man i once had a jamaican call me a nigga.I think the one issue I have is non African Americans throwing "nigga" around. I generally don't use it in my day-to-day conversations (though I've noticed that moving over to ABW I've been gettin a lot looser with it... I gotta fix that), but I get irritated when I hear Black folks from other countries saying it on some "Y'all ain't never been niggers"-type shit.
y'all do realize nigger was a word created to describe africans right
Can you elaborate?No FOH...
My thing is this tho...if you've spent the majority of your life or some significant time in this country living among fellow black Americans....youre apart of the African American experience. Hip hop was created by a Jamaican and hip hop, as well as black American culture at large, has been influenced by Caribbeans and other diasporic people. Black American people are not the only contributors to the creation and maintenance of black American culture.Its like this people who aint raised in the culture and say something negative about shit we like is always out of bounds. I cant judge Jamaicans on what they do
My thing is this tho...if you've spent the majority of your life or some significant time in this country living among fellow black Americans....youre apart of the African American experience. Hip hop was created by a Jamaican and hip hop, as well as black American culture at large, has been influenced by Caribbeans and other diasporic people. Black American people are not the only contributors to the creation and maintenance of black American culture.
And I would apply that same logic to a black person who has spent their whole life somewhere else. They're apart of and contribute to that culture and feed off that energy. That doesn't mean they can't be checked it they get outa pocket...but for some people to act like they can't have a say in the environment they live in...is just not smart.
Somebody tell me if I'm off base with that thinking...
You're right to an extent. I think even outside of hip hop, to blues, r&b, and jazz. We all have someone in the timeline of our families that were influenced by those genres to aide in the way they think. The same way hip-hop has that hold on our generations. So from top to bottom there is a connection based on songs at moments that the people who participated in those genres, that help them hold special places in our hearts.My thing is this tho...if you've spent the majority of your life or some significant time in this country living among fellow black Americans....youre apart of the African American experience. Hip hop was created by a Jamaican and hip hop, as well as black American culture at large, has been influenced by Caribbeans and other diasporic people. Black American people are not the only contributors to the creation and maintenance of black American culture.
And I would apply that same logic to a black person who has spent their whole life somewhere else. They're apart of and contribute to that culture and feed off that energy. That doesn't mean they can't be checked it they get outa pocket...but for some people to act like they can't have a say in the environment they live in...is just not smart.
Somebody tell me if I'm off base with that thinking...
Can you elaborate?
So say I'm a big fan of the Pittsburgh Steelers but I've never played football can I criticize them on a play call?Therefore their are certain issues you can’t speak on because you’ve never been through that type of struggle.
I ain't Jamaican.Nicki is black and was raised in america....sounds african american to me.
Regardless if her family came from another country her home life may or may not be different culturally from a typical african american but she still had to go outside right?!
If aa's aren't excommunicating soulja boi for thanking slave masters and paris dennard for being a living breathing samuel L jackson character from django then anybody can talk about black culture, she black right..
@gabi fuck them b....i ain't gon call em bitches I'm a call em unstable creatures over there.
@DOS_patos and the other fella
Jamaicans and I'm sure other caribean people say nigga.
Our etymology of it is a bit different.
Some use it like black americans, some use it as a straight insult. Reason being, for the latter, that's how massa used it to degrade us.
So it morphed into part insult part playful depending on who and how it's used, almost like it's evolution in america but still less of a "term of endearment" ish