Lil Wayne Disrespects Emmett Till’s Family.. Update: Boycott being sought over Wayne's Lyrics...

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stringer bell
stringer bell Members Posts: 26,212 ✭✭✭✭✭
edited February 2013 in The Reason
thyblackman.com/2013/02/13/lil-wayne-disrespects-emmett-tills-family/
Lil Wayne Disrespects Emmett Till’s Family.

(ThyBlackMan.com) When a rapper says he’s gonna “pop a pill” then “beat that p*ssy like Emmett Till,” that’s when we know that he might have gone just a little bit too far. But that’s just what happened this week, and the Till family isn’t happy.

Lil Wayne and Future, two very talented hip-hop artists, have decided to push the envelope of disrespect by releasing a song called “Karate Chop.” In the song, Lil Wayne takes the liberty of turning the mutilated face of Emmett Till into a weary s*x ? , ridiculing the agony experienced by this young man many years ago. The matter is made is even sadder by the fact that Till’s legacy was trampled by Lil Wayne, Future and Universal Records right in the middle of Black History Month.

I spoke this week with Airickca Gordon Taylor, spokesperson for the Till family and as you can imagine, the family is outraged.

“I just couldn’t understand how he could compare the gateway to life to the brutality and punishment of death,” said Gordon Taylor.


For those of us who aren’t familiar with the legacy of Emmett Till (apparently, Lil Wayne already is), Till was a 15-year old boy who was beaten beyond recognition and murdered for whistling at a white woman. Till’s mother, Mamie Till Mobley, made the courageous decision to insist that her son be buried with an open casket so that the country could see how ugly the brutality of racial violence can become. Mamie’s sacrifice sparked international outrage and served as part of the fuel which created the foundation for the civil rights movement.

Over 50 years later, we now have black rappers who think it’s OK to compare this 15-year old boy’s face to a v****a. I doubt that Dr. King would consider this to be progress.

Rev. Jesse Jackson and his associate, Bishop Tavis Grant of the Rainbow/Push Coalition have spoken up on the matter, and I’ve promised to give them my support. Hip-hop music is one of the most powerful and persuasive art forms in the history of the world, and it is now being used to enslave the minds of young black people so that they might become food for the prison industrial complex. Lil Wayne’s reference to till is just the latest effort to dumb down black America and to produce messages that are nothing short of disgustingly toxic.

Many potential black male father figures have been extracted from our community and sent to the concentration camps of the prison industrial complex, given dozens of years for sometimes minor offenses. All the while, their sons grow up without fathers, and are taught on the radio how to get high and ? every day, to ? other black men, and to disrespect the black women who raised them. Lil Wayne’s music is a reflection of this reality, as a man who is as brilliant as the great Malcolm X has been convinced to use his powers for evil rather than good.

The cultural norms that continue to undermine who we are as a people are deliberately designed to keep us in a psychological prison from which many of us choose not to escape. And for those of us who rise above the madness, we often find ourselves and our loved ones brutalized or killed by those who’ve been turned into psychological zombies. A perfect case-in-point is the late Hadiya Pendleton, the young honor student who was murdered just a block away from the home of President Barack Obama.

Bishop Grant, Rev Jesse Jackson and the Emmett Till family aren’t just taking the fight to the artists themselves, they are taking it to the streets and the boardrooms. Universal Records, the company that finances and sponsors the language being used in much of this music, should be held accountable. I guarantee that if I were releasing music which said that “I’m going to beat that woman’s v*gina as if she were in a concentration camp,” I might not be able to get millions of dollars in financing to spread my message around the world. Destructive hip-hop music is the kind of disrespect that is designed uniquely for black people only.

Some would say that the consumers are to blame for this madness on the airwaves. They say that if people stop demanding this kind of music, it will simply go away. The problem is two-fold:

1) Many of the people who purchase hip-hop music are white people who care nothing about how the music might affect the psyches of black youth, and

2) If you force a product down the throat of consumers long enough, they will eventually crave it in the same way that an alcoholic comes to desire poison in his body.

White people buy hip-hop, but are not as readily influenced by its messages. They don’t see the artists as reflections of themselves, but as reflections the “authentic” black urban “gangsta” experience. Black children, on the other hand, don’t have nearly as many media role models to choose from, and are often led to believe that music is their way out of the ghetto. Bad parenting is not the only reason that many of our kids are led astray, since many good parents see their words drowned out by a world that teaches black children to ? themselves.

I’m not angry at Lil Wayne for making this music. Lil Wayne is brilliant, creative and powerful, like Malcolm Little was before he met the Honorable Elijah Muhammad. Also like Malcolm, Lil Wayne was poisoned by a racist society, and his music is merely a symptom of the mental illness that America has built within him over the last 30 years. Since he never met his own version of Elijah Muhammad, Wayne has become convinced to use his power to ? his community rather than lift it up. This is unfortunate.

But no matter how we view the actions of Lil Wayne himself, the bottom line is that we must love our kids more than we love this music. We can support the value of artistic freedom while simultaneously demanding that our hip-hop artists and their corporate bosses show some degree of responsibility. We can’t assume that anything goes, especially when the music so blatantly spits on the legacy of someone like Emmett Till.

In other words, some things are just sacred.

Staff Writer; Dr. Boyce Watkins


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Comments

  • LUClEN
    LUClEN Members Posts: 20,559 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    Just learned about Emmett Till, Medgar Evers and all them last month in a social movements course. That being said, good timing for this thread

    I like the fact that he references Emmett Till, but I hate that he did nothing with the reference except elude to sex. Waste of a punchline if you ask me. That's all wayne really is though.

    A talented rapper can take a powerful reference like that, make a punchline with it, and communicate a deep message with it. Lil wayne just talks about sex with it.
  • Stew
    Stew Members, Moderators, Writer Posts: 52,234 Regulator
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    Didnt read but sounds like another L
  • Ghostdenithegawd
    Ghostdenithegawd Members Posts: 16,231 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    Where's the ymcmb cornballs to Defend this
  • bbkg79
    bbkg79 Members Posts: 613 ✭✭✭✭
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    RodrigueZz wrote: »
    Just learned about Emmett Till, Medgar Evers and all them last month in a social movements course. That being said, good timing for this thread

    I like the fact that he references Emmett Till, but I hate that he did nothing with the reference except elude to sex. Waste of a punchline if you ask me. That's all wayne really is though.

    A talented rapper can take a powerful reference like that, make a punchline with it, and communicate a deep message with it. Lil wayne just talks about sex with it.

    I agree
  • Bcotton5
    Bcotton5 Members Posts: 51,851 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    they bleeped it out on the radio when I heard it yesterday lol

    Wayne the best ever YMCMB!
  • obnoxiouslyfresh
    obnoxiouslyfresh Members Posts: 11,496 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    It's really disheartening to hear this line but his star is fading and I think the agenda was to capitalize off of the scrutiny he knew he would, invariably, receive. How so very easy would it be to leave morbid Emmett Till references out of your lyrics?
  • SneakDZA
    SneakDZA Members Posts: 11,223 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    so "beat that ? like emmett till" causes some concern but no one said anything in 08 when he said "rodney king baby, beat it like a cop"?

    c'mon - you know that's a false equivalence. not saying that line is right but the point is there should at least be some kind of line that is not ok to cross and while one could argue about the rodney king line being over that line, there should be no debate the emmit till line was wack and incredibly disrespectful not just to his family but to any human being really.
  • [Deleted User]
    [Deleted User] Posts: 0 Regulator
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    The user and all related content has been deleted.
  • usmarin3
    usmarin3 Members Posts: 38,013 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    Where is attorney Malice at?
  • MC The Rapper
    MC The Rapper Members Posts: 8,140 ✭✭✭✭✭
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  • south4life
    south4life Members Posts: 9,113 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    so "beat that ? like emmett till" causes some concern but no one said anything in 08 when he said "rodney king baby, beat it like a cop"?

    Rodney King was alive when he said that, Emmitt Till was murdered for whistling at a white woman.
    Completely different scenario, Rodney King didn't deserve to get beat like that but, Rodney had a criminal record it's kind of hard to defend him compared to Emmitt Till; who did not have a criminal record.

  • sully
    sully Members, Writer Posts: 4,955 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    Sorry, i couldn't agree more that Lil Wayne is a ? who offers little to nothing to society, but the author doesn't get his point off very well.

    And Lil Wayne should never be compared to Malcolm. Not before Malcolm became Muslim, nor when Malcolm was in the NOI, nor post-NOI, when he joined Sunn Islam.

    That's just disrespectful to Malcolm and everything he fought for. I'm sure, he couldn't even imagine the dumb-assery that is the existence of Lil Wayne. Hell, people living today can't comprehend it either.

  • twatgetta
    twatgetta Members Posts: 6,705 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    RodrigueZz wrote: »
    Just learned about Emmett Till, Medgar Evers and all them last month in a social movements course. That being said, good timing for this thread

    I like the fact that he references Emmett Till, but I hate that he did nothing with the reference except elude to sex. Waste of a punchline if you ask me. That's all wayne really is though.

    A talented rapper can take a powerful reference like that, make a punchline with it, and communicate a deep message with it. Lil wayne just talks about sex with it.

    Then you must be White or Asian and live in Europe somewhere.