Saturday, December 14, 2019

The Black Community did not stay on code for Nick Cannon

Nick Cannon is being clowned for protecting the mother of his children against a racist, that's how we rocking now?
It's quite a shame what age we are currently in.


With so many people proclaiming new found knowledge, elevating their understanding of what it means to be of African descent, yet these findings seem to fruitful at best.

For whatever reason, Nick Cannon does not seem to get the benefit of doubt from his own people. Instead, he is met with disdain, for what some are calling the "audacity" to defend his family.

The broken family system headed by single black mothers has been programmed to be the new nuclear family for African Americans, the black man being systematically rendered irrelevant.

This psychological buck breaking seems to cause a confusion whenever we are given images of strong African American fathers taking care of their families.

From the late Joe Jackson,  Richard Williams, to as recently as Lavar Ball, these men, instead of being revered for raising their families to being of prominence, are labeled abusive tyrants who lived vicariously through their children.

Mr Cannon's issue with Eminem has been, from the beginning, a personal one, not some petty hip hop musical battle.

Eminem,a grown man, has made it a point to consistently bash the legendary singer and ex wife of Nick Cannon, Mariah Carey.

Using vulgar terms in reference to an alleged sexual encounters and numerous times of calling her out of her name, it only makes sense that Nick Cannon, being a husband, would defend his wife.

However, majority of people are looking at this issue with a rather ignorant one sided view. Using Eminem's overpowering lyrical ability over Cannon's, as a way to dismiss Cannon's view point and already render him a loser.

What people are not looking at and not appreciating is the principle Mr. Cannon is standing for. It is an unsual image to see a black man coming to the aid of a black woman in mainstream media, yet Cannon is ridiculed for this.

It is important to point out just after the murder of Nipsey Hussle, much of 'black twitter' or the African American population of social media had stated sentiments such as " protect Nick Cannon"

 Cannon had vowed to take over the producing of a documentary on Dr. Sebi that Nipsey had been working on before his death.

These are now the same people, siding with Eminem, a white male who has continued questionable incidents with prominent African American figures.

 Nick Cannon's universal lack of support from his own people is just a small part of the deep seated self hate, Willie Lynch syndrome that has plagued the black community.

The likes of 50 Cent and Joyner Lucas were so quick to defend their master Eminem in order to denigrate Nick Cannon.

Nick Cannon's beef with Eminem goes beyond bars, it's about, at the very core, protecting the value of the Black woman and Black family construct.

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