[size/HUGE] fixed [/size]
Well-Known Member
Holy ****, I couldn't even make it to the bottom of the 4th page. This is one of the worst threads in the history of jazzfanz. There's a solid percentage of dudes around here who are top-shelf douchewads.
You need stories about racism against black Americans for validation?
[size/HUGE] fixed [/size];819196 said:Clearly this guy has earned every one of those 15 rep power points in his 55 total messages. The alt investigation should be pretty simple here.
Claims that sample based work isn't music aren't even really worth discussing.
I can't even imagine how someone like Rob or Lazy D would distinguish the "musical complexity" or the level of musical knowledge required of Dave Matthews Band with Girl Talk (entirely sample based) or a DJ like Gramatik.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KH_kPMT9Enw&feature=kp
A few things:
- it's hard to distinguish Rob's exact perception of hip-hop in his post that everyone jumped on. While there is not a 0% chance that his perception of rap music isn't tethered to his perception of black culture, I really think Kicky is stretching things with the assaults he's laid on him. The notion of calling rap music "music" as being tied completely to racism is a laughable one, in my opinion. There are several things in rap music that could put off any person-- some are tied to black culture, some are not.
- Yes, the notion of rap not being music is laughable, and uneducated. But that isn't what many are arguing here. Saying rap music isn't music makes you an idiot-- but does it make you a racist? Personally, I don't think there is enough there to slam Rob with the label.
- Rap music ****ing owns, and whoever doesn't dig it can literally punch rocks. Black people are probably the best thing that has ever happened to popular music (and music altogether, arguably).
I think there's more than one (reaching back in my memory I'm remembering the drummer and the horn player).
Virtually all uniquely American contributions to music stem in some way from African American experience. Jazz, Blues, Rock, Hip-Hop. It's all intertwined with black experience. That's inescapable and undebatable.
Claims that sample based work isn't music aren't even really worth discussing. I can't even imagine how someone like Rob or Lazy D would distinguish the "musical complexity" or the level of musical knowledge required of Dave Matthews Band with Girl Talk (entirely sample based) or a DJ like Gramatik.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KH_kPMT9Enw&feature=kp
No, you have done so enough times for me to regect, outright, your claim that racism is only one way.
careful, I think this question might be a "trap"
Well, if you understand why both are true and not contradictory, you have made progress after all.
This did not happen to me, but to a relative.
He was walking down the street in a mostly black neighborhood when 6 black guys on bikes rode past, and just as they got past the last one called out "kill that white boy".
They all turned around their bikes, but luckily my relative was a fast runner and adept at jumping fences.
Based on his other experiences there he has no doubt he would have been hospitalized or dead if he did not get away.
Is that not racist because it was directed at a white person?
@Onebrow your one way street racism argument is crap, a whole load of crap.
Onebrow. Why don't you tell us of your racism experiences. You seem to ask a lot, but are pretty tight lipped about yourself. Do tell.
You need stories about racism against black Americans for validation?
- Yes, the notion of rap not being music is laughable, and uneducated. But that isn't what many are arguing here. Saying rap music isn't music makes you an idiot-- but does it make you a racist? Personally, I don't think there is enough there to slam Rob with the label.
Or again, perhaps you have just come to understand my position better and your initial assumptions based on my race where incorrect.
Three years ago you would have, and did, say the two positions were contradictory. Now you understand they are not. Your understanding has has changed. Has my understanding changed? Of course. We all change over time. So, why are you so insistent on the connotation that you have not?
You know, a co-worker of mine was closing up the fence last year by himself, when two black men came out of nowhere behind him. It was very threatening. Then, as he was pulling away, they completely disappeared. It was like they had ghost powers. He's completely convinced this is what happened, so now we have a rule that there always have to be two people locking up. The utter ridiculousness of people vanishing into and out of existence makes no difference; he knows what he saw.
I find it much more likely that the incident, if it happened at all, has been blown way out of proportion by some fear-soaked white man. I've seen a lot more of that gangs of kids on bikes deciding to kill some stranger. Not that I think your relative is lying; I'm sure they believe that's what happened.
Good, and I'm aware of yours.I'm aware that's your opinion.
Grade school principals who suspend the black kid in a fight with the white kid, but not the white kid. An award given to the white kid in English, when a black kid was clearly a better student. Locker room jokes whites told in high school. Amazement that someone could live "downtown" with so many black people around. It's been obvious in dozens of job interviews. Black people on the internet at work are lazy; whites are not being challenged enough. White people miss deadlines; black people can't do the job. Black people being questioned by the police when the white person in the group is ignored. How many more instances do you want?
I find it much more likely that the incident, if it happened at all, has been blown way out of proportion by some fear-soaked white man. I've seen a lot more of that gangs of kids on bikes deciding to kill some stranger. Not that I think your relative is lying; I'm sure they believe that's what happened.
It seems to me that the misunderstanding happening between the two factions in this thread come down the historical sense of the concept "racism." Those board members who have that stubborn strain of libertarianism and/or cynicism over the social work of correcting systematic abuse want to shrink that historical sense to zero. The other camp asks for the recognition of a racism that has been shaped by knowable forces, the correction of which takes time, effort, and (obviously) an insistence on a certain historical memory.
I always distrust a libertarianism that demands we speak of things on a dramatically reduced historical scale. It's a meak way of looking at people and processes -- and is bad for spiritual health.