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| Comparative Studies Comparing religious beliefs across human history and cultures |
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#31 (permalink) | |
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Watcher
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: Earth
Posts: 454
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Re: Is Tupac Shakur a Prophet?
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I don't think Tu-pac ever really blames his environment. As a matter of fact most people really dont blame their environment, (unless it is legally or politically correct),as the sole reason for thier for what ever it is they are going through. Sustained opression( what most "ghettos" were designed to be) is the something different than a bad environment. A social an economic environment designed to supress and in some cases devour creative energy is what he was talking about. I think that most people can not relate to the African American eperience in American. I'v even found that Africans can not even fully relate to the African Americans. I am married to an African woman and I have to explain to her why African Americans act the way they do. Unless you have walked a mile in someones shoes, do not, judge them. ![]() |
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#32 (permalink) |
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New Member
Join Date: Feb 2007
Posts: 5
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Re: Is Tupac Shakur a Prophet?
Tupac - I will give him good rapper. I will even grant an ocassional good poem. But Phrophet- Come on he was a gangster , rapist, murderer. He wasnt a victim, He made choices, he didnt have to be a gangster, no way in hell did he
have to be a rapist.So there you can say whatever you want ,but once you fire a gun onto someone for no reason, or you rape someone or are just a general jackass you lose all creditability.He brought his life upon himself as we all do. |
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#33 (permalink) | |
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Executive Member
Join Date: Jan 2005
Posts: 1,428
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Re: Is Tupac Shakur a Prophet?
He wasn't found guilty of rape and he makes it clear in his music that he never rapped a women.
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#36 (permalink) |
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at peace
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: Texas
Posts: 3,267
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Re: Is Tupac Shakur a Prophet?
Hi YO--
When a thread kind of "haunts" me--what I mean is the idea stays with me, it usually means that what I keep wanting to contribute is worth saying. This is one of those threads. I don't really know much about Shakur. I have seen a couple of interviews and heard a few tunes. Beyond that, all I really know about him is what I have read right here and on his website. Let me first say that I think there is the prophetic element in more places than we realize. Science, music and arts of all kinds, even history and math and in the theology and Sacred Texts of many traditions and cultures. I think that truth can be found in so many places if we are just willing to see it. I know Shakur does not necessarily blame his environment entirely for his situation. Good for him! But in my opinion, why should he overlook its profound influence, either? We all come from somewhere. There are people in this world who are born addicted to drugs into families or communities where this is the way of life. There are newborn babies all over this world without food. How are they to see the world and life any other way? I don't know. But some manage to do it, and it is amazing. And for them to be able to communicate these things to the rest of us who don't know about it--well, what is wrong with that? Moreover, hopefully they are an encouragement to those who are still living it. The fact that their messages are often misunderstood by those who cannot fathom the situation they are in does not make their work invalid. YO, you know I love music, don't you? I come from a place where my peers in general can see no value whatsoever in rap music. But the children? Now that is a different story. They understand it, and some people think this is a bad thing. I say, "not so". If our children cannot learn to discern between acting out the lives of the people being featured in a work of art and simply trying to understand them, then we are not teaching our children very well. Would we rather they not be exposed to the ugly side of life? Of course! But it exists, and they are going to have to deal with it just like all of us before them. And if we are so delicate that we can't at least look into what an artist is trying to say, then how on earth will we ever be good leaders in the eyes of our kids? I dunno. Guess I just wanted to say that. Just been thinking about it all. What do you think, YO, about what I've said? Because I am not attempting to be rhetorical. I really want to know what you think. InPeace, InLove |
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#37 (permalink) |
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at peace
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: Texas
Posts: 3,267
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Re: Is Tupac Shakur a Prophet?
Hi again, YO--
I thought I should emphasize that I am not talking about unsupervised listening. Nor am I saying that a young child who has no idea about the material introduced in works such as Shakur's should have it pushed on them. What I am saying is that when your kid asks about it or when they start to hear it from outside their own home--especially if a parent sees that they are taking the poetry out of context--then it is time for the parent or guardian to take the reins and explain what is happening in this artist's viewpoint. What that means, to me, is that we can't just look the other way and say, "That is not music--it's vulgar!" without being able to justify to our children why we think that. And I think that once we actually take a good, honest look at what the artist is trying to say, then we will have a better handle on how to communicate with our chidren about it. By the way, is it really necessary to play it so LOUD??? And at gas stations where me and my kids are a captive audience and I have to hear all that language??? And at railroad crossings where it is dangerous to do that? And here, I am not just speaking about rap music. It could Billy Graham for all I care (nice guy, by the way), but turn down the volume, please. Have some consideration for those around you. And I'd probably not mind that so much at the gas station, but you put someone like Rush Limbaugh on there and force me to listen to it, and I've got issues with your manners!! And I feel the same way about rap music or anything that people try to cram down my throat at inappropriate moments in inappropriate fashion. Anyway-we all have our issues, and I'm taking the thought off-track here. Back on topic.... InPeace, InLove |
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Watcher
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: Earth
Posts: 454
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Re: Is Tupac Shakur a Prophet?
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#39 (permalink) | |||||
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at peace
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: Texas
Posts: 3,267
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Re: Is Tupac Shakur a Prophet?
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InPeace, InLove |
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