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Brent Bozell
L. Brent Bozell
10 May 2013
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Who's More Demeaning Than Brad Paisley?

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Country music star Brad Paisley is either an idiot or a genius. If he wrote the song "Accidental Racist" to stir a whirlwind of (mostly bad) publicity, he's a genius. But the negative cultural consensus strongly suggests he should have never been dumb enough to try to write a racial-harmony song.

Paisley performed the song as a dialogue with rapper LL Cool J, now a star on the CBS drama "NCIS: LA." He says he wrote the song when he felt he had to defend wearing a T-shirt celebrating the country band Alabama, a shirt with the Confederate flag on it. In the song, he tries to suggest to a black man he met that the flag just says he's a fan of the Southern rock band Lynyrd Skynyrd.

Paisley sings, "I'm just a white man comin' to you from the southland / Tryin' to understand what it's like not to be. I'm proud of where I'm from but not everything we've done / And it ain't like you and me can re-write history." LL Cool J wrote his half of the song, and replies in part: "I guess we're both guilty of judgin' the cover, not the book. I'd love to buy you a beer, conversate and clear the air."

Cheesy? Sure. But isn't this the kind of Kumbaya sentiment liberal elites embrace in their quest for racial harmony? Yes, that's what they say. But when it's what you offer, they react with their true colors.

It was quickly trashed as racially clueless. NPR's new race and culture blogger Gene Demby, fresh from The Huffington Post, quoted comedian Patton Oswalt's tweet: "Can't wait for Brad Paisley and LL Cool J's next single 'Whoopsy Daisy, Holocaust, My Bad.'"

Oswalt must have been mocking the clunkiest line in the song, when LL Cool J alludes to slavery by saying, "If you don't judge my gold chains / I'll forget the iron chains." NPR's Demby complained, "A lot of people felt as if it was kind of shearing off kind of the rough edges of our history."

Comedian and Current TV host John Fugelsang tweeted Paisley should have "gone with original title 'Well-Intentioned But Totally Ignorant Institutionalized Racist.'"

If one wants to see both institutionalized racism and an embarrassing attempt at whites trying to pander on race, I'd rather recommend "The Jimmy Fallon Show" on NBC.

Dennis Coles, better known by his rap persona "Ghostface Killah," was introduced with great enthusiasm by Fallon, before performing his song "I Declare War" from the new album "Twelve Reasons to Die." He was joined on the microphone by "Masta Killa" and "Killah Priest." Fallon even announced there was a "Twelve Reasons to Die" comic book soon available for sale — because it's never too early to sell the drug pusher/gangster lifestyle to children.

That's their Kumbaya.

"I Declare War" was not an exceptionally violent rap song. It was a very typical violent rap song, with profanity and N-words, boasting about shooting and killing.

This was how NPR defined the concept behind the album, "the creation myth of a black superhero set in 1960s Italy." Ghostface "leaves to start a black syndicate, falls in love with a boss's daughter and makes a ton of money importing cocaine. For these crimes, the criminal organization he came up in murders him and dumps his body in a vat of acetate. His former friends press 12 records from his remains, but when those records play, his vengeful spirit arises. Though he was rebuffed and disrespected in life, in legend the Ghostface Killah becomes immortal."

It should be seen as "totally ignorant institutionalized racism" for record executives to make millions of dollars selling an assembly line of poisonous music that glamorizes a violent criminal lifestyle. After many decades in which tens of thousands of young black men were gunned down by other young black men, how can it be said that country music is the genre that's terribly insensitive to what's happening on this war front? This rolling slaughter is now the "rough edges of our history," and the popular culture glorifies it, romanticizes it and commodifies it.

Brad Paisley-shredding NPR is streaming this whole album on its website, applauding how it features "jangly, tumbleweed guitar that warms the cold-hearted comic book-style violence," and hailing one song for how our alleged hero Ghostface Killah "bobs and weaves with the track, but he maintains a forthright and basically conversational sentence structure, which, when he's describing the ways he might murder your children, really twists the knife."

NPR's reviewer is probably referring to the song "Murder Spree," which is a grotesque listing of vicious murder styles — from dismemberment to pushing brains out the back of a human head. Spin magazine praises its "mix of brute violence and graceful eloquence."

This country is sick and getting sicker. Don't blame Brad Paisley and LL Cool J.

L. Brent Bozell III is the president of the Media Research Center. To find out more about Brent Bozell III, and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2013 CREATORS.COM



Comments

1 Comments | Post Comment
Sir;... Slavery has its deniers...The greatest denial of the horrors of slavery is our song: Ol' Suzanna... That man going to Louisianna was going to die, sold in the market, sold down the river, sold to labor and die of snake bite, maleria, and heat stroke... That is the man, and that is the people trying to keep a light heart in the face of their personal destruction; but he could not face it directly... He could not tell the truth though it filtered back to them... People went there, but no one returned... Why would he put it into the face of his owner that he was killing him??? Would that have made it better for those who remained??? Imagine going some where were the the clock was ticking on your life from day one... From this moment you will have a life expectancy of ten years... Welcome to the last days of your life...
We can see how much slave labor devalued free labor in the south... The whites knew of to fight and kill, but slave labor made all work dishonorable... It was the war that taught many how to bend their backs in labor; and they would not have lasted a moment in independence if they had not used blacks industrially as they were doing for a long time before...One of the reasons some black leaders so hate the unions is that they excluded blacks who were in many instances better trained... There were more black building trades men after the war than whites... Unions never stood a chance in the South primarily because by the time they were necessary there they had also taken black labor and white labor as equal, and whites would rather know slavery and poverty themselves than find themselves in the same union as a black working as equals...
I feel bad for anyone who thinks to sing themselves out of long term prejudice... You can honor the courage and valor of the South that makes all Americans great... But slavery was a dispicable condition which drove the whole society down, and even today we suffer it... We must be able to offer a united and determined defense of rights, or the people Mr. Bozell represents will win every time...This country is sick because of all those making a meal on it, who are human parasites; but it is not sick for people trying to feed healing...
Thanks...Sweeney
Comment: #1
Posted by: James A, Sweeney
Sun Apr 14, 2013 6:43 AM
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