web-site.


To whet your appetitie, I’ll give you the first paragraphs and then encourage you to read the rest at Pajamas:


When I first read about the arrest of Senator Larry Craig in a restroom at Minneapolis-St. Paul International Aiport earlier this summer, I was stunned. I wondered how a man in his position could have shown as little judgment as he had.


Ten months ago, he was the subject of rumors in the blogosphere, talk radio, cable TV and even a few mainstream newspapers that he had engaged in sexual acts with other men in restrooms at Union Station in Washington, D.C. At the time, I was skeptical of the claims, but also thought that if they were true, the Senator, realizing that his restroom activities were not as anonymous as he had assumed, would have ceased seeking them out.

Last October, he escaped the public humiliation he is experiencing today. Indeed, his local paper, the Idaho Statesman had followed up on the allegations against him, but until this Monday, “had declined to run a story about Craig’s sex life, because [it] didn’t have enough corroborating evidence and because of the senator’s steadfast denial” (Via Hugh Hewitt).

The paper even interviewed the Senator. He was thus well aware that people knew about his actions.

Tuesday, August 28, 2007

Bruce Springsteen-Born In The U.S.A.



I love this song by Bruce Springsteen the sing expresses the pain
and confusion of coming back to the USA from Vietnam. This song
higlights the stories of so many vets who later returned.
Bruce's songs even as a liberal produced art as an expression to
let the troops know they would be okay and to remember where they
came from!


Lyrics:

Born down in a dead man's town
The first kick I took was when I hit the ground
You end up like a dog that's been beat too much
Till you spend half your life just covering up

Born in the U.S.A.
I was born in the U.S.A.
I was born in the U.S.A.
Born in the U.S.A.

Got in a little hometown jam
So they put a rifle in my hand
Sent me off to a foreign land
To go and kill the yellow man

Born in the U.S.A.
I was born in the U.S.A.
I was born in the U.S.A.
I was born in the U.S.A.
Born in the U.S.A.

Come back home to the refinery
Hiring man says "Son if it was up to me"
Went down to see my V.A. man
He said "Son, don't you understand"

I had a brother at Khe Sahn fighting off the Viet Cong
They're still there, he's all gone

He had a woman he loved in Saigon
I got a picture of him in her arms now

Down in the shadow of the penitentiary
Out by the gas fires of the refinery
I'm ten years burning down the road
Nowhere to run ain't got nowhere to go

Born in the U.S.A.
I was born in the U.S.A.
Born in the U.S.A.
I'm a long gone Daddy in the U.S.A.
Born in the U.S.A.
Born in the U.S.A.
Born in the U.S.A.
I'm a cool rocking Daddy in the U.S.A. (more)

Diddy on his ''Making the Band'' shocker

Did any one see "Making The Band" I am not sure if Donnie should have gotten a solo contract he reminds me to much of the Back Street Boys. All of the singers were great but I wonder what will happen to the other guys who got kicked off like Carlos.

All of these guys could be in somebody's band and since MTV paid the sifting fee anyone can scoop them up!

So was the vote fair?


On the live Making The Band 4 finale, the ten finalists appeared on stage to await the results of the competition. Sean “Diddy” Combs explained that he didn’t select a winner on the previous finale episode because he wanted to make great TV and leave it with a cliffhanger.

After taking some questions from viewers, Diddy broke the finalists into two groups. Both groups performed the song “If It Isn’t Love” by New Edition. After the performances, Diddy eliminated Dyshon from the competition.

The remaining nine finalists performed a ballad version of the song “I Want You Exclusive.” After the performance, Diddy eliminated Brian H. from the competition. Danity Kane, the winners of Making The Band 3, made a special guest appearance and gave advice to the remaining finalists.

Young Joc performed the song “Coffee Shop.” After the performance, Diddy announced that he was going to make a five man group. Diddy selected Robert, Willie, Qwanell, Brian A., and Michael as the winners of Making The Band 4. Diddy also surprised Donnie by telling him that he would be a solo artist on Bad Boy Records.

Reality TV Magazine is your source for Making The Band news

Eve-Tambourine

Monday, August 27, 2007

Hip-hop’s Down Beat






When the political activist Al Sharpton pivoted from his war against bigmouth radio man Don Imus to a war on bad-mouth gangsta rap, the instinct among older music fans was to roll their eyes and yawn. Ten years ago, another activist, C. Delores Tucker, launched a very similar campaign to clean up rap music. She focused on Time Warner (parent of TIME), whose subsidiary Interscope was home to hard-core rappers Snoop Dogg and Tupac Shakur. In 1995 Tucker succeeded in forcing Time Warner to dump Interscope.


Her victory was Pyrrhic. Interscope flourished, launching artists like 50 Cent and Eminem and distributing the posthumous recordings of Shakur. And the genre exploded across the planet, with rappers emerging everywhere from Capetown to the banlieues of Paris. In the U.S. alone, sales reached $1.8 billion.


The lesson was Capitalism 101: rap music's market strength gave its artists permission to say what they pleased. And the rappers themselves exhibited an entrepreneurial bent unlike that of musicians before them. They understood the need to market and the benefits of line extensions. Theirs was capitalism with a beat.


Today that same market is telling rappers to please shut up. While music-industry sales have plummeted, no genre has fallen harder than rap. According to the music trade publication Billboard, rap sales have dropped 44% since 2000 and declined from 13% of all music sales to 10%. Artists who were once the tent poles at rap labels are posting disappointing numbers. Jay-Z's return album, Kingdom Come, for instance, sold a gaudy 680,000 units in its first week, according to Billboard. But by the second week, its sales had declined some 80%. This year rap sales are down 33% so far.


Longtime rap fans are doing the math and coming to the same conclusions as the music's voluminous critics. In February, the filmmaker Byron Hurt released Beyond Beats and Rhymes, a documentary notable not just for its hard critique but for the fact that most of the people doing the criticizing were not dowdy church ladies but members of the hip-hop generation who deplore rap's recent fixation on the sensational.

Both rappers and music execs are clamoring for solutions. Russell Simmons recently made a tepid call for rappers to self-censor the words nigger and bitch from their albums. But most insiders believe that a debate about profanity and misogyny obscures a much deeper problem: an artistic vacuum at major labels. "The music community has to get more creative," says Steve Rifkin, CEO of SRC Records. "We have to start betting on the new and the up-and-coming for us to grow as an industry. Right now, I don't think anyone is taking chances. It's a big-business culture."


It's the ultimate irony. Since the 1980s, when Run-DMC attracted sponsorship from Adidas, the rap community has aspired to be big business. By the '90s, those aspirations had become a reality. In a 1999 cover story, TIME reported that with 81 million CDs sold, rap was officially America's top-selling music genre. The boom produced enterprises like Roc-A-Fella, which straddled fashion, music and film and in 2001 was worth $300 million. It produced moguls like No Limit's Master P and Bad Boy's Puff Daddy, each of whom in 2001 made an appearance on FORTUNE's list of the richest 40 under 40. Along the way, the music influenced everything from advertising to fashion to sports.


The growth spurt was fueled by sensationalism. Tupac Shakur shot at police, was convicted of sexual abuse and ultimately was murdered in Las Vegas. But Shakur both alive and dead has also sold more than 20 million records. Death Row Records, which released much of Shakur's material, was run by ex-con Suge Knight and dogged by rumors of money laundering. But between 1992 and 1998, the label churned out 11 multiplatinum albums. Gangsta rappers reveled in their outlaw mystique, crafting ultra-violent tales of drive-bys and stick-ups designed to shock and enthrall their primary audience--white suburban teenagers. "Hip-hop seemed dangerous; it seemed angry," says Richard Nickels, who manages the hip-hop band the Roots. "Kurt Cobain killed himself, and rock seemed weak. But then you had these black guys who came out and had guns. It was exciting to white kids."


Hip-hop now faces a generation that takes gangsta rap as just another mundane marker in the cultural scenery. "It's collapsing because they can no longer fool the white kids," says Nickels. "There's only so much redundancy anyone can take."


Artists who never jumped on the gangsta bandwagon point the finger at the boardroom. They accuse major labels of strip-mining the music, playing up its sensationalist aspects for easy sales. "In rock you have metal, alternative, emo, soft rock, pop-rock, you have all these different strains," says Q-Tip, front man for the defunct A Tribe Called Quest. "And there are different strains of hip-hop, but record companies aren't set up to sell these different strains. They aren't set up to do anything more of a mature sort of hip-hop."


Of course, gangsta rap isn't a record-company invention. Indeed, hip-hop's two most celebrated icons, Shakur and Notorious B.I.G., embraced the sort of lyrical content that today has opened hip-hop to criticism. And the music companies, under assault from file-sharing and other alternative distribution channels, are hardly in a position to do R&D. "When I first signed to Tommy Boy, [the A&R person] would take us to different shows and to art museums," says Q-Tip. "There was real mentorship. Today that's largely absent, and we see the results in the music and in the aesthetic." That result is a stale product, defined by cable channels like BET, now owned by Viacom, which seems to consist primarily of gun worship and underdressed women.


During the past decade, record labels have outsourced the business of kingmaking to other artists. Established stars Dr. Dre and Eminem brought 50 Cent to Interscope. Jay-Z founded his own label, cut a distribution deal and began developing his own roster. But most established artists do little development. That leaves the possibility that hip-hop is following the same path that soul and R&B traveled when they descended into disco, which died quickly.
No longer able to peddle sensation, rap's moguls are switching tactics. Simmons, while still something of a hip-hop ambassador, is hawking a new self-help book. Master P, whose estimated worth was once $661 million, watched his label, No Limit, sink into bankruptcy. He recently announced the formation of Take a Stand Records, a label catering to "clean" hip-hop music. "Personally, I have profited millions of dollars through explicit rap lyrics," Master P stated on his website. "I can honestly say that I was once part of the problem, and now it's time to be part of the solution."


Chris Lighty, CEO of Violator Entertainment, whose clients include 50 Cent and Busta Rhymes, is looking at ways that record companies can work with artists in one area where rappers have been innovative: endorsement and branding. Whether it's 50 Cent owning a stake in Vitamin Water or Jay-Z doing a commercial for HP, most of these deals have been brokered by the artists' own camp. But Lighty sees in hip-hop a chance for record labels to generate more sponsorship and endorsements. "Record companies are going to have to make even better records and participate in brand extension. It's the only way they can survive," says Lighty. "We need to change the format, and this is the only way. 50 Cent is a brand. Jay-Z is a brand."

But the current hubbub over indecency poses a direct challenge to that brand strength, as the artist Akon recently discovered. While performing in Trinidad, Akon was videotaped dancing suggestively with a fan who was later revealed to be only 14. The video attracted the ire of conservatives like Bill O'Reilly. In the wake of the controversy, Akon's tour sponsor, Verizon, removed all ringtones featuring his work and retracted its sponsorship. The message was clear: Hip-hop needs a new and improved product.

Friday, August 24, 2007

Quote Of The Day

"If Kanye West sells more records than 50 Cent on September 11, I'll no longer write music. I'll write music and work with my other artists, but I won't put out anymore solo albums."

50 Cent, on the rappers' competing CDs, which drop in music stores on the same day

Islamic Republic of Mauritania Makes Slavery a Crime


Hatip to the Pamela over at AtlasShrugs



Well I'll be damned. Slavery in Mauritania has a long history--for nearly 800 years, the Arab ruling class has enslaved black Mauritanians and targeted free blacks for discrimination. Last week, the newly-elected government of Mauritania passed a law making slavery a crime punishable by up to 10 years in prison. Slavery - where's Rosie O'Donut?


A Miracle in Mauritania"Mauritania has set a new standard of accountability and transparency for the Middle East," Former AASG Director Jesse Sage and Nasser Weddady of the Mauritanian organization SOS Slaves write in this article about the success of the elections earlier this year, which transferred power peacefully from the military leaders who seized power from Colonel Taya in 2005. "The openness of the election was made more impressive by a flourishing civil society. The local press...operated without censorship."


Mauritanian MPs Pass Slavery LawThe BBC's coverage of the new law. SOS Slaves Director Boubacar Ould Messaoud explains, "We now have legislation which not only defends slaves, but punishes the practice of slavery. It is an important change." You can also read about the new law at Voice of America News and the Telegraph.


Silent TerrorThe late Samuel Cotton, a longtime friend and former board member of AASG, investigated slavery himself and wrote of his findings and his personal journey to come to terms with this modern-day atrocity in this powerful and moving book. Though there is still a long distance left to travel, this book shows just how far we have come.

Thursday, August 23, 2007

Texas Republican Party defied the "Jim Crow" Democrats

On this day in 1882, at the Texas Republican Party convention more than half the 400 delegates were African-Americans. During this era of Jim Crow, the Texas GOP bravely defied the segregationist Democrats by remaining racially-integrated.

Michael Zak is a popular speaker to Republican organizations around the country, showing officeholders, candidates, and activists how they would benefit tremendously from knowing and appreciating our Party's heritage of civil rights achievement. Seewww.republicanbasics.com for more information about the Republican Party and about the book, Back to Basics for the Republican Party, which shows Republicans how to campaign against Democrats more effectively.

Wednesday, August 22, 2007

"Mother Amanpour" and her Magical Kingdom



By Richard

Once upon a time there lived a fairy God Mother by the name of Mother Amanpour. Mother Amanpour along with her magical wand and stellar journalistic tact for objectivity would skip and hop from one current event to another tapping her beautiful golden wand and deciding between sides of any world conflict as to who should be granted moral dominance.

To her subjects Mother Amanpour was "all knowing" wise and virtuous and would fly over conflict zones all over the world and when one struck her fancy would stop and tap her magnificent wand upon its subject and WALLAH! immediately knowledge and truth would be shown to the ignorant and light offered up to the blind.

A few of Mother Amnapours subjects resented her dispersal of knowledge which they claimed to be unbalanced and questioned her God Mother like objectivity, to which she replied with a crisp proper sting, "
There are some situations one simply cannot be neutral about, because when you are neutral you are an accomplice. Objectivity doesn't mean treating all sides equally. It means giving each side a hearing!

An explanation to which most of her subjects 'immediately accepted as divine truth while others remained quiet for fear of being turned into a frog. All of the subjects of Mother Amanpour's magical kingdom knew very well that it was she who created the stage, characters and plot.The truth be told the question many of her scared subject's held was not whether Mother Amanpour would give them a hearing but whether it would be a fair one?

CNN's recent attack on Israel last night was simply Mother Amanpour 's interesting but highly implausible way of telling a story a story where she creates the plot and characters. She and CNN however should hold there heads in shame for dissecting and picking at history to fit there concept of truth. History has one goal the search for truth and accuracy not conjured up fairy dust so as to make every one a villain and a hero. There are times in life where there exist true David's and Goliath's


Israel's true struggle can be summed up by the Israeli writer Yaacov Lozowick who clearly explains Israel's moral dilemmas:

Restricting the freedom of movement of entire communities is immoral. Refraining from these restrictions when there is unequivocal proof that this will lead to the murder of innocents is worse, because movement restricted can later be granted, while dead will never live again.

Demolishing the homes of civilians merely because a family member has committed a crime is immoral. If, however,... potential suicide murderers... will refrain from killing out of fear that their mothers will become homeless, it would be immoral to leave the Palestinian mothers untouched in their homes while Israeli children die on their school buses. Accidentally killing noncombatants in the cross fire of battles being fought in the middle of cities is immoral, unless... refraining from fighting in the Palestinian cities inevitably means the Palestinians will use the safe havens of their cities to plan, prepare and launch ever more murderous attacks on Jewish noncombatants. These concrete examples and others like them demonstrate the moral considerations that Israelis... have been dealing with since the Palestinians proudly decided to use suicide murder as their primary weapon." ("Right to Exist: A Moral Defense of Israel's Wars", p.260)


Richard is the founder and editor of HipHopRepublican.com

"Are There More Black Men In Jail Or College"?

By Richard


One of the question's posed by director Janks Morton, in his new documentary"What Black Men Think" is the question about the percentage of black men in prison compared to University! For many years many black liberal radio shows and politicians have repeated without checking there facts that more black men were in jail.

The truth however is that there are and I repeat more black men and women in College than in the prison system. But the question must be asked then how and why did such a lie grab hold so strongly in our communities?

I believe that in some parts of the American black left there is a need to downplay the positives so as not to appear as if things are getting better. If things are horrible there is more sympathy which in many cases can then turn into power. This power is not easily given up no matter what the facts on the ground. A perfect example of this is Iraq where the left is constantly seeing no end in site despite what the generals are telling them! We must start telling our children the truth that the future is theres and it is now! The popular black singer Nina Simone summed it up with her song Young, Gifted, and Black!



Below is an article by Brian Carnell on the history of this myth and how it came about

In August the Justice Policy Institute generated a lot of headlines and broadcast news college with a study claiming that there were more black men in prison than in college. But a close look at the numbers finds the study doesn't add up. In a press release summarizing their findings, the Justice Policy Institute said, Cellblocks or Classrooms? also reports that in 2000, there were an estimated 791,600 African American men in prison and jail, and 603,000 in higher education.



But as Iain Murray noted in a column for TechCentralStation.Com, the Justice Policy Institute's estimate of the number of African American men in college is too low. According to the Census Bureau, there were an estimated 804,000 African-American men in college in 2000. So, in 2000, there were (barely) more black men in college than in jail or prison.


Of course the comparison is of little use since people of all ages are sent to jail, whereas college students tend to be 18-24 year olds. Murray tracked down the respective figures for those age groups and found that for African American men 18-24, there were 480,000 in college and 180,000 in prison or jail. An young African American male is, in fact, two-and-a-half times as likely to be in college as prison or jail.



The figures are even more impressive when African American women are included. Murray notes that there were 747,000 African American women 18-24 in college as opposed to only 9,000 in prison or jail in 2000. So, in total, there were 1,216,000 young African Americans in college compared to 189,000 in jail or prison.

As Murray sums it up,

What is perhaps most annoying about the way the Justice Policy Institute chose to present its figures is that it helps perpetuate the stereotype that a young African American male is likely to be a troublemaker or jailbird. In fact, as a careful look at the figures shows, he is much more likely to be carrying books than a gun. Tremendous advances have been made in crime reduction in the African community . . . which should not be hidden by presentation of statistics that, however well intentioned, show that community in a negative light.

Source:

Behind Books, Not Bars. Iain Murray, TechCentralStation.Com, September 2, 2002.

Tuesday, August 21, 2007

Barack Obama Gets Major Love From Hip-Hop

As the presidential candidate rides high with a recent cover story in Vibe that dubbed him "B-Rock," Sen. Barack Obama (D-Illinois) is getting major love from the hip-hop world, including name drops in hip-hop singles.

On Common's single, "The People," the liberal Democratic politician gets a shout out when the Chicago-born rapper says, "My raps ignite the people like Obama." In the video, an "Obama '08" bumper sticker is flashed during the line. According to Common, Sen. Obama represents what hip-hop is all about -- the struggle. "He's fresh, you know, he's got good style," Common, who attends the same church as Sen. Obama, said to CNN.

"As far as people in my age group and people that love hip-hop, there's a love for Obama. He represents progress. He represents what hip-hop is about. Hip-hop is about progress, the struggle."It's not just black American artists who support Sen. Obama. Jin, an Asian American hip hopper, has a song titled "Open Letter 2 Obama" that's garnered more than 320,000 hits on his official MySpace page. According to CNN, Jin's song is so popular that the Obama campaign is offering it as a free cell phone ringtone on its Web site, and Sen. Obama was introduced with the song before his speech to the College Democrats National Convention in South Carolina lasts month.But what is it about the senator that is attracting the hip-hop generation? Talib Kweli - who raps "speak to the people like Obama" in his new cut, "Say Something" - said Sen. Obama's name alone is perfect for adding into a rhyme. More than anything his name is a nugget of lyrical gold," the rapper told CNN.

"Obama rhymes with a lot of things." Besides his name, said Mr. Kweli, he can relate more to him than anyone else. "His youth, his being black, the way that he speaks, the way that he lays out his point of view," Mr. Kweli explained. "It's someone who looks more like you. I don't mean black, but I mean the young thing. And his name is Barack Obama. This country is become more and more multicultural."Only time will tell if the support from hip-hop will give Sen. Obama a boost if he were to win the nomination, or if it will hurt him -- if his opponents try to his it against him.

Apartment by Amber Gristak

Often times this blog is inundated with the politics of the day so today I would like to change some of this,by highlighting some more of the arts. I have in the past posted many musical artist and quotes but never any literary artist.

So today I want to highlight some poetry that was suggested by one of my blog readers..I am not into poetry very much but this one is worth the read! It is about the trials most young people have growing up in a big city like Manhattan or even a small one. The daily reflections of life with its debts and small apartments!



Apartment

by Amber Gristak

This apartment isn’t mine
Just a pause in a journey
Of a time

These past days Equal a space,
too, far and between Better times

Something, I have to accept
A legal monopoly I have to play
Man made money

Spent to simplify
Individual persona
Structures built by disenchanted
Used as comfort
Doctored perception
Injected acceptably
This account is useless
Overdrawn to remind
I am naive
Misled to believe in more
Confused to work and accumulate
A debt

I regret my regret
I echo energy
Graceless mannerisms
I cannot put to past tense
Stronger and stronger, I am not dead
All to have, I have overcome
I do not lie, but I have learned to hide
My modern animalistic tendency
To rationalization
A sin, I let set inside
Out for air
Breathe of haze
Divinity
I need intervention
Souls at rest to speak
Guide
Give me strength
What’s real?
I want it now
Have I not learned enough?
When is then?

Serenity of human sorts
Awareness and conscious living
Repeat in chant
Not the prayer
I need the remedy Bottled, packaged and contained
Inward not out
I search to find
Freedom



If you like this poem please visit Ambers website

http://www.ambergristak.com/

Britain's Ron Paul

Here,Here,Here,

On this day in Republican History

James Kealoha (R), first Asian-American Lt. Governor

On this day in 1959, Hawaii became the 50th state in the Union and James Kealoha was sworn in as Lt. Governor. Kealoha, a Republican, was of Chinese and Hawaiian descent.


Michael Zak is a popular speaker to Republican organizations around the country, showing officeholders, candidates, and activists how they would benefit tremendously from knowing and appreciating our Party's heritage of civil rights achievement. See www.republicanbasics.com for more information about the Republican Party and about the book, Back to Basics for the Republican Party, which shows Republicans how to campaign against Democrats more effectively.

Monday, August 20, 2007

"WHAT BLACK MEN THINK"

http://www.whatblackmenthink.com/

I first heard about this video on C-SPAN,
I applaud the creator as being a breath of
fresh air in a world of misinformation
and lies!






http://www.myspace.com/whatblackmenthink

RIP Max Roach

This is a great blog post from a fellow
blogger on the recent death of Max Roach!


By Roger Simons

I could be accused of name dropping to say I knew Max Roach, the great jazz drummer who just passed away at 83. But I did. At least I met him a couple of times. It's so long ago, it's amazing I still remember, but then, why wouldn't I? He was Max Roach - a legend in his time, with Kenny Clarke and Art Blakey, the man who brought bebop to the drums or vice-versa.

In those days, circa 1960, I was dabbling at the drums myself and taking lessons from a slightly older white Jewish boy named Steve Gordon who knew Max. He took me to meet Max where the drum legend was playing... I think it was Birdland, because I was way underage and they allowed early teens in then.

I don't have a vivid memory of the club... but I do have a vivid memory of Max... and of his girl friend/wife (can't recall which she was at that point) who was with him - singer Abbey Lincoln. No way a heterosexual male would not remember her! This was a few years before the Black Power era and they were both very friendly to me as an innocent young white kid/wannabe beatnik. Steve Gordon and I bumped into them again at the club a few months later and they hailed us as old friends. I don't think I was ever more star-struck in my life. Viva Max!
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Thursday, August 16, 2007

Sharpton’s spokesman on rapper: We steadfastly refuse to call this f*ggot a “f*ggot”


Hatip Michelle

Rapper David Banner criticized Reverend Al’s campaign to clean up hip hop lyrics earlier this week with unintentional irony:

The next time you see Al Sharpton, tell him I said @#*$ him and he can suck my @#*$, ” an animated David Banner told SOHH.com. “I might change the name of my album from The Greatest Story Never Told to @#*$ Al Sharpton. I hate Al Sharpton. This is the kind of @#!* that I’m talking about. They’re killing kids in New Jersey and all across the country and all a @#*$% got to talk about is rap lyrics? @#*$ that about they’re our elders and we gotta respect them. I’m tired of this. They’re like the parents, but the parents are crucifying the kids.


Today came the equally ironic touche:

Kirsten John-Foy, a leader with Sharpton’s National Action Network and the head of his Criminal Justice Initiative, responded with his own scathing remarks.

“From time to time we do encounter people that have sexual fantasies about Reverend Al Sharpton, but they are always women and Crump’s proposition is a first,” he told SOHH in a statement.

“However, in keeping with the National Action Network’s Decency Initiative, I am sure Rev. Sharpton would not call Crump the “N” “B” or “H” word,” Foy continued. “And, despite Crump’s personal request, I am sure Reverend Sharpton would not call him an @#!*%&. He would just pray for him. We at NAN are pro civil rights for everyone, even Levell Crump who has not had a banner year since his debut album in 2003.”

TMZ confirmed that the statement was issued from Sharpton’s office. It’s the logical next step in Coulter’s slam on Edwards: some of her more shameless and/or dimwitted defenders claimed afterwards that she didn’t call him any names, technically, but simply said she’d have to go to rehab if she did. Uh huh. Now this from Sharpton, which would theoretically justify unleashing every epithet in the book so long as it’s prefaced by “I’m not going to call you…”

Wednesday, August 15, 2007

Darfur Force ‘To Be All African’



The African Union chairman says outside troops will not be needed for the new Darfur peacekeeping force in western Sudan because of adequate troop commitments from African nations. “I can confirm today that we have received sufficient commitments from African countries that we will not have to resort to non-African forces,” AU chairman Alpha Oumar Konare said on Sunday after meeting Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir in Khartoum. The Sudanese government is adamantly opposed to non-Africans playing any major role in the hybrid United Nations-African Union operation that was authorized by the U.N. Security Council on July 31 and will be made up of 20,000 peacekeepers and 6,000 civilian police.

Mr. Konare’s announcement ran counter to statements made last Tuesday by Andrew Natsios, the U.S. envoy to Sudan, that Sudan would have to accept non-African troops in the beefed-up force because Africa lacks enough trained soldiers to fully staff the peacekeeping contingent. Nigeria, Malawi, Rwanda, Senegal, Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Egypt, and Ethiopia have made troop announcements. This is in addition to pre-existing AU troops already in Darfur.

My reply. Sudan thinks that it can easily manipulate

African leaders given there long history with these
countries after independence.

In other words the Sudanese goverment can pay off
and casue a scandal if "pushed". The African forces
are great but are highly suseptible to bribes.

Other nations who send tropps are also but African
troops even more so because of poverty within there
nation.I hope that this will work but time will tell!

Thursday, August 09, 2007

Kelly Rowland ft Eve - Like this

HipHopRepublican artist if the months is Kelly Rowland.
Since leaving Destiny's Child Kelly has spread her wings and

let the world know she can do it all by herself.



Kelly Rowland (born Kelendria Trene Rowland on February 11, 1981) is a Grammy Award-winning American R&B singer, songwriter, dancer, and occasional actress, who rose to fame as one of the founding members of the successful R&B girl group Destiny's Child, the world's best-selling female group of all time selling over 100 million records worldwide.

After a series of commercially successful releases with the group and a worldwide number-one success with rapper Nelly and their Grammy-winning single "Dilemma," Rowland released her debut solo album Simply Deep in 2002. The album became a commercial success, eventually selling more than 2.5 million copies woldwide. Rowland's often-delayed second album, Ms. Kelly was released on June 25, 2007 in Europe and July 3, 2007 in the United States. So far, the album has spawned the top 5 single "Like This," a collaboration with rapper Eve, and yet-to-be-released follow-ups "Comeback" and "Work."

While maintaining a recording career Rowland has also gained fame for starring in several film and television productions, including a starring role in the 2004 romantic comedy The Seat Filler, a supporting role in the 2003 slasher film Freddy vs. Jason, and several guest appearances on TV series such as The Hughleys and Girlfriends.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kelly_Rowland

"A Short History of the Do-Rag"

By Richard

Is it me or are young men wearing do-rags allot more these days?
In asking this question I am not saying that there is something wrong
with wearing a do- rag itself especialy given that in my formative day's I use
to don one. But my criticism is that these days do-rags have become a fad
of the new hip hop generation.

And as such maybe looked at as an example of authentic black culture!
While do- rags have there place as far as hygiene and appearance is
concerned I fell today the do-rag is being worn for purely rebellious
reasons.

When I was young I use to wear the do -rag only before bed as a way
to create a wave pattern in my hair.I do not recall me ever leaving the
house with it and walking around the neighborhood. The first time I can
recall a do-rag worn openly is on BET when they began adding hard core
rap to there segments in the late 80's.

Back then I noticed that most young black boys like myself wanted to look
good for the ladies and waves were in. The boy group New Edition sported
the bestwearing wave pattens to date and we wanted that. If waves is what
the ladies liked then waves it would be.But the only way to get waves or as
southernwomen would say "good hair"was to put a do-rag on for hours and
hope an pray that the wave pattern kicked in before morning.


If the pattern had not come by morning I would throw some grease
in my hair put the do-rag away grab my books and head for the bus
stop. I would never wear the do -rag to school because to do so would
be tacky and I would probably be kicked out of school for the day.


Today there is not the same social stigmatization to wearing do-rags
in public so I guess this is why I see more of it.I think this may void
of social stigmatization is why many of our children feel like "pulling
down there pants is a style and do -rags is keeping it real"


The truth is that today the do rag has become a symbol of it's tackiness
and as a young black man it is somewhat embarrassing to see other
young black men with there paints hanging literally to ones knees.
Today'sdo-rag is being worn not for wave pattern but because the
do -rag itself is a symbol and badge of urban life.


Below is a "A Short History of the Do-Rag" from Wikipedia.


A do-rag, also spelled doo-rag, du-rag, durag, 'wave cap or watchu-rag is a piece of cloth used to cover the head.

The do-rag was popular throughout many different eras. In the 1930s women wore bandanna like fabric to fasten their hairstyles in place while they set. In the 1940s the style among women shifted into the workplace where they were taking over factory jobs and needed a safe way to keep their hair out of the machinery. Rosie the Riveter is famously featured wearing the blue-collar woman's do-rag.

From the 1930s to the 1960s, they were used by African-American men to hold chemically processed hair-dos in place while they slept. Originally they were made from pieces of handkerchief, bandanas, or women's stockings; now they are made from polyester. Do-rags resurged as a fashion trend among urban youth in the 1970s and 2000s. Do-rags are worn in a variety of colors, with black being the most common. Do-rags are regularly used to create and maintain waves. They are also used for cornrowed hairstyles. It usually has ling ties on either side which are wrapped around the head to secure the do-rag and tied at the back.
Hip hop artists such as Chamillionaire, LL Cool J, Sheek Louch, Mike Jones, Petey Pablo, 50 Cent and Cam'ron have helped popularize do-rags among mainstream audiences by incorporating them in their dress.

Do-rags are also popular among motorcycle riders. The do-rag is worn by a rider as a way to keep hair from blowing into the face and eyes while riding (a benefit to both the rider and to any passenger they may have riding on their bike behind them), as a way of keeping bugs out of the hair, and as a way to absorb sweat. Generally, riders who use a do-rag for these purposes do not also wear a motorcycle helmet. Though the majority of motorcyclists prefer the original bandana.

Some gang members may wear do-rags representing their gang colors.

Barack Obama and those Damn Jews

By Richard

The other day I was reading another ridiculous article from
Ali Abunimah who is the co-founder of the The Electronic Intifada and author of One Country: In his most recent diatribe Ali attacks Illinois Sen. Barack Obama for his supposed support of the state of Israel which he so elequenlty termed "How Barack Obama learned to love Israel". In the article Ali seems to whine about why the Sen.Barack Obama has failed to never seem to attack Isreal for what he views as Human Righst abuses.

He writes "Obama offered not a single word of criticism of Israel, of its relentless settlement and wall construction, of the closures that make life unlivable for millions of Palestinians.

Ali fails to mention that this barrier is a responce to Palestinian terrorism, including suicide bombing attacks, that increased significantly during the al-Aqsa Intifada; it has helped to significantly reduce incidents of terrorism from 2002 to 2005;Once the Palestinians reign in there thugs the wall can come down, but until then it remains.

Imagine someone kept breaking in my house and then I put up a barrier and some protection and the guys breaking in and attacking me demanded to the police (The UN) I take it down for the sake of peace. Such and argument would That sound ridiculous, yet this i the kind of rationile people like Ali use.

He then continues to dribble about his past experinces with Barack as a student when Obama gave a speech at his Univeristy. What Ali fails to understand is that in Democracies people have the right (unlike in the Middle East) to change there mind. Obama with all do respect changed his mind not because of the "Jews" but because he came into contact with different perspectives on this conflict. Different views sharpen you not make you a tool of anyone person in time as with Sen. Obama logic won the day.

Ali and his elk need to put down the "Protocols of the Elders of Zion" and reach out to those who share a different views of the conflict than he does; not so as to consider why ideas not money can change a person's perspective. Blaming the Senator's change of heart on making a buck and the Jew connections only go to show the depth of anti semtism within the mindset of many in the Palestian American movement. Lets not forget the real history behind this conflict.

Israel declared its independence in 1948 after the United Nations approved the partition of the British Mandate of Palestine into two states, Jewish and Arab, in November 1947. The Arab countries rejected the plan and attacked the State of Israel the moment it was created.

And what of the Mizrahi Jews (Arab Jews) kicked out of Arab lands? The combined population of Jewish communities in the Greater Middle East(excluding Israel) was reduced from about 900, 000 in 1948 to less than 8, 000 today. Some of these communities were more than 2, 500 years old.Unlike many Arab states took in Israel her refugees the Arab states hung there's
what later became known as (Palestinan's) to dry.

Mr Ali needs to consider that there are many views to this conflict not just his.Perhaps Obama got his advice from a fellow African American human rights activist Dr.Martin Luther King who said of the conflict

"Peace for Israel means security, and we must stand with all our might to protect its right to exist, its territorial integrity. I see Israel as one of the great outposts of democracy in the world, and a marvelous example of what can be done, how desert land can be transformed into an oasis of brotherhood and democracy. Peace for Israel means security and that security must be a reality."

Richard is the founder and editor of HipHopRepublican.com

Monday, August 06, 2007

"The Bronx is burning."

By LARRY McSHANE, Associated Press Writer

NEW YORK - It was the summer of Reggie, the summer of Sam, the summer when the lights went dark and the Bronx burned bright.

Thirty years ago, as the temperatures soared and its morale plunged, New York City endured a scathing summer custom-made for tabloid headlines:
A crippling July blackout, complete with arson and looting ("24 HOURS OF TERROR"); a media-savvy serial killer dubbed the Son of Sam ("NO ONE IS SAFE"); and a dysfunctional, sensational New York Yankees team ("THE BRONX ZOO").

There was more: A bitterly contested mayoral race, the lingering threat of fiscal disaster, the perception that crime was turning New York City into Dodge City (albeit with a splashier skyline). The nation's largest city was becoming a punchline, but those who resisted the urge to flee the five boroughs weren't laughing.

"There were three things that were bad for the city: First was the blackout and the looting," recalled Ed Koch, who was running to unseat incumbent Mayor Abe Beame. "Second was the fear in the city with the Son of Sam. And third was Howard Cosell's comment that the Bronx was burning."

The air of desperation eventually led to inspiration: ESPN is revisiting 1977 with its eight-part serialization of the Jonathan Mahler book "Ladies and Gentlemen, The Bronx Is Burning," while Spike Lee directed the slice of '77 life "Summer of Sam" back in 1999.

But it's not an era that inspires nostalgia.

"You had looting, you had a homicidal maniac, you had the city in dire straits fiscally," said Mitchell Moss, a professor at the New York University Urban Research Center. "There was a genuine breakdown in the city's self-confidence."

___

It was 9:34 p.m. on July 13, 1977, when the lights went out. All of 'em, in all five boroughs, when a lightning bolt knocked out electricity to about 8 million people.

When the power returned 25 hours later, it illuminated a city in chaos. Widespread looting and arson had raged, with Beame lamenting "a night of terror." The mayor's quote, in large type, became newspaper shorthand for the destruction: more than 1,700 stores looted, more than $150 million in property damage, more than 3,000 people arrested.

Daily News columnist Jimmy Breslin remembered walking along Brooklyn's Atlantic Avenue around 6 a.m. on July 14, watching a woman and a small boy lugging a dining room table.

"The boy is struggling," Breslin said. "Out of the goodness of my heart, I hold up the back end of the table. I took four steps, and the thought occurs to me: I'm a looter. I told the kid, `Sorry, you'll have to do it yourself.'"

For Koch, Beame's failure to maintain order provided a huge campaign boost. Koch was a law-and-order candidate in a city where anarchy had ruled for a day.

"The blackout probably meant the difference between my winning and losing," Koch now says. "I was then, and am now, for the death penalty.

"Although not for looters."

___

Even when the power disappeared, this was the summer when Reggie Jackson owned the spotlight.

The power-hitting right fielder arrived in New York with a huge contract and an ego to match, announcing — at the expense of team captain Thurman Munson — that he was "the straw that stirs the drink."

His big bat and bigger mouth kept the Yankees on the back page of the tabloids, even as the city's bigger stories dominated page one. By season's end, Reggie would become front-page news, too.

A month before the blackout, Jackson and combative Yankees manager Billy Martin nearly came to blows in the dugout after Martin pulled the future Hall of Famer mid-game for a perceived lack of effort in Fenway Park.

"Was this the straw that broke the camel's back?" asked Daily News sportswriter Phil Pepe after the June 18, 1977, near-brawl.

The Yankees had recently been bought by George Steinbrenner, rounding out the troika that transfixed fans into the fall. The once-storied franchise, moribund for most of the previous decade, was back as the new owner and the old-school manager struggled to find harmony with their superstar slugger.

___

It was around 2:30 a.m. on July 31 when the Son of Sam struck for the last time.

His real name was David Berkowitz. He lived north of the city, in Yonkers, and claimed to take his homicidal marching orders from a neighbor's dog. His weapon of choice was a Charter Arms Bulldog .44-caliber revolver.

He killed six New Yorkers and wounded seven more. Terrified women across the city, noting the gunman targeted long-haired brunettes, opted for a shorter, blonder look. The shootings began in July 1976, shortly after the nation's bicentennial. The last attack, one year later on a Brooklyn lovers' lane, killed 20-year-old Stacy Moskowitz.

It took eight months after the first murder for police to link the shootings. Once they did, a sense of dread consumed the city.

"It was all looking for freaking Berkowitz," said Breslin. "I didn't know if the Yankees were playing baseball or not. The political campaign, I hardly looked at. ... It was the same, all the time."

In taunting letters to police and Breslin, the killer proclaimed himself the Son of Sam.

"I had to go in and talk with the police," Breslin remembered. "This inspector said, `I'm hoping you're the one that can bring him in.' I said, `What am I supposed to do? Get killed?'"

Instead, Breslin wrote a column urging Son of Sam to surrender.

"GIVE UP!" the headline screamed. "IT'S ONLY WAY OUT."

It was in October, during the World Series between the Yankees and the Los Angeles Dodgers, when Howard Cosell told a national television audience, "Ladies and gentlemen, the Bronx is burning."

A building near Yankee Stadium was indeed ablaze, although Cosell's crack created a negative image that lasted long after the flames were extinguished.

Cosell spoke as the mayor's race reached its final weeks. Koch would win and spend the next 12 years in City Hall.

"The most important thing, aside from balancing the budget, was upgrading the spirits of New Yorkers, making them feel we could overcome and prevail," Koch said.
Berkowitz was already behind bars, arrested Aug. 10 after a Brooklyn parking ticket led police to his door. "How come it took you so long?" he asked the arresting detectives.

The Yankees won their first World Series in 15 years, led by Jackson, who drilled three homers on three pitches in the deciding game. "YANKEES ARE CHAMPS!" read page one of the Daily News.

Thirty years later, "Mr. October" returned to the Bronx for the annual Yankees' old timers' day festivities. His long-ago season was inevitably brought up, and Jackson acknowledged that it lingers to this day.

"I can forgive," he said of that year's assorted pinstriped contretemps, "but I can't forget."

Few can when it comes to the summer of '77.

Friday, August 03, 2007

Funny Impersonation of Prof. Cornel West

Did a Black Muslim Sect Kill Black Journalist Chauncey Bailey?



Who Killed Chauncey Bailey?

SWAT Teams Swarm ‘Your Black Muslim Bakery’.

The alleged crimes include, “serious violent felonies including murder, robbery and kidnapping,”

Oakland Raids Linked To Journalist Slaying

Images of the raid:

http://www.nbc11.com/slideshow/news/13814675/detail.html


SLIDESHOW:
Images From Shooting (Warning: Graphic Images)

EMERYVILLE, Calif. — Oakland and Fremont police have surrounded the Your Black Muslim Bakery in Oakland.NBC11 News has learned that SWAT team negotiators and various high-ranking police officials are at the scene.

Officers from Oakland, Fremont, Alameda and Emeryville are at the scene, reported NBC11’s Christie Smith. The police chief and assistant police chief from the Oakland Police Department are also at the scene, reported Smith.Such a heavy police presence was needed to serve the warrants because of the violent nature of the alleged crimes, according to Oakland Assistant Police Chief Howard Jordan.The alleged crimes include, “serious violent felonies including murder, robbery and kidnapping,” said Jordan.

Yusef Bey IV is one of the men detained, reported Smith.

Previously at LGF:
Religion of Tolerance Attacks Liquor Stores In Oakland Oakland Muslim Leader Jailed for Attempted Murder

UPDATE at 8/3/07 10:13:35 am:

Another well-known hate preacher from Oakland is Amir Abdel Malik Ali:
Muslim Hate Speech at UC Irvine.


Oakland Police spokesman Roland Holmgren(AP)

The outspoken new editor of the Oakland Post was shot to death Thursday near a downtown courthouse in what police believe was a deliberate hit. Chauncey Bailey, who had been a reporter for The Oakland Tribune before moving to the Post in June, was killed around 7:30 a.m., Oakland Police spokesman Roland Holmgren said. He said witnesses told police that a single gunman had shot Bailey and then fled. Police had no motive for the killing but said it did not appear to be random. Holmgren said investigators would look into any possible connections with Bailey's work. “I've spoken with him several times,” Holmgren said.

“I know him as being a somewhat outspoken type individual, assertive in his journalistic approach when trying to get at matters at hand.” Bailey grew up in Oakland and worked with several area media outlets, including KDIA radio and Soul Beat TV, a local cable channel. He wrote for the Tribune for more than 10 years before being named editor of the Post, a weekly community newspaper. Oakland Tribune managing editor Martin G. Reynolds said Bailey was “a friend, a valued colleague and a loving father” whose coverage of Oakland's black community was “a tremendous asset.” At the Oakland Post, Gwendolyn Carter, the paper's advertising manager, said the staff of about 10 was shocked by Bailey's death.

“He was a good man,” Carter said. “He always took care of me. He would say I was his little sister and he was my big brother.” Police and Crime Stoppers of Oakland offered up to $10,000 in reward money for information leading to the gunman's arrest.


Where the hell is the NAACP ?

Aretha Franklin - I Say A Little Prayer