During a panel discussion on Morning Joe Wednesday morning, co-hosts Mika Brzezinski and Joe Scarborough, along with guest panelist Bill Kristol, came to the defense of the white University of Oklahoma fraternity members who were caught on video singing a racist song.
In the minds of all three of them, the Sigma Alpha Epsilon frat
brothers who sang “there will never be a n*gger SAE” were influenced by
profane lyrics in rap music. Specifically, they Mika placed blame on
Waka Flocka Flame, a hip-hop artist who had performed for the frat in
the past and pulled out of a future performance after video of the chant
was made public Sunday.
After presenting a news report about the racism
flap, the hosts brought on Urban League president Marc Morial to discuss
the incident and what needs to happen moving forward. After a bit of a
discussion, Brzezinski brought up Waka Flocka Flame and some of the
lyrics from his song. She then asserted that he and the rest of hip=hop
were really to blame for a bunch of young, white, privileged men
chanting a song about not allowing a black member in their frat and
preferring they hang from a tree.
“If you look at every single song, I guess you call these, that he’s written, it’s a bunch of garbage. It’s full of n-words, it’s full of f-words. It’s wrong. And he shouldn’t be disgusted with them, he should be disgusted with himself.”
From watching the segment, it seemed that
Mika nearly passed out from the vapors after reading a sample of a black
rapper’s lyrics. She was not alone in demonizing hip-hop culture and
laying the blame squarely on its shoulders for the SAE controversy.
Both Kristol and Scarborough, two rich, middle-aged white guys, jumped
headlong in the “blame blacks for whites being racist” pool. Kristol
pointed out that “popular culture is a cesspool” and nobody should be
surprised “when a bunch of drunk 19-year-olds repeat what they’ve been
hearing.”
Meanwhile, Scarborough used that as a jumping point
to insist that white kids aren’t learning racism from their parents,
friends or neighborhoods, but instead it is being instilled in them by
black rap music.
“The kids that are buying hip-hop or gangster rap, it’s a white audience, and they hear this over and over again. So do they hear this at home? Well, chances are good, no, they heard a lot of this from guys like this who are now acting shocked.”
Just to hammer home their point a little more, Mika
ended the segment by smugly stating that she wishes Waka Flocka Flame
wouldn’t be so self-righteous when criticizing the OU students, implying
that he is as much to blame due to his music’s content. By the end of
the discussion, you would have thought it was the SAE frat bros who are
the real victims in all of this.
Obviously,
context is lost on Mika, Joe and Kristol in regards to this incident
and why it has absolutely NOTHING to do with hip-hop culture. In the
infamous video, we saw young, white males proudly chanting a song where
they declared “there will never be a n*gger SAE” and “you can hang ‘em
from a tree, but they’ll never sign with me,” all to the tune of “If
You’re Happy and You Know It”. It had nothing to do with rap or blacks
being able to say the n-word with impunity. They weren’t repeating what
they heard from a black rapper. Trying to conflate the two is a huge
leap and logic and nothing more than shameless victim-blaming.
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