Krayzie Bone Exposes Private Prisons That Are Linked To Rap Music

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Publicado 2020-09-16

Todos los comentarios (21)
  • @joseywales4638
    The rich don't play poker or spades. They play real life chess with real people's lives.
  • It’s funny that people like myself are called conspiracy theorists, until something like this comes out. This is actually scary to hear. By the way this isn’t just the music industry, this is going on all over the world. Better wake up!! The world is not what you think it is
  • @brunoberardi4815
    I remember in the late 70s to early 80s, right after disco this new music was coming out, they called it Rap music. Sugar hill Gang, Soul Sonic Force and the Furious 5. They sang about struggles and hardship and overcoming, they warned the youth of pitfalls in life and sang about getting an education and becoming something great. Then by the 90s that all changed.
  • @weirdorigins9533
    There is a reason it’s called “programming” it’s not just music it’s in all forms of entertainment.
  • @rockandfound
    Imagine if this was a headline story on mainstream media. People would lose their minds but they will never put this out there for the masses. Thank you K Bone you are a good man.
  • @MistaLoRocka
    Puts Eazy-E’s visit to the whitehouse in a whole different perspective.
  • @khalemabrown
    And now this man is fighting for his life… May God heal him 🙏🏾
  • @_Gwuapo
    This knowledge has been going around for years. Is up to the people to do their homework and break free from this spell the music industry put on the mass
  • @Skywalker21O
    I’m so glad I’ve heard this story! As a kid born in 84 I loved hip hop so much and got to see it all happening but this is so crazy. I’m gonna spread this word
  • @DJTeddyJetts
    This horrifying, but many of us felt it our whole lives. I grew up listening to 90s hip hop, but was always drawn to positive, or deep knowledgable music, i would always express my confusion why rappers like Talib Kweli would splash the scene but never really sustain a presence on the radio or tv. Why Deathrow was all over the radio, but BlackStar was largely for "niche" hip hop fans... this revelation is a confirmation of our underlying suspicions. I pursued a music career with some fellow artists back in the mid 2000s until about 2014 when I finally stepped down after we had opened up for some more mainstream artists, and weird sh** would happen every time. I started getting this feeling in my gut that I didnt want to go any further in this industry. And I layed low. I promised myself that the next time I attempt to create music, it would be behind the disguise of a cartoon character and never in the pursuit of fame or money. Again, I was right, as all music since 2014 has only become worse. The game is rigged and there is a reason why "selling your soul" is a consistent theme in the entertainment history as a whole. Smh... and so many people are still so completely oblivious to all of it.
  • @lisamarieva3514
    This explains a lot. Kids should not be targeting in such an evil and twisted plan. There is a place in hell for the ones responsible for this. My heart goes out to all those kids drawn into that lifestyle just to make other people rich.
  • @johngumbs2111
    It's gone to another level now. That drill music not only gets the consumers but the rappers themselves.
  • @newphilmz3605
    It's not just music, it's in everything. Movies (Goodfellas, Blood in Blood Out, Scarface), TV (Oz, Prison Break, Cartel Crew, Growing Up Gotti, The Wire, Breaking Bad), even the news is normalizing crime and making it entertainment.
  • @vergedrums
    My friends from Stony Island and Chicago School of Hip Hop back in the early 90s predicted the meteoric rise of gangster rap. There was such an amazing positive hip hop scene in Chicago back then. They were against all the disrespecting of women and glamorizing of the criminal lifestyle. Lavie and Alex are now a physician and an attorney, and STILL inspiring rappers with their amazing skills and powerful message. Sad that they’re still marginalized as creative artists, while the thug life rappers help rake in prison profits.
  • @nxt1990
    After the artist breaks the contract, they clone the original, enslave them, and let them watch their clone in the real world. These people are ruthless predators.
  • @dieselphiend
    I read about this many years ago, and I believe every word of it.
  • @LadyCoyKoi
    I remember that R&B and Rap were two different music types... now-a-days you can't tell the difference. R&B was soft and more romantic in beat and lyrics. I miss the romance that R&B music had in the 1990s. We had All-For-One, Boys to Men, Whitney Houston, Mariah Carey, Toni Braxon, En Vogue, etc... we had so many that it would take me all day to enlist them all. Now-a-days, we have music about taking each others man and woman, raping and abusing each other, glorifying violence, etc. 🥺 Thank you Krayzie Bone for sharing and talking about your experience. I saw a huge difference between what I had listen to as a teen to what teens today are listening to. Music back then was far more diverse than todays' stuff.
  • Much respect for coming forward and telling us the truth on this matter. God Bless! ✝️
  • @j0hnyb0y909
    It makes sense why Bone Thugs made music of harmony, they knew, and talked about it through lyrics.