BLACKVOICES
Curtis Jackson, aka
50cent: “50Cent opens up on the use
of the N-Word”
“I think when actually using it with malice on your heart
you can feel the difference in the way a person’s saying it (and how they say
it.) When woman are getting dressed, if
she says, “Hey bitch hurry up, we’re going to the mall, and you’re holding us
up.” You don’t feel like when a man is
saying that word to you. It’s degrading
and it actually hurts just a little more.
And the same (goes) with the word nigga.
At that point where it’s being used by someone that you know isn’t using
it in a racial term; it doesn’t impact the same to the person that’s hearing
it. They think it’s just a part of the
way that they talk.”
RAISED TO BE
IGNORANT
Therefore it would hurt just a
little more when a man call you a bitch than a woman who you know or calling
someone a nigga is also righteous because it can’t be racially motivated when
we both are black. It’s just a sign of
endearment when you know already that’s the way we talk my nigga, or do you
prefer dog? So if a white person is
smiling with a spoon of sugar it’s all good, oppose to having a frown on their
face and showing up with a spoon of gun powder all bets off, must be
right. Translated from the babbling of a
fool who raised himself from the streets to having everything many less
fortunate blacks will never have. Still,
thank God for those that have more than 50cents worth of common sense.
In every culture many words have
more than one meaning depending on how you use them and what part of the
country you are coming from. The word
nigga no longer can be found in the dictionary and once meant; no good,
worthless, dirty and you get the point.
Now the word has been replaced with niggard with a totally different
meaning for the once held true to the hearts of white as do today the slang and
beloved word nigga. Yet, we all know
that this word has only one meaning in any languish you chose to speak in and
one purpose. So it doesn’t matter if you
are smiling are frowning at the time of use, it still comes out interpreted the
same. Every time we used the word,
describes how little we think of ourselves as a race, the very seed in which they
planted in our great grand parents, we are raising our own out of the same
ignorance. When in fact,
the only two things that we have in common are our color and where we come from, yet out of the ignorance of many, we are grouped as one. In fact, we are the only race of people that are, because of our color and behavior. When we were taken fromAfrica we came from many different tribes with different
beliefs and habits/cultures. We are the only race of people to degrade
ourselves at every opportunity given. We wear pants sagging showing our
underwear, hair matted to our heads displaying what we call a style and never
learned anything about the culture. You are not from Jamaica no more than wearing a Mohawk and once again never took
the time to learn anything about the native Indians. How many times can we ask
or say "You know what I mean, you know what I'm saying followed by nigga
this and nigga that?" We can't have a conversation without using that word
or the ability to complete a full sentence. Have you ever heard a white person
or any other race talk about another member of their race in such a derogatory
way around another race? No you haven't. They will not be quoted calling each
other words that will reflect on them as a race. To quote the lines used by
Glen Scott in Sucker Punch, "If you don't stand for something, you'll fall
for anything." We are not the
same! For THINKING OUT LOUD, I’m E. L.
PLEASANT
the only two things that we have in common are our color and where we come from, yet out of the ignorance of many, we are grouped as one. In fact, we are the only race of people that are, because of our color and behavior. When we were taken from
STORY BY:
E.
L. PLEASANT
STORY
EDITOR
BRANDON
DE’LEONCE
MUSIC
BY:
BONONIASOUND
SHINERECORDS
ISTOCK
PHOTO
PRODUTION
MANAGER
JOHN
WESLEY
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COPYRIGHT
© 2012
E’SDROP
PUBLISHING
COUNTRY OF FIRST PUBLICATION UNITED
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