Christine
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Aug 31, 1999
- Messages
- 32,712
Does the rappers use the "ho" word in their songs to exploit a specific group of woman like Imus did?![]()
No, I don't believe that the artists target a specific group of women. However, as I was trying to say on another thread, once you start making it acceptable to call ANY woman a 'ho' and you start flinging the "N" word around, it all starts permeating everyone's language and it's easier to say.
There is no way in the world I would ever stick up/defend Don Imus, but something tells me that 10 years ago, he would have NEVER, EVER used those type of words in his racial slurring. Maybe something else? But the gangsta hip-hop that is out there today is making it increasingly acceptable to use these terms. Except when the "wrong" person uses the term. Then, suddenly, it is NOT acceptable (not that it ever was in anyone's case).
And really, I won't just target gangsta hip hop. On Gwen Stefani's L.A.M.B CD, she calls her own SELF a "HO" on the first track. On another song in her lastest CD she talks about "actin' stank." My feeling is, if you are going to call yourself these names and talk about yourself this way, don't be shocked or mad, when someone else calls you that. I'm sure Gwen would be fairly ticked if someone got on the media and called her a bleached blonde "stank ho." (The words in quotes are words she's has used on her own CDs). While that hypothetical person would be wrong to do so, I almost feel like she invited it.
Please don't confuse this example with what happened with Imus and the Rutgers team. They didn't deserve that remark and didn't invite it. My point is that mainstream music is using these terms and making them "okay" and they are not. I just happen to to think that hip-hop is the worst offender of this.

And if you look at it, most of the rappers wind up in jail and/or court b/c of a gang related issue, a different violent matter and even drug related issues. Pathetic.


Seriuosly...it stinks.