American
rapper, Nas, considered as one of the most politically conscious
rappers in the game, penned an open letter to his fans urging action to
combat what he said was institutionalized racism and the policies of
President Donald Trump.
The
only way the black man gets a little piece in America is if he takes
the O.J. stance: “I’m not black, I’m O.J.” When you ignore the shit
that’s happening to people you can live in this fantasy, this American
fantasy that you belong to… who? You ignore what’s happening, and that
gives you peace. Because what’s going on is enough to make people
insane. Some guy lynched in a tree at Piedmont Park in Atlanta,
Georgia, and the cops rule it a suicide. Now, don’t get me
wrong—suicides happen.
There
are blacks suffering from mental illness just like whites suffering from
mental illness, except that whites who suffer from mental illness and
have interactions with the cops, they end up living. Blacks, we get
killed. So if you want to sit back and ignore all that, go the O.J.
route. Just remember, even he got dealt with at the end of the day. So
where do I stand? I stand just as a man, doing what I have to do. Doing
what I was born to do. No one can tell me who I am. No one can tell me
where I can go and cannot go.
The
Creator put us here to do our thing, so I do my thing. And I don’t pay
attention to politics at the moment. For what? There’s no reason. For
me, it doesn’t make any sense. We all know a racist is in office. People
can talk their shit. Comedians can sound racist. People can go through
their moments of that shit, but when you have the responsibility of
being President and you carry on like that, you send a strong message to
people outside of your group that they ain’t worth shit.
So
why would I focus on that unless I’m in the political game? Unless I’m
running for office I don’t have to pay attention to know that. If I ever
vote again—when it’s time to vote again, and I feel like voting again—I
don’t have to follow the news to know who I’m voting against. But then
you wind up saying “Who’s the next motherfucker coming in, and how does
that help?” My way of addressing these issues is through my work.
Whatever president may be in office doesn’t affect my work directly.
The
way he affects people is what affects me. I observe what’s going on and
that goes into my creative process. The person himself, I’m not caught
up with. I don’t even have time for Trump or Pence. I don’t give a
fuck. My focus is on what’s happening with real people in their
everyday lives.
How they
behave, the decisions they make, and how that affects families. I grew
up in a single-parent household, so I was affected by that life. But it
didn’t stop me. So I speak to the everyday people. I speak to everybody.
If the people are bothered by it, I speak on it. If the people are
bothered and want change, I speak on that. It’s the same way I felt as a
youngster when Ronald Reagan was in office.
My
voice at that point didn’t fuckin’ matter to anybody. I didn’t care.
You know what’s different today? I’m older, that means I’m more
responsible. That means paying attention to what’s happening to my
country. But in reality, art is gonna thrive regardless. Whether it’s
affected by who’s in office or not, art thrives. I live in that—I live
in those walls, I live in those wires, I live in those pencils and
papers, and that sound. I’m not caught up in politics. I saw Gerald Ford
and his vice president Nelson Rockefeller. I saw Jimmy Carter.
I
saw Ronald Reagan, and I saw George Bush, Sr. I saw Bill Clinton,
George Bush, Jr., and Barack Obama. I’m good. I got my own things to
say and I been saying how I feel on the mic. Sometimes people ask me
“Why you didn’t say this?” or “Why you didn’t talk about that?” You got a
million people out here with a million different views and I heard it
all. I talked about it all. I thought about most of the shit somebody
could think of. I move through action. My music is action. What I’m
giving you through my music is my actions. I might have a song I want
to deliver and then do things around that song that represents that
song. And that can represent people and change and help with the
education of young people. I like those ideas. I like ideas about
helping kids in the inner city want to learn. Helping them want to be
more. I’m all about being what you can be, because you never know.
That
position, the presidency, seems so far away. But Barack Obama changed
the game so that now, whether you’re a woman or Latino or whoever, you
can feel that running for office can be a real goal. Winning the
election could be real for someone in this country, if that’s what you
want. As a kid, at one point I thought I wanted to go to film school. It
was gonna be films or music. Steven Spielberg, George Lucas—those were
big names for me coming up.
I’m
doing all the things I ever dreamed of, even though there was a Ronald
Reagan, even though there was laws that ruthlessly destroyed the black
community, put tons of us in prison on trumped-up charges, and put us in
jail for a long time over crimes that other people get a smack on the
hand for. It’s basically slavery. It’s like the top of Sacha Jenkins’
documentary, Burn, Motherfucker Burn! where this guy says “I see blacks
as a superior pet.” You know what I’m talking about?
I
read Eastern philosophy as a teen, so I see balance in everything, I
have a cooler head because of it. If I could do that then, now we can
save many more, ya dig? Especially in this day and age with all the
resources we have, all the information of the Information Age, And
that’s whether Trump’s in office or not. So, I don’t got time for
lippin’. I got time for actions. Anytime I’m speaking it’s action.
FOR ADVERTS CALL +234 8065046533 OR 7010528147. YOU CAN ALSO SEND US AN EMAIL ON dpaschalblog@gmail.com.
FOR ADVERTS CALL +234 8065046533 OR 7010528147. YOU CAN ALSO SEND US AN EMAIL ON dpaschalblog@gmail.com.
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