Dear Hip Hop:
By the time that you read this letter, hopefully all
will have been repaired within the U.S. government. As we stand in the
final months of the year 2006, the majority of the world hates us, we
have a huge trade deficit, and our President, George Bush, is disliked
by not only the international community, but an overwhelming amount of
the people that voted him into office two consecutive terms. We are not
speaking of the George Bush that succeeded Ronald Reagan, but rather
Bush Baby. Not the Hip Hop group the Bush Babies, but George Bush’s son.
Right before you fell into your coma, the country
was ridin’ high. The Olympics had put Atlanta on the international map,
the U.S. economy was experiencing the largest economic boon in the
country’s history, everyone seemed to have jobs and disposable income,
and that computer thing called the Internet made lots of people filthy
rich. Our boy, President Bill Clinton, was loved by most Americans and
respected by much of the international community.
Well, around this same time, Bush Baby was elected
the governor of Texas, and commenced to execute death row inmates at a
speed faster than it takes to pull the electric chair switch. He was
also bosom buddies with the head of a Texas energy company who was
sentenced to twenty-plus years in prison for a slew of white-collar
crimes, and caused his company to file the largest corporate bankruptcy
in U.S. history. Bush Baby and his cohorts cleverly convinced the
majority of southerners, evangelicals, homophobics, and racists to
elect him President. Just like that Papa Bush, Bush Baby lead a war
against Iraq, but for circumstantial, and what evidence shows were
outright false pretenses. Worse yet, the last six years have been a
period of corruption, lawlessness, and all out immoral actions.
Recently, the American people voted to change the
countries leadership and move in another direction. This change in
direction was more a testament of the Administration’s utter
incompetence rather than a shakeup caused by Democrats or outspoken
liberals. Most disheartening is the Hip Hop community’s lack of
interest in politics and social ills that pervade urban communities.
Remember back in the early eighties when your vision
spread across the country, urban America was in dire straits. The
unemployment rate was astronomical, crime was high in nearly every
major city, teenage pregnancy was epidemic, and mothers waited in long
lines for a hard block of government issued cheese. Worse yet, both
crack and AIDS hit urban communities like wild fire. Your music caused
many members of our cities’ gangs like the Black Spades, Vice Lords,
Gangster Disciples, Bloods, and Crips to put down the knives and guns,
and instead pick up a microphone. Not only were we supposed to dance
and have fun with you, but also use you as a vehicle to vent and affect
change.
When your early disciples like Grandmaster Melle Mel
and Run-DMC had the platform, they produced songs like “The Message,”
“White Lines,” “Hard Times,” and “It’s Like That,” which set the stage
for MCs to go beyond solely moving the crowd at parties to stimulating
thought and conversation. In the late 80’s that baton was passed on to
a new group of MCs who were more vocal and socially-conscious than
their predecessors. Public Enemy called out everyone from the U.S.
government and the 911 response system, to the state of Arizona and
Hollywood studios. Remember when N.W.A. let the world know about police
brutality in Los Angeles, and KRS ONE took it a step further by calling
out “Black Cops?” How about when Ice-T and 2 Live Crew fought tooth and
nail for their constitutional right to free speech? We would be remiss
if we didn’t mention X-Clan, Paris, YZ, Sistah Souljah, and the
Poor Righteous Teachers.
Presently, the rappers who claim to be the closest
to the street are, in actuality, the furthest removed. The rappers with
the most exposure stray far away from not only social and political
issues, but also anything of substance. The same issues that inspired
Chuck D, Ice Cube, and others to question authority are prevalent
today, but the New School artists prefer to rap about their
bling-bling, Bentleys, and Cristal; items that the vast majority of
their fans will never own. Maybe new school rappers are scared of the
ramifications for criticizing the present administration. After all, an
all-American country group called the Dixie Chicks was nearly banished
from the music industry for questioning this administration. Most
likely, the new school simply doesn’t care. It’s unfortunate
considering that Rap has a platform double the size Hip Hop had in the
80’s and early 90’s. Hip Hop artists did more for their fans and
communities with less resources than their new school brethren.
We are constantly encouraging your original audience
to rebuild their Hip Hop collections and to add socially-conscious
artist like Public Enemy, KRS-ONE, Ice Cube, X-Clan, and others.
Ideally, we would like for our generation to play Old School Hip Hop
around our children, nieces, and nephews so that they know that Real
Hip Hop addresses more than just jewelry, cars, the club, and girls. By
the time you read this letter we hope to have inspired a new generation
of future MCs to really take Hip Hop back to the streets.
Hip Hop has been in an induced coma since 1996.
This is our open diary to Hip Hop; hoping that one day he will awaken
and can catch up on all that he has missed.