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Originally posted by Spirit777
I wouldnt be surprised given that music is also a math and numbers are prevelent in the occult.
Originally posted by Doomsday 2029
Originally posted by Spirit777
I wouldnt be surprised given that music is also a math and numbers are prevelent in the occult.
I did some research on this "Rainman" character that Eminem and Jay Z both refer to... and basically they are speaking about a demon that possess them while they create their lyrics.
Now normally you would they are speaking about Rainman the Dustin Hoffman charcter... and they are, but also remember that Rainman was a Supreme Genius with only numbers and math.
(just watch about the first three minutes of the video if you don't want to watch the entire thing.)
[edit on 19-5-2010 by Doomsday 2029]
Originally posted by thedeadtruth
Hip Hop was in my opinion 100% hijacked and re-designed to keep the youth of today so caught up in image they have no passion for anything else.
The ultimate push in consumerism / bling.
When demonstrations were held when I was young, half the crowd were teenagers. Now its just the older generation that seems to give a #.
Originally posted by pro-all
The strange thing I find about hip hop is that a piece of music is released today, catches your fancy. Then after a couple of weeks, you lose all desire to listen to it. How is that music that was once so lovely becomes distasteful in a matter of days or weeks?
Those who think the music industry is programmed may have a point. If you see the works of artists who have little or no education, one is forced to accept that they just act scripts written for them. How is possible for Rihanna to think up tracks like Russian Roulette or Beyonce talking of Halo? There are other complex lyrics attributed to artists who normally should never dream of such ideas.
Shading kids from the influence of music is vitually impossible as music is all present. My 18 months old kids started reacting to music on TV when he was just 9 months. Now he dances and imitates dancers on music videos.
Originally posted by TheRoadLessTraveled
OP, I've researched a lot of material on this subject and I think that there is much truth to it. I can't provide links right now, but checkout Hip Hop and Freemasonry: Culture Creation and The Shape Of Things To Come on YouTube. I think you would enjoy it.
Originally posted by Doomsday 2029
Originally posted by TheImmaculateD1
Hip hop, gangsta rap is dead and gone as that was identified as being a chief item on how they indoctrinate the youth. When you put on a hip hop record it tells you the best you can achieve or hope for is being stuck in the ghetto on welfare while pushing narcotics on the corner and busting a cap in those who oppose you.
That is not the message you want to send our young, impressionable youth so in that regard this genre is in effect dead.
When you put on your favourite album from your favourite artist on your preferred medium (lp, 45, 331/3, cassette, 8 track, mini disc, cd, mp3) you want it to lift you up and not tell you that you have no future.
They have figured out a way to indoctrinate those using heavy metal, pop, country, r&b, and alternative so to truly avoid it is to avoid all popular music and stick to vintage classical and vintage operas.
So what happens when people within the industry go from preaching one message to another? What happens when they come out of the darkness and into the light?
I discovered this video and it made perfect sense.... as soon as DMX turned to the light... the industry no longer needs him.