More Fun To Compute said:Jeez though. Is it really so far off base to point out that the roots of black culture in the UK is disproportionately more influenced by the Carribean than Africa or the US.
Any chance you could download it and turn it into an MP3 so I can listen to it? I want to hear if anybody came at the guy with some knowledge, I don't want to hear ad homs, personal attacks, strawman arguments, deflections, or shaming tactics. I don't want to hear any of that emotional bullshit, I want to hear people explain to the guy why his views are out of context. That is one of the major probs I have with so many black people, they don't know how to operate in the dominate system. You have to be able to explain your views properly, you can't just lash out at people.Meus Renaissance said:BBC Radio 5 podcast from last night, some public calls. Also, Starkey came on it and expanded on his views. That begins around 1hr 35mins into it but plenty of interesting views and heated exchanges before then! Let me know if non-UK Gaf cannot listen to this, I'll upload it.
Listen
SSJ1Goku said:A lot of white people have a hard time vocalizing their thoughts on why the black community is fucked up because of multiple factors:
1. They have a lot less interaction with black people than they thought. This usually results in some type of thought of black people should be just like white people but with dark skin. The problem with this is that it completely ignores the history.
2. The concepts of black people don't connect with the sterotypes they have in their own heads. White people seem to forget that they are the ones that created the ideas that black people are stupid, lazy, ugly, etc. You can't point to ideas of why the black community is messed up and go against those ideals.
3. Trying to pinpoint issues in the black community ends up pointing the blame right back at white people. And when they realize this they end up stumbling. This goes for the media, employment, education, financies (loans) and history.
Hip-hop created a shift in culture in the black community because it glorified the disenfranchisement of black men. Black men had problems gaining employment from the white dominant system. This created a reactionary culture. The only way for a black male to viewed as a man in the black community was to be a thug.
Furret said:As I've already commented the reason why rap/hip hop is such a major problems is not the music itself but the lifestyle and attitudes of the stars. These people are not only looked up to, but trying to emulate them is now a tried and tested way of advancing yourself.
Nix said:Now that it's spilled over to different facets of society, it's now our fault, as if we're the eternal stool pideons. I just don't know. I can see where that historian guy (umm, Starkley?) is coming from, and his points, although lacking tact, are valid, but he puts it across in such a way that I can't bring myself to think he actually knows what he's talking about. Once again, marking out the black community to be the stigma of society, when as far as I know, most of the rioters weren't black. (Or were they, and I'm mistaken? The video's I saw showed mostly white looters.)
I disagree and here is why. The majority of black children are being raised by black females the legacy of struggle is being passed on by their the mother. The legacy of struggle says that a black female has to be strong and independant because of things that have happened in the past. Black boys are being raised in the same situation but are being told to do what makes black females happy NO MATTER WHAT (the legacy of corny). The females are attracted to what is perceived has manhood in their environment, which would be the hyper masculine thug. What is a thug? A thug is a male that has rejected the white dominate system wholesale and replaced it with the street shit. The majority of black boys can't like rock music for the simple fact that it is not seen as "black" so says black females. Now how do we get more thugs in the black community? Simple, let the corny boys have their first interaction with a black female and he gets rejected. The corny boy will see that the black females are attracted to thugs, so the boy will want to become a thug. This is where you get the stat that says that 50% of young black boys dropout of highschool. The culture has shifted, anything that is seen as white is rejected. This is why the boys fall off, because black females do NOT find value in an on-point black male. It is simple supply and demand. Black females demand a certain kind of guy and they get the supply.Nix said:Damn, SSJ1Goku is raising some fine points; damn fine. Although, the thought that Rap music, or the rap-gangster mentality, is harbored by a majority of blacks, is a pretty common misconeption, when that's an ideal placed on blacks, by a subjective society.
Furret said:As I've already commented the reason why rap/hip hop is such a major problems is not the music itself but the lifestyle and attitudes of the stars. These people are not only looked up to, but trying to emulate them is now a tried and tested way of advancing yourself.
Furret said:Punk was an extremely short lived and parochial phenomeon at the time and had a clear political agenda - not just the celebration of wealth and decadence.
Furret said:And, once again I've already said, rap is not the only issue, TV and films glorify criminality are also part of the problem - although movie stars tend to be more poistive role models, at least comparitvely speaking.
Furret said:I'd actually say next to rap/hip-hop culture the only equally negative influence is celebrity culture in general - the sort of magazines and newspapers that celebrate the trivial and denigrate the profound.
Strummerjones said:They emulate rich entertainers who themselves often became entertainers to escape terrifying lives of poverty and violence? Great news, soon they'll all be millionaires who wouldn't dream of being involved in a riot!
Punk had no clear political agenda whatsoever. Most groups were apolitical, a feted minority had (typically vague) left wing views, others were genuine anarchists, others still were far right groups.
You're right on this one. You can't underestimate what TV makes people do (specifically blacks and thick people). "You remember 'Andy Pandy'? He used to come on. As soon as that was on I used to get in a glove. I used to jump in a glove and rush down the road and, you know, the power it has over people."
So the biggest menaces to society today are celebrity magazines and rap music (which has been in decline for the last decade anyway)? Thank fuck for that, I thought for a minute we'd have to take a hard look at ourselves and try to unpick the real failings of a society in which disperate people, both socially and geographically isolated, can inexplicably come together to take part in shocking acts of violence at the drop of a hat. Good job there was an easy answer that let us unequivocally blame some folks we never really liked much anyway.
Silliest post I've yet seen on this forum (which lets face it, is quite an achievement), unless it was a troll, in which case well done.
SSJ1Goku said:Any chance you could download it and turn it into an MP3 so I can listen to it? I want to hear if anybody came at the guy with some knowledge, I don't want to hear ad homs, personal attacks, strawman arguments, deflections, or shaming tactics. I don't want to hear any of that emotional bullshit, I want to hear people explain to the guy why his views are out of context. That is one of the major probs I have with so many black people, they don't know how to operate in the dominate system. You have to be able to explain your views properly, you can't just lash out at people.
Strummerjones said:Punk had no clear political agenda whatsoever. Most groups were apolitical, a feted minority had (typically vague) left wing views, others were genuine anarchists, others still were far right groups.
SSJ1Goku said:I did not mean it like that. What I meant was when people look at a black person they automatically think that they fit perfectly into the "Nigga Box". The Nigga Box is a place that black people put themselves into by embracing being on the bottom. I said I don't listen to rap music I was basically saying I don't fit the mold of the majority of black people. In my experience what most black people do is hate the sterotypes about black people, but turn around and will still accept being on the bottom, embrace ignorance, embrace rap music, accept all of the negatives...just for the sake of, as they see it, blackness. They don't want to reject anything because they don't want to be shamed. The problems in the black community have gone on for so long that very few people would be able to walk away from the community unscathed. So what you get is masses of black people who have reacted accordingly and have allowed their shame to dissipate. Most black people are at a point to where they are completely uncheckable, even by another black person.
EDIT: Let me explain it more simpily, in my experience black people are very hot and cold on the issues in the black community. They either represent all of the sterotypical traits or they have none of them. I'm not saying that there are not black people out here who listen to rap and also have an education. But from what I have observed there is basically a wholesale acceptants of the sterotypes or a wholesale rejection of them. These middle of the road people are rare. Remember what I said a lot of black people feel that if you do not accept all of the negative traits then you are rejecting blackness.
Bgamer90 said:Yeah I knew what you meant. I was just saying that you probably should have stated it better.
I've been called an "oreo" for most of my life so I know where you are coming from.
LQX said:Surprised so much of the blame is being shifted on only blacks and even that American blacks an ocean away are being used as examples which is odd. Also on thing that surprised me about seeing those rioting images is how diverse the crowds looked.
True but the consensus even in this thread for the past few pages seem to be agreeing to put the blame on one group and also blame what's popular within that group. The blame is being shifted from the actual rioters to include every black person and I'm not sure thats fair. Just an observation. Canadians also rioted a few months ago and the blame did not then shit to putting all whites in box or blaming hockey because it is violent.Meus Renaissance said:Only a small minority are doing that.
Dr Starkey described Scotland as a "feeble little country" and said Robert Burns was a "deeply boring provincial poet."
To boos from the audience, Dr Starkey said: "If we decide to go down this route of having an English national day, that means we become a feeble little country, just like the Scots and the Welsh and the Irish.
Haha, is making fun of another country really xenophobic? It seems to be a tradition over there.killer_clank said:Fucking xenophobic cunt.
LQX said:Surprised so much of the blame is being shifted on only blacks and even that American blacks an ocean away are being used as examples which is odd. Also on thing that surprised me about seeing those rioting images is how diverse the crowds looked.
Spokker said:Haha, is making fun of another country really xenophobic? It seems to be a tradition over there.
zomgbbqftw said:I think people are putting the blame on black people because they associate them with rap culture (it's a fair mistake to make for the uninitiated). They see rap videos glamourising violence, drugs, guns and possibly theft. The same people also see that most rappers are black. In these people's minds, black people are responsible. I don't agree, I think it is poor parenting whereby kids are put in front of the TV and watch and listen to music that isn't really made for them...
I don't know anything about it, but if he hates another country he might as well let people know.killer_clank said:Saying that kind of stuff on a national political debate program is not banter, and that's when it's most definitely not OK, verging actual hate, perhaps not xenophobia.
Spokker said:I don't know anything about it, but if he hates another country he might as well let people know.
Are you angry with what he said or are you angry that he said it? If you're going to let him on a debate show it's best that he be honest.
Spokker said:I don't know anything about it, but if he hates another country he might as well let people know.
Are you angry with what he said or are you angry that he said it? If you're going to let him on a debate show it's best that he be honest.
I think in many ways anti-intellectualism is an essential part of 'hip hop' culture. And the fact that these whites, blacks, immigrants or non-immigrants cultures are ghettoised to the point of destroying their own society. I'm not sure what is incorrect about David Starkey's comments .Meus Renaissance said:This is the good stuff
Third verse mocks modern rap/hip hop
You putting me to sleep nigga (Dumb it down)
That's why you ain't popping in the streets nigga (Dumb it down)
You ain't winning no awards nigga (Dumb it down)
Robots and skateboards nigga? (Dumb it down)
GQ Man Of The Year G? (Dumb it down)
Shit ain't rocking over here B (Dumb it down)
Won't you talk about your cars nigga? (Dumb it down)
And what the fuck is goyard nigga (Dumb it down)
Make it rain for the chicks (Dumb it down)
Pour champagne on a bitch (Dumb it down)
What the fuck is wrong with you? (Dumb it down)
How can I get on a song with you? (Dumb it down)
:lol
vordhosbn said:I think in many ways anti-intellectualism is an essential part of 'hip hop' culture. And the fact that these whites, blacks, immigrants or non-immigrants cultures are ghettoised to the point of destroying their own society. I'm not sure what is incorrect about David Starkey's comments .
vordhosbn said:I think in many ways anti-intellectualism is an essential part of 'hip hop' culture.
FreeMufasa said:Thing is, that makes sense for our generation (kids who grew up in the 80s/90s) and the type of rap music that played then.
These days, rap (if it can even be called that) sounds like this stuff http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HrjRj4uQQ1o&ob=av3e
It just sounds like a really outdated argument that might have passed 10-20 years ago, but looks silly now.
I suspect the fact most people and even hip hop aficionados haven't even heard of this guy proves that he's an exception. And I doubt they would ever be interested. This culture can't really be saved at all.Sneds said:Well it really depends what you mean by 'hip-hop' culture. There's certainly some MCs out there who do have something of substance to say and talk about social problems in a meaningful way. J-Live springs to mind, who was a school teacher before he went full time in the music business. This track of his reminds me of the fourth season of The Wire.
Furret said:What worries me is how desperate the left are to deny every single suggestion of why this happened and what kind of social and cultural problems may have led to it.
Nobody in Britain lives in "terrifying poverty", that's insultingly absurd. When I grew up I didn't have a colour TV till I was in secondary school and no telephone until after I left for university.
Those involved in the riots who weren't millionaire's daughters or in a steady job had free housing were nowhere near the breadline and were organising their thievery via Blackberry mobiles.
So if it's not poverty, and according to you it's nothing cultural, why were they doing it? I've still yet to see any suggestion from liberal halfwit posters such as you as to what your explanation is.
SSJ1Goku said:White people control "rap culture" not black people. White people have no problem making lots of money off the backs of black people but when that bullshit starts to become too extreme and spills over into the white community then they want to bitch.
Suzanne Moore on the Mail Online website said:It is most odd to be told these riots came out of nowhere when I live up the road from where they started.
When I moved to London I actually lived and worked in Nowhere, or Tottenham as it appears to be called, and my family still shop in Wood Green High Road, which was looted on Saturday night. Nowhere soon became a war zone where many residents were devastated by the activities of what was actually a small number of people. Nowhere then extended itself to retail parks, other parts of London and other cities. Nowhere was set alight. Lives were lost. Family businesses were burnt down and livelihoods shattered. Each story was worse than the last. Oh no, they burnt down Peppers & Spice [a Caribbean food shack], I heard people say. That old mans barber shop and home was destroyed. Did you see on YouTube? They mugged a boy whod already been beaten up.
Tottenham has never been gentrified: some of the gang stabbings and rapes there in recent years have been pure horror stories. Long before the riots there were pleas for more police, more help. The local MP, David Lammy, has been eloquent about the myriad problems in his constituency, as have many youth workers. But how did what started as a legitimate protest after the police shooting of Mark Duggan end up with disorder in Wolverhampton? How did we get from concerns about policing to idiots nicking plasmas? What point were these people making except I want free stuff. I am entitled to it. I dont care about anyone else?
Those of my generation who remember the real uprisings of the past, like Brixton in 1981, struggle to make sense of last weeks events. Even if we can comprehend anger we cannot condone the mindless destruction of already poor communities. I note that unemployment in Tottenham is at much the same level as in the last riots in 1985. This is not an excuse. It is an indictment of those responsible for the fact that change has not happened where it should. The banal political dismissal of the riots as nothing more than pure criminality is criminally stupid. If that is all they were, why now? Why in some places, not others?
The reality is these riots do not fit old patterns or easy narratives of the Right or Left. But no matter, they were soon squeezed into pre-conceived ideological views. Its the cuts, say some, refusing to acknowledge that most have yet to come into force. Its the feral underclass spurred on somehow by the liberal metropolitan elite, say the Right, while failing to recognise that the liberal intelligentsia has little or no connection with the underclass Ive found myself having to explain to them what Poundland is! The immorality of those who behaved as they did and their utter disconnection from any notion of bourgeois norms have been much discussed; less so, the disturbing political disconnection.
No one begrudges politicians a holiday, but when they did come back it was too late, and mainly to condemn the easy bit a lot and to understand the hard bit rather less. As the riots raged, people wanted the police to do far more than they were doing. All kinds of conspiracy theories have done the rounds about why they did not show up in Wood Green on that first night. Television crews were in Tottenham until 2am when they were forced to pull out and my friends in the area tweeted and texted on what was happening till daylight. In the days that followed, as copycat rioting and looting broke out in other English cities, I was perturbed, of course. But I was also perturbed by how quickly everyone started talking about bringing in the Army: some said soldiers were already bedded down in South London.
David Cameron flew back from photo-ops with Italian waitresses to assert some kind of control. Boris still hadnt bothered. Cameron has gone from talking about Broken Britain to the Big Society and now the Sick Society. And how shall the sick be healed? Apparently, by locking them up, taking away their benefits and throwing them out of their council homes. All this while cutting police numbers but increasing visible policing, which is little more than wishful thinking. Of course crimes were committed by an alienated cross-section, many of them unemployed youths, though we have had a good laugh at the exceptions. Ballerinas! Organic chefs! Posh girls! But those professing shock at the level of disaffection in many levels of society must have been wearing blinkers for the past two decades. The remoralisation of a demoralised society is but a hopeful promise.
The very notion that one must face the consequences of ones actions has been undermined by the banking fiasco, the MPs expenses scandal and the phone-hacking saga. The gangsta credo of demanding respect for absolutely no reason other than it is demanded is not an attitude confined solely to postcode gangs. Such attitudes are prevalent at the top of our social structure. The coming generation cannot take for granted education or housing in the way we did. They cannot afford to leave home, jobs are scarce and mortgages way beyond the reach of average pay packets even for the so-called squeezed middle. Those at the bottom, now spoken of as less than human and unredeemable, still live right beside us. In times of austerity, they will be pushed further down and garner no sympathy. Some may be mere children of 11, but still there is a public outcry because they cannot be tagged or put in prison. What sort of civilised response is this?
After the terrible events in Norway, its leaders proud response was a commitment to more openness and democracy. Faced with an atomised culture, ours is the opposite. Many are asking for an absolute clampdown on basic freedoms, and suggesting Twitter or BlackBerry messaging be shut down. This extraordinarily draconian response befits Syria or China. Technology is neutral. Rioters used it but so did the police, so did those exchanging information about where it was safe to be, and so did those mobilising the clean-up. Greater Manchester Police used Twitter to give calm and detailed reports of what was happening a huge source of reassurance. In the face of nihilism, the need to connect was paramount.
The usual causes, from single parenthood to multiculturalism, have been rolled out in a smug-fest by people who have no idea of the lives many lead. The looters poverty of aspiration snatched trainers and DVD players was soul-destroying. Because Im worth it says the advertising slogan, but when ripped out of its display case our consumer culture does not look worth much at all. The rioters statement was simply: We are here. We want. Want, not need. Hence the rehearsal of the tedious debate on relative poverty which goes nowhere. These people feel they are owed something. Society says no.
We have some of the worst youth behaviour in the developed world. This is hardly new. Mostly we turn a blind eye, hoping CCTV will somehow intervene, but real intervention has to start very young indeed. And that costs. No single solution can come from Right or Left. Successive governments have made this mess and now we are all in this together. The truth is that what we used to call civic or public society needs not just care but actual rehab. If you believe society is sick from the bottom up or the top down then you may as well join in the self-sabotage of the rioters.
For what is forming is another angry mob who are foaming at the mouth with rabid Right-wing authoritarianism. At a time of economic collapse I am as frightened by this mob the ones supposedly in charge as I am of the moronic minority whose dreadful actions may mean that our basic liberties may go up in flames.
Such flames are being fanned. They will burn us down.
A note of caution to those who still wish to follow such fearful and fearmongering authoritarian illogic.Charles Dickens said:"'Forgive me if I am not justified in what I ask,' said
Scrooge, looking intently at the Spirit's robe,' but I see
something strange, and not belonging to yourself, protruding
from your skirts. Is it a foot or a claw.'
'It might be a claw, for the flesh there is upon it,' was
the Spirit's sorrowful reply. 'Look here.'
From the foldings of its robe, it brought two children;
wretched, abject, frightful, hideous, miserable. They knelt
down at its feet, and clung upon the outside of its garment.
'Oh, Man. look here. Look, look, down here.' exclaimed the Ghost.
They were a boy and a girl. Yellow, meagre, ragged, scowling,
wolfish; but prostrate, too, in their humility. Where
graceful youth should have filled their features out, and
touched them with its freshest tints, a stale and shrivelled
hand, like that of age, had pinched, and twisted them, and
pulled them into shreds. Where angels might have sat
enthroned, devils lurked, and glared out menacing. No
change, no degradation, no perversion of humanity, in any
grade, through all the mysteries of wonderful creation, has
monsters half so horrible and dread.
Scrooge started back, appalled. Having them shown to him
in this way, he tried to say they were fine children, but
the words choked themselves, rather than be parties to a lie
of such enormous magnitude.
'Spirit. are they yours.' Scrooge could say no more.
'They are Man's,' said the Spirit, looking down upon
them. 'And they cling to me, appealing from their fathers.
This boy is Ignorance. This girl is Want. Beware them both,
and all of their degree, but most of all beware this boy,
for on his brow I see that written which is Doom, unless the
writing be erased. Deny it.' cried the Spirit, stretching out
its hand towards the city. 'Slander those who tell it ye.
Admit it for your factious purposes, and make it worse.
And abide the end.'
'Have they no refuge or resource.' cried Scrooge.
'Are there no prisons.' said the Spirit, turning on him
for the last time with his own words. 'Are there no workhouses.'"
zomgbbqftw said:I get called a coconut all the time because I don't listen to rap music, and I'm Indian!
Meus Renaissance said:I thought it was only me but a few of my black mates are saying they're getting looks from people (London)
Meus Renaissance said:I thought it was only me but a few of my black mates are saying they're getting looks from people (London)
vordhosbn said:I think in many ways anti-intellectualism is an essential part of 'hip hop' culture. And the fact that these whites, blacks, immigrants or non-immigrants cultures are ghettoised to the point of destroying their own society. I'm not sure what is incorrect about David Starkey's comments .