Opinion The Girls and Gays Are Dominating Hip Hop, But Where Is the Respect? - Tariq Nasheed makes an appearance

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The Girls and Gays Are Dominating Hip Hop, But Where Is the Respect?

By
Ashley Rees
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On Monday morning, rapper DaBaby became a trending topic after footage of someone throwing a shoe at him during his Rolling Live festival set that weekend made the rounds. DaBaby dodged the shoe and tried to play it cool, asking, “who the fuck threw that motherfuckin’ busted ass goddamn Adida?” But this wasn’t necessarily the work of a drunk and disorderly member of the crowd; timing is everything. The incident occurred justafter DaBaby made a slew of homophobic and sexist remarks: “If you didn’t show up today with HIV, AIDS, or any of them deadly sexually transmitted diseases that’ll make you die in two to three weeks, then put your cellphone lighter up;” “Ladies, if your pussy smell like water, put your cellphone lighter up;” “Fellas, if you ain’t sucking dick in the parking lot, put your cellphone lighter up.”

The statements came after DaBaby’s brazen move to invite Tory Lanez to the stage, a rapper who is arguably most famous for allegedly shooting rapper Megan Thee Stallion last summer during a domestic dispute. DaBaby even performed both “Cash Shit” and “Cry Baby,” two Megan Thee Stallion songs that included DaBaby as a feature. And as if the optics couldn’t get worse, Megan performed on the Rolling Live stage just before DaBaby did.

There’s more backstory still: In June, DaBaby retweeted a joke mocking the shooting. In an apparent subtweet about DaBaby, Megan wrote, “Support me in private and publicly do something different. These industry men are very strange. This situation ain’t no damn ‘beef,’ and I really wish people would stop downplaying it like it’s some internet shit for likes and retweets.”

Such brazen disrespect warranted a shoe-throw, but it also speaks to a larger point about the state of hip hop in 2021. Or, rather, straight men’s place in hip hop, and the ways in which the vilest misogynists and homophobes are bristling against the increased visibility of women and queer people in the genre.
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The long male-dominated genre has seen women rise to the top of the game in the last few years, with people like Megan Thee Stallion, Doja Cat, and Cardi B quickly becoming household names with a speed that their contemporary male counterparts can’t lay claim to. For the better part of the last decade, only Nicki Minaj has managed to reign supreme in what often feels like a boys’ club of a genre, but there is no one token woman in hip hop making major moves today; now we have City Girls and Saweetie, Rico Nasty and Flo Milli, BIA and Latto. And openly gay hip hop artists have also risen to prominence, like Young M.A and, most notably, Lil Nas X, who has released viral hit after viral hit from “Old Town Road” to “Montero.” His most recent song “Industry Baby” includes the line, “I don’t fuck bitches, I’m queer, hah” and also features a video full of Black men twerking butt naked and thotting it up with no reservations. Naturally, it made Black conservative men blather on about gay agenda conspiracy theories, which Lil Nas X, a social media genius, batted away with ease.

When Loud Mouth social commentator Dr. Boyce Watkins accused Lil Nas X of “marketing the sexual irresponsibility that’s causing young men to die from AIDS,” Lil Nas X replied, “y’all be silent as hell when niggas dedicate their entire music catalogue to rapping about sleeping with multiple women[,] but when i do anything remotely sexual i’m “being sexually irresponsible” & “causing more men to die from aids.” He added, “y’all hate gay ppl and don’t hide it.”
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Lil Nas X lives for controversy, but the constant push for him to justify his existence in the public eye and in hip-hop must be taxing. But taxing is the best description for plenty of the contradictions that plague women and LGBTQ artists in hip hop. If it isn’t Lil Nas X supposedlyacting as part of a conspiracy to turn Black men effeminate, it’s Megan Thee Stallion being accused of lying about domestic abuse or Cardi B getting hate for not being a good role model. The girls and gays might be putting a solid foothold in hip hop that hasn’t been seen at this volume before, but they’re still surrounded by constant reminders that they will always be more heavily scrutinized and treated with far less respect than their straight male peers among both fans and artists alike.

It’s worth noting that DaBaby seems more interested in aligning himself with a forgettable rapper who allegedly shot Megan than Megan herself, a star whose rise appears limitless. That, alone, underlines the lasting appeal—the sheer normality—of the outdated and patriarchal dominance that still has a hold on hip hop’s major players. Getting with the winning team, so the thinking goes, isn’t worth having their masculinity threatened—and considering the bluster required in hip hop, all this insecurity is oozing with irony.
 
If it was so "harmful," why did record companies allow it to be published? Money. Within reason.
Money is the only reason.
If black/white/brown genocide became universally popular tomorrow you can bet they'd let even the filthiest shit blast on-air.

NWA "Fuck the Police" is a great example. It was okay to make diss records about beating up other Black people, but do not dare talk about police brutality without a letter to the FBI.
- Nobody likes the FBI. Their discontent is everyone's gain.
- The reason "Fuck the Police" ultimately couldn't be stopped is because it resonated with people. There's a reason we have FtP and not "Fuck the Fire Department".
- The beating up/wishing murder upon Blacks is exactly the poison I'm talking about. FtP is a song that would've been immortalized so much more if it wasn't on the same album as "Straight Out Of Compton", which basically idolizes contemporary youth ghetto mentality. "Stay ignorant. Do not aspire for more. Be proud of being scum." FtP has soul and justifies it's use of violence and language to express the oppression of urban blacks by The Man, but it's one song in a sea of degeneracy.

Remember the government hysteria with regulating media and expression around the 90s-00s.
Yes. I have not forgotten the DNC's hard-on against free speech and hurt feelings. *Waves at Tipper Gore and Joseph Lieberman.*

However, government "concern" and hip-hop polluting the minds of many are two separate topics altogether.
 
Why are thowse nogs stealing white music again?
 
The music industry is and has been fake forever. Everything popular is either manufactured by a casting agency or selected by a PR firm and then coached and groomed to promote the correct messages.

It's propaganda.

Also, NWA was a bunch of nerds and Fuck the Police was written by Oshay because Dre had to do community service after they got pulled over for riding around the LA freeways shooting their nerd-ass paintball guns at the other cars. It was promoted by a perfidious kike because he's a kike and creating discord and distrust is his nature.
 
Megan got some bops tho tbqh. Reminds me of when Queen Latifah first started out.

Tbh she's better than Nicki Minaj and...whatever the fuck Lil Kim did to her skin.
 
Lil Nas X supposedly acting as part of a conspiracy to turn Black men effeminate
Except that is what's happening. The people in charge of the record industry have determined that the one black musician they're going to promote as part of the mainstream is a flaming fag who makes videos about getting bummed. Not a black musician, mind you. The only black male musician I have seen being promoted in the UK to normies is Lil Nas X, and it doesn't seem like a coincidence that the same people who are trying to promote him when he clearly doesn't represent black people are the people trying to legitimise homosexuality.

I hate to say this given his painfully obvious hatred of anyone who so much as looks white or mixed, but Tariq Nasheed is right. There has been a conspiracy against black families and black Christianity for a long time, and Lil Nas X is just the modern-day version of filling the AME churches with modernists, or putting abortion clinics in black neighbourhoods, or encouraging single motherhood. The elites hate black people, and the sooner black people realise this the better our society will be.
 
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