Senator West Virginia | Why Kids are Attracted to Rap/Hip-Hop (and why it isn’t healthy)

Jay Wolfe 2008

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Why Kids are Attracted to Rap/Hip-Hop (and why it isn’t healthy)

We are under no obligation to be subjected to the underbelly of cultural dysfunction, rap and hip-hop music. We just need adults to take charge.

Let’s take a typical hour in the car, listening to a pop music station, such as WPGC Washington, DC. Fortunately most of the hour is commercials. Normally, you wouldn’t want that. But in this case it is a relief. Why? There was a song about birthday sex, a song about a large penis (the song production included Beyonce, and I had thought she had some class. I was wrong.), a song with masturbation references, another about sexual positions, and another about nudity and the joys of weed. This is material not suited for the intended audience: kids. We should not put up with it. But in today’s over-communicative world, it’s everywhere.

The key here is that for a free society, without government censorship, to work, there has to be something else: adults. For parents, that means turning off the radio. But we know that in this day and age, communications are a step ahead of parents. There are just too many sources, and the kids are too savvy — they learn early where the minimize button is.

Something should be done. This content is not OK. It is unhealthy. This isn’t prudishness talking here; it’s decency. In that hour of music there was not one — not even one! — positive message. It was filled with sexual content, but no hint of sexuality — that passion, caring, gentleness, and other traits that separate human intimacy from the animal act. Basically, what rap and hip-hop talk about is what pigs do. That’s as elevated as the conversation becomes. And it goes downhill from there. It glorifies pimps and gangs. These are two things that in reality have always — always, in EVERY case! — been destructive. So to see teenage boys cheerfully talking about pimping, or teenage girls playfully trying to make gang signs is more than disturbing. It is a sign of sickness in a society that claims to care about kids.

A free society means we are going to have freak shows. It also means people are free to shake up the system and push envelopes. Freedom does not protect us from shocking behavior. But when Snoop Dog, on national TV, leads a woman on all fours around on a leash, we all know it is wrong. And moms and dads should work to stop it. In fact, anyone with morals should step up.

What can be done to create a civil society? Well, we’re going to need help. We are going to need adults in positions of responsibility. Adults would’ve said, ‘No!’ to Snoop Dog and pulled the plug. Adults would’ve said, We care about kids and we are not going to allow music [like the hour I described] on the airwaves.

In a society that needs more civility and not less, adults are going to have to act. Not under government coercion, but because they are adults. With the incredible choices we have — local music, world music, all styles and types, there is no call for adults to choose the type of airwave pollution with NO value. Censorship NO! Acting like adults, YES!

1 Comment »

  1. or anything really. I couldnt even get a car loan at the end up, i got there in the end though, it takes a little digging,

    Comment by john dillan — December 2, 2009 @ 4:29 pm

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