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Friday, April 24, 2026

Hip Hop Connection: Hip Hop Artists Have A Responsibility To Youth

Juneea Butler cbBy Jineea Butler

NNPA Columnist

Since its inception Hip Hop has been a target for problems in the Black  community.  40 years later its still a topic of discussion. On Monday, July  22, 2013 Bill O’Reilly launched  a tirade of issues in his Talking Points  segment of the O’Reilly Factor on Fox News titled President Obama and the Race  Problem.  Bill O’Reilly attacks African-American leadership for having no  clue on how to solve the crisis in the Black community and offered his own  set of solutions.  While Bill and his Right Wing approach is sometimes  uncomfortable to digest, he gave a somewhat valid synopsis on whats happening in  our neck of the woods.

He cited two major problems: the entertainment industry peddling garbage (Hip  Hop music) to impressionable youth and the alleged disintegration of the  African-American family.  I find it insulting that in the wake of the  Trayvon Martin verdict, that Bill O’Reilly has the temerity to challenge us to  reform Black America, but won’t challenge Whites to examine White privilege or  White supremacy.

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Regardless of O’Reilly’s views, we should take it upon ourselves to examine  what Hip Hop artists are spewing.

For example, after Harry Belafonte said last year that Jay Z and his wife,  Beyonce, have turned their back on social responsibility, Jay Z struck back. In  his song Nickels and Dimes, the Hip Hop mogul said:

I’m just trying to find common  ground ‘fore Mr. Belafonte come and  chop a nígga down Mr. Day O, major  fail Respect these youngins  boy, it’s my time now Hublot  homie, two door homie You don’t  know all the sh#* I do for the homies

Not only does Jay Z call the iconic civil rights activist a ‘boy,’ he says  it’s “my time.”

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It’s your time to do what?  Remove the hyphen from your name?  Send  the wrong message to young people about the contributions of Harry Belafonte?   The super star actor paid a high price for his civil rights work long  before Jay Z was born. In my book, he has earned the right to chastise  the younger generation, which he does in love.

In an interview with Elliot Wilson of Rap Radar Jay Z says he was offended by  Mr. Belafonte’s comment because his (Jay Z’s) ‘presence is charity’ and goes on  to compare himself to President Obama saying if he (President Obama), like  himself,  speaks on anything that should be enough.

This is where I jump off the RocNation tour.  If Jay Z can’t respect  Harry Belafonte and his earnest plea for using his influence to change the state  of Black America, what good is he?  I agree with Bill Cosby when he says  instead of President Obama condemning the entertainers who get rich  marketing  negative images to kids who emulate their lyrics and attitudes,  he invited them into the White House. But that’s a different conversation for a  different day.

What do you think happens when Jay Z doesn’t respect a man like Harry Belefonte and doesn’t condemn the problems that he knows exists.  Jay Z  says he uses his instinct to connect to issues he feels are important to  support.  So the very issues that you went through in the projects of Marcy  are not all important?  Harry Belafonte was so far off base that you  denigrate him by calling him a boy?  Then you turn around and say he went  about it wrong and you are open to a dialogue?

Time Out.  I am tired of the mum is the word mentality in our African  American community.  We stay quiet or politically correct out of fear of  not being invited to the next party or invited to the table to break bread with  the few celebrities who are making money but are inadvertently killing  us.

Since advertisers and the corporations are paying for the loaded messages we  feel forced to go along with the nonsense even though we know it’s wrong.   As a result, we are enslaving ourselves.  No its not the White man’s  problem that our children are not prepared to compete in this society.  We  know the rules, we know the game, it’s our responsibility to get these kids  ready to play.

For some reason it seems as if we are waiting for the White man to care about  us more than we care about ourselves.  Our only way out is the people and  the celebrities who break through to open more opportunities for the next great  thinker, the next great artist.  Instead you walk around like someone owes  you something because your ego is too big to share the stage and your  self-esteem is too low to give someone else a chance.

Actually, Belafonte went easy on some of our artists.

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