Music's Dark Secret: How It Fuels the Prison System!

3 months ago
17

[117:14-118:34]
Visual transition discusses a secret meeting where private prison investors allegedly met with music executives to promote violence, gang life, misogyny, and drug culture in rap music, potentially fueling the prison industrial complex and causing social engineering.
This ties into a secret meeting that several industry insiders have spoken about dating to the early '90s, where private prison investors allegedly met with music executives to encourage a shift in lyrical content to glamorize violence, gang life, misogyny, and drug culture. Whether that meeting occurred exactly as described or not, the outcome matches perfectly. Rap transition from public enemy, message-driven hip hop to gangsta rap. Labels like Death Row and Bad Boy were backed and promoted heavily. Diddy, Suge Knight, Russell Simmons, and others were incentivized to perpetuate a culture that normalized violence, degradation of women, and anti-authority sentiments, not for liberation, but to fuel the prison industrial complex. Crazy. Music became a tool of social engineering, separating the Moorish family unit, promoting division between man and woman, and instilling generational trauma. 4, the prison industrial complex and strategic targeting.

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