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Get Educated or Get Exploited (Hip-Hop and Women) PDF Print E-mail
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Written by Michael Cohen   
Monday, 10 April 2006
As Women’s History month comes to an end I feel spiritually compelled to help alleviate the exploitation of misguided women in Hip-Hop. This issue goes much deeper than Hip-Hop, the everlasting philosophical debate of moral right and wrong becomes more mind boggling when it comes to the exploitation of women. Are women acting on their own will or has OUR culture distorted their moral judgment? (I put ““our” in caps because if our culture is responsible for this, then it is our responsibility to convey a more positive message.) Does man’s sexual appetite provide wholesome employment opportunities, or does giving these women a decent pay check conceal the continued suppression of women? In plain English, is it wrong for an eighteen year old girl to shake her ass in a music video, or are the artist and director at fault for giving the public what they want? Perhaps we can place blame upon the education system, or inadequate parenting. I can spend an entire day metonymically displaying the elements in society that lead to the core problem. A lack of accountability in society perpetuates into extremely poor decision making tactics among the youth.


Culture sets the context for norms and how we see things. It has been a while since The Miseducation of Lauren Hill, the last recognizable positive record from a female in Hip-Hop. This means there exists a generation of BET/MTV viewers that have never seen a woman in anything more than a thong and skimpy top. This is a small exaggeration, however, we have our Alicia Keys, Jill Scotts etc. “Everything is Everything” was a hot video, remember the city spinning like a record and the DJ scratching and shaking up the city. The song was hot, the video was hot, but more importantly Lauren was hot. She is a sexy woman, known more for her intellect and ability as an MC. Though in Lauren’s eyes I am racially handicapped (being white), just like her “I wrote these words for everyone who struggles in their youth.” Positive female role models are scarce in Hip-Hop. Voletta Wallace said it best when she referred to Lil Kim as “representing sex not sexy.” Miss Wallace sugar coated her statement out of respect but the bottom line is that most Hip-Hop divas look and act like sluts. Young girls watching these sluty acts may not idolize them but this medium imbeds a distorted view of social norms.

Foxy Brown
Foxy Brown
Both dons as well as divas of the Hip-Hop game are equally responsible and need to be careful of the messages they send. Around the same time as “Everything is Everything” two other videos relevant to this issue were in rotation, Juvenile’s “Back That Ass Up” and Destiny’s Child’s “Bills Bills Bills.” The chauvinistic brutal honesty of “Back That Ass Up” can distort a teenage male’s view of women’s purpose in existence, making them think women are nothing more than sexual objects hear for man’s pleasure. But what about “boy bands” like N-Sync and The Backstreet Boys, that sing about how much they love their girl, “oh baby I love you, you’re my one and only,” shit like that, but then they go backstage and fuck 12 groupies. The honesty of Hip-Hop should be respected; however, a balance of honesty and responsibility as an icon needs to be maintained. This “balance”” is one of the objective reasons that Tupac Shakur’s greatness can not be disputed. With “Keep Ya Head Up” and “I Get Around” on the same album we can not ask for a more complete display of fun hip-hop and conscious rap. Rappers are not the only artists that need to be held accountable. R&B acts like Destiny’s Child have been reckless with their privilege to reach the masses; perhaps even more reckless than us hormone driven males. Most rappers have positive intent conveyed through negative content, what the fuck is the message behind “Can you pay my bills…then maybe we could chill…I don’t think you do/ so you and me are through.” Why not try to create a generation of casual prostitutes and sucker ass dudes that try to buy women. Even worse is the complete interruption of balance between materialism and the subjective view of love. Don’t worry though; Destiny’s Child doesn’t need someone to pay their bills anymore, now they “need a soldier.” So if your daughter gets pregnant by some kid who violated parole by fucking your underage daughter, don’t throw out her Lil Kim CDs, trash that Destiny’s Child shit. “Girls used to sing about how they want us to love and hold ya/ now they c-walkin, talkin bout they need a soldier.” (J-Ro of Tha Liks)

Let’s not overlook my brief reference to our institutionalized education system that needs to be checked. With the high school drop out rate drastically rising many teens wake up around noon, watch 106 and Park, and this is what their mind absorbs during its most efficient hours. If a young woman wants to pursue a career in videos and modeling that’s fine, after all that’s the beauty of a capitalist society, individual independence and economic prosperity. The problem is when this young woman’s mind was not developed and prepared to make wise decisions. Perhaps if the importance of women’s history was stressed just a little bit in junior high schools young adult women would have more pride, and teenage men would have more respect. Or if the importance of history in general was stressed instead of drilling facts and dates into student’s heads, trying to turn them into academic robots. How about a real “sex education” program, not a lecture that scares teens into abstinence? If a young woman was properly educated (there some smart models out there don’t get it twisted) then she would be able to conduct herself in a professional manner while still being sexy. Outrageous college tuition is another problem. Despite Chris Rock’s theory of “the stripper myth,” (see Never Scared) there are girls that try to strip their way through college. I see nothing morally wrong with that, however, not all women are as strong minded as the main character in Playas Club. Lyndon Johnson once said “Men are molded by their environment…,” well so are women, and there many atrocities women can be exposed to living the stripper life. When wack “acts” like Tpain sing “I’m in love wit a stripper,” my subjective bias opinions of Hip-Hop go out the window, and I seriously hope a young mind embodied by beauty does not become a victim of latent dysfunctions from an irresponsible medium.

We are all individuals that should not be judged for individual choices, which cause no harm to others. But society has a responsibility to reach out to those on the path of self-destruction. Sure, a Hip-Hop website is not the forum to preach for utopia, however, societal problems exist within the culture and business of Hip-Hop. I am sick of Hip-Hop being attacked by political big wigs and corny ass media who are completely ignorant to our world. I said we should not be judged for individual choices which cause no harm to others, so to all the women who choose to be scandalous don’t “Wonda Why They Call You Bitch.” Like AZ said “P.E.A.C.E Positive Education Always Corrects Errors”

R.I.P. Tupac

All the best to Foxy Brown

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