Rapper JA Rule Gets Ready to Release 7th Solo Album
and 6th Attempt at a Comeback, But Not Before He Shares what's
F--king up America
by
Jasmyne A. Cannick
And I quote:
"Dating shows that's showing two guys or two girls in mid-afternoon.
Let's talk about s--t like that! If that's not f--king up America, I
don't know what is."---Rapper
Ja Rule,
SOHH.com.
Funny, all this time I thought President Bush was f--king up
America. Go figure.
The statement above is from rapper Ja Rule on the September 25th
Congressional hearing on the lyrical content and imagery of
African-American women in hip-hop.
According to SOHH.com, in a recent interview with Complex Magazine,
Ja Rule decided to get political.
"They got my man Doug Morris under fire and @#!*, they got him going
down to go speak to Congress about hip-hop lyrics, are you @#*$ing
serious?" Ja said. "There's a f--king black kid right now about to
get 25 years for having a fight with some white kids over hanging
the nooses over the white tree, let's get to that. Let's get into sh-t
like that, because that's what's tearing up America, not me calling
a woman a b--ch or a h-e on my rap songs."
"And if it is, then we need to go step to Paramount, and f--king
MGM, and all of these other motherf--kers that's making all of these
movies and we need to go step to MTV and Viacom, and lets talk about
all these f--king shows that they have on MTV that is promoting
homosexuality, that my kids can't watch this sh-t," he continued.
"Dating shows that's showing two guys or two girls in mid-afternoon.
Let's talk about s--t like that! If that's not f--king up America, I
don't know what is."
"There's a lot of issues we can address besides hip-hop, but they
want to put everything on us like we're the problem," Ja added.
"This is going to be a shameless f--king plug, but I said, 'when
everyone wants to point the finger, and ask why there's so much
corruption, they only need to look in the mirror.' It starts with
themselves."
Oh where to start?
Ja is right in his reference to the Jena 6 case going on in
Louisiana right now regarding the 6 Black kids on trial after a
fight broke out regarding the hanging of nooses on their school
campus.
However, that doesn't mitigate the fact that Ja calling women b---hes
and h--s in his rap songs is contributing to the destruction of the
Black race. Because not only are his lyrics being heard by Black
children who then by virtue of the song's popularity began to use
those same words when referring to women, but he's also holding the
same door open that Don Imus stepped through. Ja Rule and rappers
like him that condone the use of derogatory terms to refer to women,
in particular Black women, are telling not only Black America that
it's okay to use those words but they're also giving the okay to
people of other races to use the same language when referring to
Black women.
I remember clearly the endless arguments from whites on national
television during the Imus controversy about it being ok because
"they," meaning Blacks, use the same words.
As for MTV promoting gays, Ja clearly has an issue with gay people
and it's a poor argument and an even poorer comparison.
Instead of taking responsibility for using these words, Ja Rule
wants to point the finger at the gay community and blame gays for
all that ails America.
But what Ja fails to recognize is that the Congressional hearing is
about the stereotypes and degradation of Black women (key word) in
hip-hop and the entertainment industry, and not about gays on
television.
Before Ja started talking out the left side of his mouth, he might
have taken some time to come up with a better argument. Perhaps
focusing on the film studios for the limited roles available to
Black women, as in, why do Black female actors always end up playing
roles of prostitutes, drug addicts, welfare mothers, etc?
Gays aren't the reason that many Black families live below the
poverty line. Lesbians aren't the reason that our prisons are
overflowing with young Black men and women. Can't blame gays for
the senseless gang violence in the our neighborhoods that is and
continues to take the lives of many Black men. And it's unfair to
blame gays for the number of Blacks that are unemployed in America.
Oh, and gays weren't the reason that in 2003, he punched a man in
Toronto for shouting at him in a crowd because of the 50 Cent feud.
Nor were they the reason that in 2004, police investigated whether a
feud involving The Inc. led to fatal shooting outside a nightclub
party hosted by Ja Rule. Now were they?
But what about little 10 year-old Jerome Jenkins who is sitting in
the back seat of the car singing along with his mom who is in the
front driving bumping Ja Rule's last hit song from 2001 "Livin' It
Up?"
Work with me for a minute:
Baby, this ain't your typical, everyday, one night thing
It's a physical, I'ma fuck you tonight thing
fuck, knowin your name, jump yo' ass in the Range
And roll over, gettin blown while blowin the doja
Bring head to a closure - that's a good bitch
Before it's all over, I'ma meat this bitch
Probably treat this bitch
, mo' betta
Cause if you ain't - know, thugs and ladies go together
Poppin my collar potnah - who in the spot?
Baby, Rule in the spot; and the mug and the watch ugly
Half the h--s hate me, half them love me
The ones that hate me only hate me cause they ain't fucked me
And they say I'm lucky; you think I got time
to fuck all these h--s and do all these shows?
Or flight in the llama chargin white Rolls
Uhh-oh, another episode
b---hes, just wanna hold a name that's active
That's why they suck dick with mo' passion than average
And I ain't mad at'cha; never leave you alone
Cause we fucks when I'm home, phone sex when I'm gone
We both grown, both got minds of our own
Plus I freaks off like O-Dog in "Love Jones"
Been in, many zones, baby one h--s, two h--s
From, prissy b---hes to h--s that do porno
But you know, the Rule be livin it up
And got all these h--s, givin it up
I like a, little ooh baby, how cute are you?
With a body that rides on sexual
I got a stick, I'll ride right next to you
Do a doughnut, and cut, then I'll open it up
On the freeway,dick in the mouth, foot on the clutch
Rule bitch, not givin a fuck
That was Ja in 2001, just imagine what words he's added to his
vocabulary in the last 6 years?
So little Jerome, thanks in part to Ja Rule, but mostly to his
mother for playing it around him, learns at a young age that women
are b---hes and h-s and are to be f---ked. And hey, if momma is
singing it and saying it, it must be so. Right?
Now if you ask me, that's what's contributing to bringing down Black
America. Our kids are being taught from a young age, by the lyrics
of rappers like Ja Rule and by parents who care more about bumpin'
their song, than the effects that hearing those lyrics day after day
have on their children.
Ja Rule will be releasing his seventh solo album and sixth attempt
at a comeback this fall entitled "The Mirror" thanks to Universal
Motown Records.
But I'd like to say that Ja Rule would do good to take his own
advice and take a good long look in the mirror. There's got to be a
reason why he's been attempting a successful comeback album almost
every year since the release of his first album. Perhaps if he
spent more time focusing on his own personal self development and
leave the politics of hip-hop to artists who actually make it onto
the charts, he wouldn't have to stage a comeback year and year.
There's an old saying that goes: if you're not part of the solution,
you're part of the problem. Somebody must have lied and told Ja he
had the solution.
posted
September 16, 2007