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Rights and Liberties

Hip Hop Profanity, Misogyny and Violence: Blame the Manufacturer

By Glen Ford, Black Agenda Report. Posted May 7, 2007.


Corporations have been usurping and reshaping Black mass culture for decades -- hip hop is just the latest product line.
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On a Spring day at McDonald's fast food restaurants all across Black America, counter clerks welcome female customers with the greeting, "What you want, bitch?" Female employees flip burgers in see-through outfits and make lewd sexual remarks to pre-teen boys while bussing tables. McDonald's managers position themselves near the exits, arms folded, Glocks protruding from their waistbands, nodding to departing customers, "Have a good day, motherf**kers. Y'all my niggas."

Naturally, the surrounding communities would be upset. A portion of their anger would be directed at the young men and women whose conduct was so destructive of the morals and image of African Americans. Preachers would rail against the willingness of Black youth to debase themselves in such a manner, and politicians would rush to introduce laws making it a crime for public accommodations employees to use profanity or engage in lewd or threatening behavior. However, there can be no doubt that the full wrath of the community and the state would descend like an angry god's vengeance on the real villain: the McDonald's Corporation, the purveyor of the fast food experience product.

Hip Hop music is also a product, produced by giant corporations for mass distribution to a carefully targeted and cultivated demographic market. Corporate executives map out multi-year campaigns to increase their share of the targeted market, hiring and firing subordinates -- the men and women of Artists and Recordings (A&R) departments -- whose job is to find the raw material for the product (artists), and shape it into the package upper management has decreed is most marketable (the artist's public persona, image, style and behavior). It is a corporate process at every stage of artist "development," one that was in place long before the artist was "discovered" or signed to the corporate label. What the public sees, hears and consumes is the end result of a process that is integral to the business model crafted by top corporate executives. The artist, the song, the presentation -- all of it is a corporate product.

Yet, unlike the swift and certain public condemnation that would crash down upon our hypothetical McDonald's-from-Da Hood, the bulk of Black community anger at hip hop products is directed at foul-behaving artists, rather than the corporate Dr. Frankensteins that created and profit from them. As the great French author and revolutionary Franz Fanon would have understood perfectly, colonized and racially oppressed peoples internalize -- take ownership -- of the social pathologies fostered by the oppressor. Thus, the anti-social aspects of commercial hip hop are perceived as a "Black" problem, to be overcome through internal devices (preaching and other forms of collective self-flagellation), rather than viewed as an assault by hostile, outside forces secondarily abetted by opportunists within the group.

In order for our nightmare McDonald's analogy to more closely fit the music industry reality, all the fast food chains would have to provide the same type of profane, low-life, hyper-sexualized, life-devaluing service/product: "Bitch-Burgers" from Burger King, served with "Chronic-Flavored Fries," "Ho Wings" from KFC, dipped in too-hot "187 Murder Sauce." If you wanted fast food, you'd have to patronize one or the other of these thug-themed chains. So, too, with hip hop music.

A handful of entertainment corporations exercise total control of the market, in incestuous (and illegal) conspiratorial concert with corporate-dominated radio. Successful so-called "independent" labels are most often mere subcontractors to the majors, dependent on them for record distribution and business survival. They are no more independent than the owner of a McDonald's franchise, whose product must conform to the standards set by global headquarters in Oak Brook, Illinois.

As "conscious" rapper Paris wrote, there is no viable alternative to the corporate nexus for hip hop artists seeking to reach a mass audience. "WHAT underground?" said Paris. "Do you know how much good material is marginalized because it doesn't fit white cooperate America's ideals of acceptability? Independents can't get radio or video play anymore, at least not through commercial outlets, and most listeners don't acknowledge material that they don't see or hear regularly on the radio or on T.V."


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Black Agenda Report executive editor Glen Ford can be reached at Glen.Ford (at) BlackAgendaReport.com.

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No idiots.
Posted by: ABetterFuture on May 7, 2007 12:07 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It's the consumers. I.E.

Y

O

U

If you buy the crap.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» RE: No idiots. Posted by: Consumer007
» Wrong Posted by: felipe
» RE: Wrong Posted by: 1rmichlee
» RE: No idiots. Posted by: EagleMB
» RE: No idiots. Posted by: LJAllen
» RE: No idiots. Posted by: largeprofessor
» RE: No idiots. Posted by: poppop_schell
» They made me do it Posted by: LiberalRedneck
» umm, actually... Posted by: dissidentpoet
» RE: They made me do it Posted by: CatDad
Download to the Promised Land
Posted by: edith on May 7, 2007 1:09 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"The major record labels actively suppress positive hip hop by withholding promotional support of both the above- and below-the-table variety"

Um, is country music, rock, pop, or other commericially successful music directed to the "desireable" demographic of 18 to 24, or 11 to 24, or whatever numbers the morons who run the music media business desire, any different in their marketing strategy than wheeling & dealing hip hop? I don't think so.

There is hope for the listener willing to try independent or progressive music, whether rock(Wilco) or hip hop(Roots). The pessimistic but largely accurate article did not discuss the pebble that could slay these corporate Goliaths: downloading or direct delivery by artists to listeners. This new phenomena threaten to circumvent the "A and R" goons as well as payola (it never really left, did it?) to the radio stations.

Five years ago, who heard of ipod? MP3 downloads were mired in lawsuitis about Napster, Mozilla, etc. Now, however, the CD and the corporate(i.e., Radio One) type radio station, with all of its graft, are old, dying media distribution networks.

The corruption of pop music radio and the studio control of new artists is old(like 60 yrs. old) news. What's needed is an article on how new media and direct artist to listener distribution hold promise to bankrupt these "music" corporate scumbags once and for all.

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» RE: Download to the Promised Land Posted by: Consumer007
Funny
Posted by: kepstein7777 on May 7, 2007 3:44 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
A few of the McDonalds' I've been to are actually like that. Phrases like "May I help you?" are un-cool. They just stare at you until you tell them your order, bitch!...Customer service is so whack.

Some of the uproar about hip hop may be overstated. A lot of "metal" was the same way: make it as evil and gory as possible, and put lots of babes with big hair and ripped-up outfits in the videos.

Rap, pro wrestling, big trucks, bimbos, Nascar...It's all corporate crap that feeds off of male insecurities.

One big difference is that hair metal blew over, and satanic metal went underground. After 15-20+ years, hip-hop still won't go away.

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» RE: Funny Posted by: goldmarx
the fakeLeft talks up the same distractions as the FakePopulist Right
Posted by: emmanuel_goldstein_fights_fake_lefties on May 7, 2007 4:22 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The fakeLeft is always going on about how tte fakePopulist Right spends all its time talking about bogus issues like video games, scary muslims, lifestyle politics, religion, god etc but the fakeLeft does the same thing.

WHo gives a fuck about hiphop, misogny, misandry, minor variations in temperature, Iran, Iraq, green shit, whatever.

Instead, just tax the fucking rich, stop taxing the poor, simply the tax system, institute single payer healthcare, fix the goddam transportation systems, stop the goddamn mass immigration, mandate 4 weeks vacation annually, no more than 40 hrs/week, lower college tuition etc.

But is that what the fakeleft talks about? Nooooo!

Just do me a favor, those of you with an open mind here. Note what percentage of articles here at the top of the Alternet page deal with fakeleft issues like this hiphop nonsense, and what percent deal with real bread and butter issues like single payer healthcare.

I have been doing this for about two years.

And Alternet is perfectly typical of the American fakeLeft establishment. These small fakeLeft nonprofit outfits like Alterbet are funded by large nonprofits like the Ford Foundation, which are set up and run by the rich in order to mold and shape the American Left so that a FakeLeft is created, a fakeLeft that does not threaten the fat wallets of the rich.

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» Funded by Ford Foundation? Posted by: CatDad
» Down in a Hole. Ode to Goldstein Posted by: Iconoclast421
THANK YOU FOR THIS ARTICLE - 1
Posted by: Seyazou on May 7, 2007 5:33 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
One of the things that annoy me about current Black so-called "leadership" is how they rail against young Black people about how bad our culture is, how Hip Hop has poisoned a whole generation, how current youth culture is degenerate as far as they're concerned.

What I've always thought and felt and knew has been confirmed by this article, and I THANK this brother for writing and putting out here what needs to be put out there about Hip Hop. If it were up to me, this article would be re-printed in the New York Times, Time magazine, etc. This NEEDS to be told.

What we hear on the Radio, see on TV music channels, what CDs are sold is not under the control of Black people, corporations control it. It's a manufactured image that feeds off the basest and crudest of human nature and centuries-old racial and gender stereotypes - and that finds too many accomplices in the Black community itself to market this false and degrading image not just to this country, but to the world.

Unfortunately, Black leaders and too many Black people cannot or will not see the forest for the trees. Instead of putting the blame and the self-righteous indignation where it belongs, Black people (including I might add, Bill Cosby and his rants against Black youth) blame the victims. We get blamed. I include myself because I grew up on old-school Hip Hop, when it was still "rap" - a positive party genre that was both fun, and also spoke about the realities of urban Black youth in the late 70's and early 80's - just when corporations started co-opting and commodifying the genre and exploiting Black culture yet again.

..... read below for part 2

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THANK YOU FOR THIS ARTICLE - 2
Posted by: Seyazou on May 7, 2007 5:34 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
....continued from just above

Read Black cultural history over the past 150 to 200 years, and you realize this is not the first time Black culture has been hijacked for the profit of those outside our community. Minstrel shows, racially derogatory ads pushing everything from tobacco to soap to cooking oil, the profits made off Jazz, then Rock N' Roll, it is a long line of exploitation. Hip Hop's exploitation continues this abhorrent tradition, and for lack of a better phrase, puts it on steroids via global mass media and the Internet. Instead of just Americans having a distorted view of African Americans, now the whole world sees it. Yet still too many Black people here buy into just what corporations wants us to believe, that any and all problems associated with Hip Hop culture is something within us, and not the machinations of A&R departments.

It was recent news here in New York City about a cell phone video that was taken of a German army officer instructing his target-practicing trainees to pretend they were shooting at niggers in the south Bronx. The German Counsel General to the UN here came to the Bronx and spoke to a group of Black men at a charter school, apologizing for the incident. That particular officer was fired by his superiors. I bring this up because German news reporters and commentators were quick to say that it is the images they see and music they hear of Black Americans that make many feel like it's okay to view Black people the way they do. Now while I feel that's utter bullsh*t (Germany is a deeply racist country even without corporate-generated Hip Hop), there is a lesson to be learned in this, and that is the power of the global distribution of these distorted images. Immigrants come to this country thinking that all us Black Americans do is hang on the street corner smoking weed, robbing, dealing drugs and pimping our women.

Instead of getting angry and railing against one's own youth, put the damned blame where it belongs. Bill Cosby, Oprah Winfrey and other Black elite would do well by putting some kind of pressure on corporate labels. It may not change much, but it would certainly shift the blame where it belongs. To continue to blame ourselves for ills that were created by others reinforces what Franz Fanon said so many years ago. Fanon, and also Paulo Freire (Brazilian educator and influential theorist of education whose Pedagogy of the Oppressed is what I consider to be the intellectual forefather of Fanon‘s later work) should be required reading for critics of Hip Hop, and for African Americans in general.

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» RE: THANK YOU FOR THIS ARTICLE - 2 Posted by: meadowlake59
“Hip Hop” is code for HIPOCRACY (misspelling intended)
Posted by: HughScott on May 7, 2007 5:45 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
When Don Imus got kicked off the air for stupidly saying "nappy-haired ho," I expected the same media lynch mob led by Al “Tanya Brawley” Sharpton and Jesse “Heimie Town” Jackson to go after Snoop who has made millions trashing black women.

I’m not holding my breath. This fuss is all about political power, not public civility. In the end, Snoop will sell more records while Sharpton and Jackson continue inflaming the small minority of black people who believe they aren’t a dark version of the KKK.

Hugh E. Scott, editor of the forthcoming JohnQPublic4PRESIDENT2008.com and King-George.biz, the only website with hardcopy proof of White House corruption.

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Thank you x 10
Posted by: wagadog on May 7, 2007 6:31 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It's true -- the majors' producers have some sick Judith Regan-esqe need to make the underdog incriminate themselves, on behalf of the ruling class. Probably so their legitimate grievances can be easily dismissed by racists, sexists, class bigots, etc. It's just part of the "divide and conquer" strategy they apply to everything else in the world.

Even nice Catholic girls are unsafe from the depredations of these creeps. When the Burns Sisters were signed by Capitol, there was this female video producer that wanted them to dress all slutty and even wear S&M gear for their video. They said "No" and lost their contract. Of course, Capitol just found someone else to do the bidding of the music masters.

Thank God the Burns Sisters are still recording -- for Rounder Records, not Capitol.

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Passing Gas
Posted by: NoPCZone on May 7, 2007 6:38 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
From 1987 to early 1994, I co-owned and hosted "Rap It Up," the first nationally syndicated radio hip hop music program. During the first half of this period, the Rap genre accomplished its national "breakout" from New York and LA, spreading to all points in between.
TRANSLATION:
The toilet bowl overflowed, driven by marketing money and polluted the airwaves of the US.

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Blame ONLY the corporations?? My ass....
Posted by: veggiegrrrl on May 7, 2007 6:40 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Blame MORE THAN JUST THE CORPORATIONS...Blame the artists who write the garbage, blame the artists for making money off the violence, incarceration and death of youth, blame the artists (I'm being generous) for perpetuating the image of GANGSTA (instead of revolutionary), blame the females for shaking their booties for bank, blame the parents for letting the kids buy it, blame the video-makers for filming it, blame the TV stations for broadcasting it, blame the radio stations for playing it, blame the kids for listening to it, BLAME THE CULTURE FOR TOLERATING IT.

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I'm spitting mad- ULTIMATELY blame the RAPPERS
Posted by: veggiegrrrl on May 7, 2007 6:51 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'm spitting mad- ULTIMATELY blame the RAPPERS.

If they had a shred of care for children, they would STOP participating in this vileness that has destroyed a generation of children and continues to perpetuate gang violence, violence against woman, the dumbification of youth. There would be no cRAP to market if these bling-glock-pimps would WAKE UP and STOP selling their vomit under the guise of "art" to the evil corporations who destroy a generation of youth while calling it "entertainment." BLAME THE RAPPERS FOR BEING GREEDY AND PUTTING THEIR "MUSIC" OUT THERE.
They would all do better getting jobs as math teachers.

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An old white guy's take on gangsta rap
Posted by: sausage on May 7, 2007 6:53 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
When I first heard rap music in the Eighties I didn't like it. Of course I didn't find it intimidating either, I'd been a fan of Gil Scott-Heron in the Seventies. After all, it was the only form of popular music that could drive parent raised on Jimi Hendrix, The Who, The Rolling Stones and disco crazy.

Then a friend, who worked at a very square radio station, stopped by with a demo record of Run-DMC's "You Be Illin'." Laughed until I thought I'd die. Long story short, after that experience Rap didn't seem all that bad, just formulaic like all popular musical styles, even a little silly at times (remember Tone-Loc's "Funky Cold Medina.")

But the genre really hit its stride with the white pre-teen and teenage crowd with the rise of gangsta rap during Ronald Reagan's second term and George H.W. Bush's administration. And I asked myself: Why?

Then, as I delivered mail in lily white suburbia and heard the strains of gangsta rap, it dawned on me. Corporate America was pushing the stuff because it scared the shit out of the parents of the suburban teens who bought the CDs and where glued to the videos of the likes of The Notorious B.I.G. and Tupac Shakur on MTV after school. It reinforced the old negative stereotypes of inner city blacks are over-violent, over-sexed near-subhumans. The perfect formula for driving nominally "liberal" anti-Vietnam War white suburban Democrats into the folds of reactionary Republicanism.

Face it, Alternet readers, we really are not "free" in the United States. We are collectively under the thumbs of marketing firms, that in turn control the poltical process. Thus as it is with "gangsta rap" so it is with abortion, gun control and the entire list of phony balony and bullshit "issues" on which we are collectively hung up.

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Sorry Ekpinrut, I don't live in a White Jewish community
Posted by: veggiegrrrl on May 7, 2007 7:30 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Sorry Ekpinrut, I don't live in a White Jewish community...I live in the San Francisco Bay Area where young adults (teens) of all races/ethnicities (mostly blacks and latins...but not all black and latin) are killing each other over respect, drugs, money, pussy and gang turf.

You want me to go to Beverly Hills and stop upper middle class white women from shopping? Sorry, I'd rather be out here trying to read, write, and do math with city kids.

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p.s. Ekipnrut...you agreed to stop trolling
Posted by: veggiegrrrl on May 7, 2007 7:39 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
p.s. Ekipnrut...you agreed to stop trolling and bringing your anti-semetic racist agenda to my every post. So you can stop now.

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RE: "Nothing like white and jew feminist"....and you are not a racist anti-semmite?????
Posted by: elfinito on May 7, 2007 12:33 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"Blame MORE THAN JUST THE CORPORATIONS...Blame the artists who write the garbage, blame the artists for making money off the violence, incarceration and death of youth, blame the artists (I'm being generous) for perpetuating the image of GANGSTA (instead of revolutionary), blame the females for shaking their booties for bank, blame the parents for letting the kids buy it, blame the video-makers for filming it, blame the TV stations for broadcasting it, blame the radio stations for playing it, blame the kids for listening to it, BLAME THE CULTURE FOR TOLERATING IT."

I don't see how you can possibly argue with this quote????

Where did anyone ever say the advice above was for Black Parents or Black Culture...not all parents and all culture? She never once even hinted that...you just assumed it? As for giving advice...when ya'll bitch about public perception and the largest selling consumer goods in Black Communities all revolve around these images/lyrics/diamonds/shoes/etc... that are propogated predominantly by Black artists...we have a right to "give advice." Either don't bitch about the black image, or do something about the black culture that propagates it!!!!! I live in the Heart of Brooklyn...and the images and styles portarayed by Gangsta-Rap are almost invariably the image and style of the Black/Latino teens in my area. Don't get me wrong, I think the is just as bad for all teens; teen pop-culture on all-levels has become the same bull-shit. Intelligent music has lost its place in the pop music of every category...

Personally, I have no problem with gangsta rap...certainly will never buy it for myself, but thats just my taste. I prefer Jurassic-5, Lyrics Born, The Roots, Common, Arrested Development, and all the other rappers that actually ahve something to say, thats either (1) entertainment by appealling to a bit more than our lowest base instincts (sex, money and power), or (2) Culturally poignant.

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YEA!!!!!My favorite poster ekipnrut laying down the truth,,,ya'll
Posted by: psychochurch on May 7, 2007 12:46 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
get em man...I/m trying to get thru to these suburban punks, but the conditioning is thick...........it may be hopeless...stupid bastards

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» I read you 5X5!!!....... Posted by: ekipnrut
» Rekipnrut or Pyschochurch Posted by: elfinito
» RE: ekipnrut or Pyschochurch Posted by: psychochurch
Shared Responsibility
Posted by: ilene on May 7, 2007 7:05 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Yeah we should place responsibility at the feet of the manufactuer (oppressor). It all about money after all, but that lets the rest of us off the hook. Consumers and artists share responsibility as well. As long as consumers pay their good money for trash and artists make it, then manufacturers will continue marketing it.

Consumers and artists have to show some integrity and say enough!

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» RE: Shared Responsibility Posted by: ALANHESTER
Rap shhhhhhiiiiiiitttt!
Posted by: The Big Raven on May 7, 2007 7:21 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
rap is not music. rap is just that someones lips moving to a beat . Why does america want your children to act and sound like a black gangster??????? Because its easyer to shoot them and treat them like shit. Why does the record companies want you to support black gangsterism?????? Because its easyer to make money of all you copy cat fools
Be who you are I really dont need you to shake that fat stinking ass in my face or run around with a gun killing others for doing the same pretty frigging stupid! Its all FAKE just like diamond encrusted teeth and flava flav I gonna puke!

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Good for Sharpton
Posted by: Democritus on May 7, 2007 9:42 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'm glad to see that Al Sharpton has finally got the word and is protesting the trash hip-hop manufacturers. Good for him. Now he needs to go after Snoop Dogg and the other foul-mouthed rapsters who make a living degrading women.

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» RE: Good for Sharpton Posted by: ALANHESTER
Awful analogy...McDonald's vs. Producers
Posted by: elfinito on May 7, 2007 9:53 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The product you get at McDonald's is the food...designed and created by the corporation. They have full accountabity for every aspect of it. The consumer wants a freakin burger, and if he/she has to verbally harassed, that has nothing to do with the product...and its up to McDonlad's to fire those employees becuase they will lose business!!!!!

The product in rap...is the MUSIC...created by artists, that sell it to the corporation. Yes the corporations could stop selling it...but hell, the people demand it and buy it. The problem here is that the CONSUMER is getting what they want, and the corporation is giving it...as long as the consumer demands this (and no comnsumer would ever demand being harassed at McDonald's) any corporation will provide it. Its called Supply and Demand!!!!!!!!

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» MOST PRODUCTS ARE BIG FAILURES Posted by: poppop_schell
women now empowered by everything a woman does!
Posted by: emmanuel_goldstein_fights_fake_lefties on May 7, 2007 11:12 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Women Now Empowered By Everything A Woman Does
Women Now Empowered By Everything A Woman Does

OBERLIN, OH—According to a study released Monday, women—once empowered primarily via the assertion of reproductive rights or workplace equality with men—are now empowered by virtually everything the typical woman does.
"From what she eats for breakfast to the way she cleans her home, today's woman lives in a state of near-constant empowerment," said Barbara Klein, professor of women's studies at Oberlin College and director of the study. "As recently as 15 years ago, a woman could only feel empowered by advancing in a male-dominated work world, asserting her own sexual wants and needs, or pushing for a stronger voice in politics. Today, a woman can empower herself through actions as seemingly inconsequential as driving her children to soccer practice or watching the Oxygen network."

Klein said that clothes-shopping, once considered a mundane act with few sociopolitical implications, is now a bold feminist statement.

"Shopping for shoes has emerged as a powerful means by which women assert their autonomy," Klein said. "Owning and wearing dozens of pairs of shoes is a compelling way for a woman to announce that she is strong and independent, and can shoe herself without the help of a man. She's saying, 'Look out, male-dominated world, here comes me and my shoes.'"

Eating energy bars specially fortified with nutrients "for women" has become a feminist trend, as well.

"Unlike traditional, phallocentric energy bars, whose chocolate, soy protein, nuts, and granola ignored the special health and nutritional needs of women, their new, female-oriented counterparts like Luna are ideally balanced with a more suitable amount of chocolate, soy protein, nuts, and granola," Klein said. "Proto-feminist pioneers like Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony could never have imagined that female empowerment would one day come in bar form."
.....
Other acts of empowerment include gossiping about the sexual proclivities of male acquaintances, lunching with other women in small groups, taking calcium-rich antacid tablets, and reading The Nanny Diaries.

The study also cites the act of pumping one's raised fist in a gesture of female solidarity against the oppressive forces of air pressure.

"Nearly 90 percent of study participants have done this at least once in their lives, often accompanying their action with the exhortation 'You go, girl!' or, simply, 'Whooooooo!'" Klein said.

Perhaps most remarkably, the mere act of weight gain is now regarded as a feminist act. Though some women express reservations about the negative impact of obesity on one's health, overweight women display a level of assertiveness, or "sassitude," that thinner women lack.
....
"Of course, women can be empowered by losing weight, too," Willets added. "Pretty much any change in weight—up or down—is empowering."
....
"Not every woman can become a physicist or lobby to stop a foundry from dumping dangerous metals into the creek her children swim in," Klein said. "Although these actions are incredible, they marginalize the majority of women who are unable to, or just don't particularly care to, achieve such things. Fortunately for the less impressive among us, a new strain of feminism has emerged in which mundane activities are championed as proud, bold assertions of independence from oppressive patriarchal hegemony."
....
www.theonion.com

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Heeeeeeeerrrrrree She is.. Miss WHITE AAAAAhmerica......
Posted by: ekipnrut on May 7, 2007 12:16 PM   
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Posted on Alternet News Today (5/7/07)
LINDSAY Lohan, fresh from rehab, has been pictured taking part in a marathon cocaine binge.
Sordid snaps of her sno