B
Bill_7154
Guest
Don’t forget that there are a whole lot of rock bands made up of white guys whose lyrics are filled with gore, evil, etc. What about the rock band black sabbath? What does that name convey?I think that’s exactly the kind of question we should ask. But it’s not the only question I’m trying to ask. Racism and sexism are awful, but they’re only part of the problem. It’s African American male artists that are making this music, and it’s being played across America (and maybe the world), spreading the stereotype that women in general (and black women in particular) are some combination of materialistic, shallow, slutty, and crazy. But that message affects all women, and men, particularly kids who are just about to hit puberty, and portrays an image of what being a sexual person looks like.
I came of age listening to Public Enemy’s “Fear of a Black Planet” and “Apocalypse '91: The Enemy Strikes Black.” From those albums, I learned to think critically about sexism, advertising, stereotypes, racism, alcohol, the media, and materialism. Their strong influence on me convinces me that the music that children hear growing up shapes their views of culture. So songs like Cee Lo Green’s “Forget You” (“F**k you” on the internet and night clubs), and their historical predecessors (“Bth Betta Have My Money”; “Gold Digging Girls Drivin’ Me Crazy”, “Shake Ya Tailfeather”), leave impressions on society as a whole.
I certainly don’t blame all of this on hip-hop. The cheapening of human sexuality is a much broader issue than hip-hop. But I picked the title because in this culture, black women have been so maligned by the culture as a whole, black and white. In America, we are shown the images
And thank you for your gut reaction. I am sorry that my title offended. May I please ask your mind’s reaction? I’m a white guy who spends too much of my alone time thinking about this stuff.
I think that it’s problematic when you have a thread that in general is addressing moral decay in society, but you single out a minority race as the proposed topic of conversation.It brings me in a negative mindset but things do not have to be that way.
As far as solutions, I think they need to start at home. When I was growing up as a child I didn’t have restrictions around what I could and couldn’t watch on TV or what I coud and couldn’t listen to for music. Or what kind of posters I could/couldn’t have in my bedroom (well no naked ones).
I am now a father. My son 10 months old. We let him watch TV. I like the tv channel Nick JR. There are a lot of cartoons that focus on helping children learn lessons about sharing, helping, etc. These are the shows he will be watching as he grows. Not robots killing each other. Compare that to the cartoons I watched growing up. Like Tom and Jerry who killed each other like 50 times per 1/2 hour cartoon with bombs and stuff. or bugs bunny or that road runner and someone trying to kill him all the time…
I didn’t grow up violent at all, and don’t know if tv makes kids violent, but do think that it gets into a persons mindset to one degree or another. I consciously choose to not watch the news as it exposes me to seeing the daily reports of various isolated horrible tragedies that have happened across the country every day. I don’t want that stuff in my mind, so I don’t watch.
And I will guide and supervise my son with respect to what he watches. And we will have a strong bond so he will have a desire to please me and he will have a deep trust and respect for me.
So I think it starts at home, it’s a huge responsibility that I think must be taken very seriously. But it is common for parents to alllow their children to do whatever, not supervise them, not instill solid moral values in them, etc…
I really don’t have answers beyond that. My focus will be on raising my son to have strong moral values, empathy, respect, etc…so he can bring this out into the world and not be swayed by others who would have him involved in morally questionable activities. I will work to instill leadership qualities in him so he has the confidence to take a stand for what is right, hopefully he will be respected for doing so. Possibly he will influence others in a positive way also.
