originally posted in:TFS The Floods Sanctuary
[quote]Hip-hop has always been about flipping others’ work and making it your own, and Kanye West is the God of that. He sped up Blues samples to make his signature chipmunk-soul sound, he took the kilt from the ancient Scottish kings, he sampled Nina Simone's “Strange Fruit” to make his own song about “second-string bitches.” As he’s gained more credibility in his career, he's moved on to borrowing from even more culturally sacred icons, for example the Jesus imagery throughout Yeezus. Now, he’s not even touching something considered “good,” he’s repurposing “bad" imagery to make an artistic and social statement. Really, really bad imagery.
For those of you who haven’t heard, Kanye has started using the Confederate Flag as the primary design on his tour merchandise for Yeezus. So, already, that ignites a gut reaction in so many of us who grew up understanding that the Confederate Flag was a symbol of racism, slavery, and discrimination. I mean, that was my first reaction. But let’s hear what Ye has to say about it:
“React how you want. Like I said, any energy you got is good energy. You know, the Confederate Flag represented slavery, in a way—that’s my abstract take on what I know about it, right? So I made the song ‘New Slaves.’ So I took the Confederate Flag and made it my flag. It’s my flag now! Now what are you gonna do?”
Kanye West knows what he’s doing. He’s being like, “ha ha, I made it mine.” He’s being like, “ha ha, I’m making money off this too.” If he continues with this, a whole generation of kids is going to grow up associating the Confederate Flag with Kanye West and less with the South. If he continues with this, white racists aren’t going to be able to use the symbol anymore. He’s spoiling it for them.
I’ve thought about the Confederate Flag before—aesthetically, it’s an interesting design. Obviously, everything it stood for up to this point was -blam!-ed. But designs are designs, they can be repurposed. The swastika used to stand for something good in the Eastern religions, then the [url=http://www.wikipedia.org/wiki/Godwin%27s_law]-godwinslaw!-[/url] made it stand for something bad. The confederate Flag used to stand for something bad, now Kanye West is making it stand for something badass.
A side note: look at the American Flag. The American Flag stands for slavery, too, and for the genocide of the Native Americans. It also stands for freedom of speech. Symbols are symbols, generations come along and repurpose them for their own uses. “Skinhead” used to mean white racist person, then Kanye made a hugely popular song called “Black Skinhead.” Now, if you say “skinhead” to a lot of young people they’ll think, Kanye West, and the messages of Yeezus. Which shows, words and symbols, they can be flipped into something better or something worse.
Kanye West, in the past, has identified himself as in the tradition of activist artists such as Gil Scott-Heron. So this is Kanye’s activism. In the past, activists had to fight institutionalized racism, laws that explicitly promoted racial discrimination. Some of those still exist, like stop-and-frisk, and there are people who are working to combat those laws. But Kanye West fights on a different front. In addition to law-based racism, there is also cultural racism. Cultural racism is more significant, because it’s not what the government thinks, it’s what the people think.
But culture is vast and hard to change, like a large blob; you can only really change it within the culture itself. You need the producers: the musicians, the writers, the filmmakers, to influence the consumers, everyone else. The War On Marijuana was lost not because of lobbyists trying to change laws but because weed became accepted in music, film, and literature. People are more okay with homosexuality because of films like “Brokeback Mountain,” singers like Frank Ocean, and players like Jason Collins. Laws don’t change people; culture changes people.
Kanye West is that, cultural agent. To an extent, he is the culture. He’s the tastemaker of the decade: the man of the shutter glasses, Air Yeezys, chipmunk-soul, kilt, operatic hip-hop sound, and more. Kanye doesn’t fight racism by signing petitions and lobbying politicians; he uses music, words, and now fashion to influence kids everywhere.
With his repurposing of the Confederate Flag, it’d be like, taking and displaying the enemy’s flag for a war you’re already winning. The enemy, at the very least, would get confused. And they would talk amongst themselves: should they fly that flag anymore? Why is the other side doing this? What’s going on?
I’ve said it before, and I’ll say it again, Kanye West is a -blam!-ing genius. He's not afraid to sacrifice his image for something he believes in, which so many artists today are scared to do. He could have made a more mainstream album that would have sold better than Yeezus, but he didn't. He could just not wear the Confederate Flag and avoid all this bad press, but he does it anyways, because he's trying to make a statement.
You can agree or disagree with use of the flag, but at least he's prompting a dialogue: getting people to talk about what it means, whether it’s okay or not to wear, which is more than most high school or college history professors are able to do. Like he did musically with Yeezus, he’s forcing you to have an opinion, which is what great art does.
Look, no one’s going to forget what the Confederate Flag originally stood for, and no one should. But think about it: he’s co-opting it and making it a symbol of Kanye West, the man, "the young revolutionary coming out of Chicago." I don't think I would ever wear a Confederate Flag, but it's awesome that he is. In an age where people sometimes like to pretend that racism is dead just because we have a black President, among other reasons, Kanye West forces people to think about it with songs like "New Slaves" and fashion statements like this. Like he said, any energy is good energy. Whether your opinion is for or against his use of the Confederate Flag, at least you have one—and that's what matters.[/quote]
I freaking love Kanye West. Great article to read.
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You could always take this garbage on twitter. Were people actually give a shit about celebrities.
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I got banned for having a confederate flag on my truck....
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When's Kanye gonna finally say he's a god and end up in a Jonestown like ending, but with all the dumbasses that follow him.
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I wish he would get shot in the face.
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Kanye West's ego is as big as Kim Kardashian's ass if not bigger.
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First off, he isn't doing this to promote awareness or inclusion of everybody. He is doing this for publicity, the same as with the whole Yeezus stint. Get the thought out of your head that this man at all cares about anything other than himself. Secondly, I'm laughing at all the northerners and foreigners( I just generalized) who didn't grow up actually in southern culture and don't know what the "Rebel Flag" really means. Your history textbooks are biased.
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[quote]Confederate Flag was a symbol of racism, slavery, and discrimination[/quote] And what about the American, British, Spanish, Dutch, French, and even African nation's flags? What do they represent then? Yes, the Confederacy advocated slavery but less than 1% of the population/army owned slaves and funny thing is that many freed blacks VOLUNTARILY served in the Confederate military. The Stars and Bars needs to stop being taught as a sign of hatred and instead shown as a symbol of a culture. But alas won't because it would interfere with the Liberal political machine brainwashing everybody into thinking southerners are racist bigots.
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Hate to agree with Rose but the Confederate flag is rarely used to represent racism.
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[quote]Really, really bad imagery. For those of you who haven’t heard, Kanye has started using the Confederate Flag as the primary design on his tour merchandise for Yeezus. So, already, that ignites a gut reaction in so many of us who grew up understanding that the Confederate Flag was a symbol of racism, slavery, and discrimination.[/quote] what? retards gonna 'tard, you know...they don't know jack about that history man.
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The idiot in the article has no idea what the Confederate flag represents.
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If someone makes a joke about you, own it and it is no longer funny. This case is a great example of this.
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>Not actually Confederate flag >is flag for Battle of shiloh >Racists are idiots >Kanye is idiot
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Kanye is disrespecting racists everywhere, but then, what do you expect from one of [i]them[/i]...
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tl;dr not gonna read that, especially for some clown like kanye lol
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a celebrity doing something intentionally controversial? Next up doctors discover that drinking bleach while smoking cigars may be detrimental to your health. Details at 8
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lolKanyeWest
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Can we just stop looking at him? Maybe then he'll go away.
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Kayne is a fag.
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The sad part is that people will take this guy seriously
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Okay seriously If there wasn't anyone dumber in this world...
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People don't paint a realistic picture of the south
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I LOVE YEEZUS!!!!!!!
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He in no way deserves recognition of applause for this. Not because of the uneducated specific to black racism, but because it completely contradicts everything he has claimed to stand for. He as always talked and made songs about a united people and bring Americans together outside the bounds of race and skin color and now he takes a symbol that has become known for hate? I have no issues when insanely rich people go and make more money so the can have solid gold toilets, that's fine by me. My issue is with him using controversy and anger to do so. Sad fact is it will sell because it's Kanye. Then it will sell simply because of how many people think they are cool (do the kids still say cool?) because they wear something so edgy. Long story short I just hate this because it further expands stupidity in youth in an already failing and self entitled generation. I didn't read any of what I typed so if I rambled and made no sense that yeah... Yeah.
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Whatevs in my opinion! I don't believe anything bad will come of it.
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Such edge. Wrap! Wow Much sole 2kewl Kanyay Wow. Nice flag
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So it's not offensive when a famous black guy displays it? But when a [url=http://news.nationalpost.com/2013/03/04/owners-of-the-hamilton-bbq-restaurant-hillbilly-heaven-defend-choice-to-splash-window-with-confederate-flag/]small southern restaurant in another country[/url] displays it, it is?