This vile, anti-white hate publication has been mentioned in other threads, but deserves one of its own.
This week's issue has Amare Stoudemire and the rapper Nelly on the front cover with the headline "How Hip-Hop Amped Up the NBA." The very first sentence of the article is racist: "The men -- hairy, fat, mostly white, knocking on the door of middle age -- dance without shame (or rhythm) to Snoop's 'Drop It Like It's Hot'." The white buffoons are among 18,000 Bulls fans, all supposedly reacting positively to rap music during a television timeout.
From that start we have seven pages praising the glories of rap and the NBA players who live the rap lifestyle. Various players' comments are featured, most but not all black. We learn from Kirk Hinrich: "I grew up in Sioux City, Iowa, and me and all my friends listened to hip-hop. We used to play DMX, Mase, Tupac and, obviously, Biggie, before games. Almost the whole population of basketball listens to hip-hop, regardless of where they're from or if they're black or white or whatever. If you play basketball, you're exposed to it."
Dallas Mavericks owner Mark Cuban spews forth this menagerie of lies: "The NBA hasn't made a conscious effort to align with hip-hop; it's made a conscious effort to build a fan base. Kids drive merchandise sales. Kids are our future customers. If classical music were hot with 12- to 24-year-olds, you'd be asking why the NBA is tied to Brahams. I don't even agree with those who say hip-hop offends our older, mostly white ticketholders. Today's 45-year-olds listened to it in college. . . " blah, blah, blah
If there is as much as a single drawback to the "hip hop culture" it isn't identified in this crude propaganda piece. It's just another example of the ideology that is pounded into whites, particularly the young MTV generation, non-stop from every direction. Edited by: Don Wassall
This week's issue has Amare Stoudemire and the rapper Nelly on the front cover with the headline "How Hip-Hop Amped Up the NBA." The very first sentence of the article is racist: "The men -- hairy, fat, mostly white, knocking on the door of middle age -- dance without shame (or rhythm) to Snoop's 'Drop It Like It's Hot'." The white buffoons are among 18,000 Bulls fans, all supposedly reacting positively to rap music during a television timeout.
From that start we have seven pages praising the glories of rap and the NBA players who live the rap lifestyle. Various players' comments are featured, most but not all black. We learn from Kirk Hinrich: "I grew up in Sioux City, Iowa, and me and all my friends listened to hip-hop. We used to play DMX, Mase, Tupac and, obviously, Biggie, before games. Almost the whole population of basketball listens to hip-hop, regardless of where they're from or if they're black or white or whatever. If you play basketball, you're exposed to it."
Dallas Mavericks owner Mark Cuban spews forth this menagerie of lies: "The NBA hasn't made a conscious effort to align with hip-hop; it's made a conscious effort to build a fan base. Kids drive merchandise sales. Kids are our future customers. If classical music were hot with 12- to 24-year-olds, you'd be asking why the NBA is tied to Brahams. I don't even agree with those who say hip-hop offends our older, mostly white ticketholders. Today's 45-year-olds listened to it in college. . . " blah, blah, blah
If there is as much as a single drawback to the "hip hop culture" it isn't identified in this crude propaganda piece. It's just another example of the ideology that is pounded into whites, particularly the young MTV generation, non-stop from every direction. Edited by: Don Wassall