Reply
  • Dec 12, 2019

    You mean of junkie rap.

  • Dec 12, 2019
    ·
    1 reply

    Did anybody listen to Eminem and think "damn, I want to be on pills"

  • Dec 12, 2019

    is the ultimate peak of being a "prescription d*** rapper" to die of an OD?
    Someone should edit those pill commercial narrators listing deadly side effects to a prescription d*** rap video where everyone is turning up (sort of like the prescription d*** commercials where they show people having fun/smilingwhile listing side effects: rectal bleeding, suicidal thoughts, internal swelling).

  • proper 🔩
    Dec 12, 2019
    ·
    1 reply
    Mango

    Did anybody listen to Eminem and think "damn, I want to be on pills"

    also this too..

    d*** use just looks way cooler to kids when it’s being promoted by a rapper draped in designer and supreme rocking vvs jewelry and s*** w hella b****es

    way diff then ems “I’m a white trash pos who’s on d****

  • Dec 12, 2019
    ·
    1 reply

    According to an interview with DJ Paul he claims three 6 were the first ones to talk about hard d****.

  • RASIE 🦦
    Dec 12, 2019
    ·
    2 replies
    proper

    when white ppl have d*** problem it’s “opiate crisis” when black ppl have d*** problem it’s “war on d****” and crime related tho

    It's understandable why you frame it that way — especially since similar rebuttals are indeed valid in other scenarios — but it's a mistake in this case (albeit an easily forgivable one).

    The War on D**** movement facilitated the opioid crisis, because the "When white people have a d*** problem" part of your argument existed during the build-up to and throughout the War on D**** being active. It was politicians and the media that suppressed numbers in the 80s and early 90s showing that the white suburban teens to mid-20s demographic was more active in d*** use than african american areas (including those in low-income districts).

    Statistics like these were ignored because publicizing the not-so-pute reality of the "perfect middle class white suburb with gated communities" could've affected local economies that depending on suburban parents spending freely cause they felt safe in their financially (see: racially) segregated environment. Meanwhile, all the focus was put on lower-income communities, and the faces of d*** abuse and violence shown on the nightly news were disproportionately those of black citizens. (And usually, black males and females each had different stereotypical language "assigned" to them: females were typically the "crack mothers" often with a crack baby;while black males were hyper-violent d*** fiends who were depicted as abandoning their family for either d**** or from prison.)

    The way the above groups' relationship with d*** were ignored/distorted in the media led to a culture where both white suburbanites and black americans using d**** became a normal thing — nobody batted an eye at whites, so itwas casual behavior.

    A few years later, when the actions that kicked off what (would eventually become the opioid crisis were carried out), the white suburban generation were old enough to be prescribed these new heavy painkillers after injury/hospitalization, and they didn't think twice about taking them because they were under the impression that it wasn't bad (or as bad as the d**** they used in their young adult years).

    Black americans were in a similar circumstance as well, especially after the War on D**** exasperated local financial gaps and abandoned them in lower-income areas without proper (or satisfactory) law enforcement, leading to high crime which leads to high hospitalization rates. (Not to mention the absurd accessibility of opioids that created more opportunities for temptation when it came to people buying/selling them on the street to cope with the life they were wrongly forced into.)

    Sorry for the long post, haha... I just wanted to say that the opioid crisis (which is a byproduct of the War on D****) is not as blatantly simple as something like the "black people = looters, whites = gathering supplies" during big disasters like floods and hurricanes. The force behind the two concepts is indeed motivated by class-regulated racism, but the d**** scenario is a much more involved system of racially-charged media/politics, and the groups that capitalize on all the victims by exploiting what results from it.

  • Dec 12, 2019
    AbstractEric

    According to an interview with DJ Paul he claims three 6 were the first ones to talk about hard d****.

    They the first I can think of.

  • Dec 12, 2019
    ·
    1 reply
    proper

    also this too..

    d*** use just looks way cooler to kids when it’s being promoted by a rapper draped in designer and supreme rocking vvs jewelry and s*** w hella b****es

    way diff then ems “I’m a white trash pos who’s on d****

    We need Macklemore and Hopsin and Joyner to be pro-drug. Only way to make it uncool.

  • Dec 12, 2019
    ·
    1 reply
  • Dec 12, 2019
    ·
    1 reply

    Rappers are the reactionary element. I don't see people saying the memes soccer moms share about opioids on Facebook is causing the d*** epidemic despite that being their equivalent of rap. The cause is always underrated

  • proper 🔩
    Dec 12, 2019
    ·
    1 reply
    RASIE

    It's understandable why you frame it that way — especially since similar rebuttals are indeed valid in other scenarios — but it's a mistake in this case (albeit an easily forgivable one).

    The War on D**** movement facilitated the opioid crisis, because the "When white people have a d*** problem" part of your argument existed during the build-up to and throughout the War on D**** being active. It was politicians and the media that suppressed numbers in the 80s and early 90s showing that the white suburban teens to mid-20s demographic was more active in d*** use than african american areas (including those in low-income districts).

    Statistics like these were ignored because publicizing the not-so-pute reality of the "perfect middle class white suburb with gated communities" could've affected local economies that depending on suburban parents spending freely cause they felt safe in their financially (see: racially) segregated environment. Meanwhile, all the focus was put on lower-income communities, and the faces of d*** abuse and violence shown on the nightly news were disproportionately those of black citizens. (And usually, black males and females each had different stereotypical language "assigned" to them: females were typically the "crack mothers" often with a crack baby;while black males were hyper-violent d*** fiends who were depicted as abandoning their family for either d**** or from prison.)

    The way the above groups' relationship with d*** were ignored/distorted in the media led to a culture where both white suburbanites and black americans using d**** became a normal thing — nobody batted an eye at whites, so itwas casual behavior.

    A few years later, when the actions that kicked off what (would eventually become the opioid crisis were carried out), the white suburban generation were old enough to be prescribed these new heavy painkillers after injury/hospitalization, and they didn't think twice about taking them because they were under the impression that it wasn't bad (or as bad as the d**** they used in their young adult years).

    Black americans were in a similar circumstance as well, especially after the War on D**** exasperated local financial gaps and abandoned them in lower-income areas without proper (or satisfactory) law enforcement, leading to high crime which leads to high hospitalization rates. (Not to mention the absurd accessibility of opioids that created more opportunities for temptation when it came to people buying/selling them on the street to cope with the life they were wrongly forced into.)

    Sorry for the long post, haha... I just wanted to say that the opioid crisis (which is a byproduct of the War on D****) is not as blatantly simple as something like the "black people = looters, whites = gathering supplies" during big disasters like floods and hurricanes. The force behind the two concepts is indeed motivated by class-regulated racism, but the d**** scenario is a much more involved system of racially-charged media/politics, and the groups that capitalize on all the victims by exploiting what results from it.

    I know my post was a very broad/general statement that isn’t all the way true.

    I just posted that s*** cause that’s what everyone says when they talk about race and d*** crisis.

    good looks on that history lesson tho my g I actually read the entire thing lol

  • proper 🔩
    Dec 12, 2019

    You not wrong about prescription d**** being a thing in rap music forever but you are wrong about ecstasy being a prescription d***. pretty sure ecstasy is just a really great time.

  • proper 🔩
    Dec 12, 2019

    let’s not forgot all the east coast rappers who used to smoke pcp cigarettes n s***

  • Dec 12, 2019
    A Mad Ass Nigga

    Let’s blame the white man. People don’t bring him up enough for my liking.

    lmfao

  • proper 🔩
    Dec 12, 2019
    Mango
    !https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d3bfqlTCHZk
  • proper 🔩
    Dec 12, 2019
    dismissyourself

    Rappers are the reactionary element. I don't see people saying the memes soccer moms share about opioids on Facebook is causing the d*** epidemic despite that being their equivalent of rap. The cause is always underrated

    but the memes that soccer moms share are anti opioid use/shedding light on opioid crisis where as rappers swear their music isn’t glorifying d*** use when they really are 90% of the time.

    But I do agree about rappers being the reactionary element or whatever I think I made a similar post in this thread if I’m understanding your post correctly

  • Dec 12, 2019

    Screwed up click

  • Dec 12, 2019

    Prescription s***- Wayne or Future

    That street sold s*** goes to Pusha

  • RASIE 🦦
    Dec 12, 2019
    proper

    I know my post was a very broad/general statement that isn’t all the way true.

    I just posted that s*** cause that’s what everyone says when they talk about race and d*** crisis.

    good looks on that history lesson tho my g I actually read the entire thing lol

    Yeah I get ya haha. And glad to share fam!

  • Dec 12, 2019
    ·
    1 reply

    Could you imagine being a US soldier, getting deployed to Afghanistan in 2002, thinking you gonna go fight the Taliban and help liberate the oppressed citizens, you get there and they want you to guard poppy field

  • Dec 12, 2019
  • Dec 13, 2019
    Mango

    We need Macklemore and Hopsin and Joyner to be pro-drug. Only way to make it uncool.

    We need this for the culture