By Damian Boycott
In the 1990's the idea of gay rappers was far-flung. The thought of gay rappers in alpha-male
culture was totally unheard of and unacceptable. During the same time (the ,1990's) radio
show host Wendy Williams generated listenership by going on and on about the mysterious
"gay rapper". This was all absurd nonsense used to market a daily radio program, and used
as a ploy to convince people to listen to her show.
Over time the quest to learn who the " gay rapper" was faded. Also, the idea of homosexuality
in rap culture faded as well. Since that time the production and the subject matter in
mainstream Rap has gotten progressively worse. Popular rap over glorifies materialism,
disrespect for women, homosexuality, alcohol abuse and drug abuse. The drugs that
are being promoted are man made, synthetic designer drugs. Gone are the days when
Public Enemy sold 500,000 records in less than one week- spreading a
socially relevant message.
in rap culture faded as well. Since that time the production and the subject matter in
mainstream Rap has gotten progressively worse. Popular rap over glorifies materialism,
disrespect for women, homosexuality, alcohol abuse and drug abuse. The drugs that
are being promoted are man made, synthetic designer drugs. Gone are the days when
Public Enemy sold 500,000 records in less than one week- spreading a
socially relevant message.
In a recent video, Wesley Muhammad talked about the queering of hip hop. In this 28
minute video, Muhammad explains in detail how the drug culture in rap is linked to the
gay agenda in rap music. This all seems to be a part of a mass depopulation agenda
to eliminate black people.We don't see the promotion of synthetic drugs in any other
genre of music. However, when it comes to music that is marketed to a black demographic,
we see the glorification of dangerous synthetic drugs.
minute video, Muhammad explains in detail how the drug culture in rap is linked to the
gay agenda in rap music. This all seems to be a part of a mass depopulation agenda
to eliminate black people.We don't see the promotion of synthetic drugs in any other
genre of music. However, when it comes to music that is marketed to a black demographic,
we see the glorification of dangerous synthetic drugs.
The video from Muhammad speaks for itself.