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Paris: Here For
November
By Yaminah Ahmad, allhiphop.com, November
3, 2008
Never one to hold his tongue on issues like politricks, violence and
poverty in the Black community, it is no surprise veteran, revolutionary
rap commander Paris is sounding off on this historic 2008 Presidential
Election.
The Bay-area rabble rouser just released his latest
'get free' effort, entitled, Acid Reflex. on his indie label,
Guerilla Funk Recordings. According to Paris, not only does the single,
"Don't Stop the Movement," but the entire album serves as the soundtrack
documenting this moment of change and transformation in the
country. AllHipHop caught Paris in mid-grind to get a quick
course in politics and Hip-Hop for those in need of a cheat sheet before
hitting the voting polls this Tuesday.
On the economic
crisis and the absence of poor people from the
conversation.
"I think a lot of times when those
conversations are taking place people assume poor people don't have
anything anyway. They're not on anybody's radar. They're not homeowners.
Nobody seems to care about renters. Poor people not applying for credit
because they can't get it so it's like they're vote is never taken
seriously because oftentimes the assumptions is those voters are
uneducated or not able to provide direction one way or another anyway.
And, of course, politicians respond to money. Politicians respond to
donors. Politicians respond to that which they think will be beneficial
to their future.
"A lot of what is enticing to people about
Barack Obama is how his campaign is funded. It's more of a grassroots
approach. In reality he's young, he's vibrant, he's handsome, he's
Black, he's so completely different from what we're used to and he's
different from what we equate to a politician, so people are
energized."
On the bailout being corporate welfare, the
government being gangsters and Obama being Elliot Ness.
"[The
bailout] is corporate welfare. We're seeing institutions buying each
other and instead of using money to help lenders we're seeing it used to
better position themselves in the corporate landscape. The money is
already not being used for what it is intended for. It's gonna be a
bloodbath. Eight years of Republican rule, Republican congressional
rule, it's amazing to me to hear the GOP talk about they want limited
government when they spent a trillion dollars on an illegal war and have
proven time and time again to be fiscally irresponsible.
"All of
the problems that exist in America right now are the direct result of
war profiteering, cronyism, no-bid contracts, a reduction of
expenditures on social programs and government deregulation...The
government is gangsters. It's set up for a select group of individuals
to be able to benefit at the expense of everybody else, and by
definition, that's what a gangster is... [Obama as Elliot Ness] It's
possible. It depends on who he surrounds himself with. We won't really
know until he gets in. He's not gonna say anything that's going to be
contrary to what the status quo is right now. He can't start talking
about looking out for us before he gets in office. You know
that."
On protest music in Hip-Hop and music's influence on
the community.
"I know that in entertainment, especially in
Hip-Hop, protest music is not heard at all. I know it's definitely
not heard on a mass commercial level. And I know when I first started in
music back in the early 90s, Hip-Hop had an entirely different
sensibility. I came out in what people considered to be the golden era
of Hip-Hop when it was me, Public Enemy, X Clan, Queen Latifah, BDP,
early Ice Cube, that wave of Afrocentricity back then. That no longer
exists... so me coming to the table talking about current events, talking
about the social conditions that exist within our community, that's
nothing new.
"But a lot of people [are] disillusioned with what's
going on even though the people are talking about Obama, oftentimes,
they feel like politics never speak to them, no matter who it is. A lot
of people feel that way, a lot of people feel as though participating
doesn't make that really big of a difference and I see where they're
coming from, especially when you've been beat down repeatedly over the
years... But I know the power that music has and I know the influence that
musicians have over young people because it speaks to us the way that
teachers and politicians and a lot of times our parents don't.
"I always say many teenagers know the words to a lot of these
songs that's out - they know them verbatim. They spit the lyrics to
anything because entertainment speaks to them. When entertainment is
laced with messages that's positive it has an effect that's positive.
When entertainment is laced with negative messages then it has a
negative effect. That's just the cold hard reality..."
On
foreign relations and Hip-Hop.
"I was looking at a story the
other day about a store in Africa. The name of the store was called the
N*****s store and a black African ran it and it sold Hip-Hop
paraphernalia. So connect the dots and understand why they call it that
and why they choose to identify with that word that way and choose to
identify themselves that way. That's a prime example [of] the negativity
Hip-Hop can have. You gotta black African in an area with all Black
people and still identify with that word. That's hard to take."
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