Tag Archives: Nas

Why We Must Talk about Hip-Hop with Young Folk: Thoughts Sparked by a Nas T-Shirt

Although I cannot pinpoint the moment that I fell in love with History, I can tell you that I love my job as a historian. Although cliché, the study of the past illuminates the present and paves a path for the future.

So, I am sure you understand my delight when I see one of my students wearing a T-shirt pointing to a prior cultural moment in Black America. I guess it is a sign of aging for one to see popular culture icons of my generation on the chests and book bags of today’s collegians. These moments are a double-edged sword that, on the one hand, excites the historian in me while also verifying my transformation into what my students characterize as an “old head.” Yet, I delight in seeing images of Tupac, Pimp C (aka Sweet James Jones”, DMX, Aaliyah, or even Whitney Houston adorning my clothing.

I am sure you can imagine my sense of pride after seeing one particular student I did not know wearing a T-shirt bearing Nas’ image. Such items serve as an easy point of engagement with students as my generation bequeathed Hip-Hop Culture to succeeding generations. There are few more meaningful conversations between me as a professor and students pursuing knowledge than Nas. I just had to stop this young man and ask him a logical question.

Young man, what is your favorite Nas album?

I prayed to the hip-hop Gods that he would respond with Illmatic.

He failed to respond with Illmatic, It Was Written, Nastradamus, or Stillmatic. His response was a nearly indecipherable “Hunh?”

His response threw me off. The look of bewilderment etched across his face led me to point toward the image of Nas boldly placed on his chest. He glanced down at the picture, looking up with a whimsical look, and then he said,

“Oh, I just liked the picture. Who is he?”

I was stunned!!!!!! However, I did recover long enough to explain to him that it was Nas, one of the most influential figures in the History of Hip-Hop, adorning his T-shirt.

As I walked away with more than a fair portion of disappointment, I glanced over my shoulder and told him to listen to Illmatic; it would enrich his life.

 Dr. James Thomas Jones III

© Manhood, Race, and Culture 2024.

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Congratulations HBCU Graduates: The World Is Yours!!!!!!

Let’s be honest about leadership. Great leaders should be servants to those who have placed their trust in them. Make no mistake about it, leaders rarely receive even a morsel of the applause they are due. Most citizens believe that they are merely doing their jobs.

If the above can be said about leadership in general, only the Lord knows how frustrated the U.S. President must feel at times. Quite possibly the only thing that could make things more pressure packed for an American President is if he were a person of color. Just ask Barack Hussein Obama.

A great argument could be made that the only President who rivals Obama in his polarizing affect on the nation is Lincoln whose administration was front-loaded with the myriad issues flowing from chattel slavery. To the chagrin of opponents, Barack Hussein Obama handled their disrespect and opposition with the style, class, and grace that our people have exhibited for centuries.

During the recent commencement address delivered to nearly 30,000 students called “Show Me Your Walk H.B.C.U. Edition” this past Saturday, the still embattled, yet always smooth former President touched on the fact that Black America always receives a double-portion of misery and suffering from a nation that would not exist without their crucial contributions.

I expected Obama to touch on the Coronavirus and the lynching of Ahmaud Arbery during the address; he did not disappoint me in that regard. While addressing the global pandemic, the former President poignantly highlights that

A disease like this just spotlights the underlying inequalities and extra burdens that black communities have historically had to deal with in this country. We see it in the disproportionate impact of COVID-19 on our communities, just as we see it when a black man goes for a jog, and some folks feel like they can stop and question and shoot him if he doesn’t submit to their questioning.

I am sure that I have much company in being unmoved by a recitation of the problems facing Black America. At this moment in time, I expect Black leaders to be ready to articulate a reasonable action plan to address the matters that afflict us.

So, I was extremely pleased to hear Obama issue a call to action for the next generation of Black leaders. The former President shared the following with the graduates.

Injustice like this isn’t new. What is new is that so much of your generation has woken up to the fact that the status quo needs fixing; that the old ways of doing things don’t work.

I hope that Barack Hussein Obama is correct in his summation that the current generation “has woken up to the fact that the status quo needs fixing.” We need their help in this battle to uplift the Race and bring a semblance of common sense to the nation in general.

As an educator, I tip my hat with pride to graduating students and offer congratulations regarding their accomplishments and truly believe that “the best is yet to come” for each of them.

I will leave the graduates with the poignant question of rap emcee Nassir Jones (Nas).

Who’s world is this?

 The world is yours!!!! The world is yours!!!!!

Graduates, I plead with you to go forth with courage, common sense, and love for yourself and your fellow human.

Dr. James Thomas Jones III

Whose World is This?: Why We Must Reorient The Perspective of African-American Male Collegians Toward Something Nas Told Us Long Ago

Please do not mistake my annoyance at various male students’ insistence that the obstacles that stand in the way of them arriving to class on time and prepared are routinely a Jason Bourne worthy harrowing journey as the absence of empathy. Please understand that it is not difficult for me to recognize that more times than not I am hearing foolishness that seems to be the sole purview of privileged Black teens.

If I did not know any better, these shysters may have convinced me that their lives have been so difficult that it is a certifiable miracle that they are alive. Unfortunately for the alluded to African-American male collegians who arrive pre-loaded with excuses for why they do not hold the principal responsibility for their academic failings, I have lived enough to understand exactly what Loraine Hansberry meant when she wrote: “To be young, gifted, and Black.”

The vast majority of my African-American male students grit their teeth when I counter their pitiful excuses with the following assertions.

  • There is no better moment to be “young, Black, and gifted” in America than the present.
  • The racial bigotry that others spew is largely inconsequential to their success.
  • If I were endowed with enough power, I would make Nas’ hypnotic hook of “Whose world is this? The world is yours!!!! The World is yours!!!!” the theme song for the brilliant young males who sit in front of me on a daily basis.

The most disappointing aspect of my interaction with some, certainly not all, African-American male students’ is their inclination toward pessimism. Until you have faced such negativity, it is difficult to attribute it to anything other than an absence of self-esteem and copious amounts of depression. Many of the Black males’ that I encounter emanate such negativity that it is detectable by anyone who engages them regarding substantive matters.  

After thousands of discussions that revolve around this often unspoken issue, I have come to some understanding that many of these young men have been socialized to believe that success of any kind will remain outside of their grasp; just as it has remained beyond the reach of everyone around them.

When framed within a familial reality that provides few examples of professional or financial success, such conclusions are understandable. Although it is misleading to assert that African-Americans are monolithic in any aspect of their worldview, I feel comfortable in asserting that many of my students believe that the foremost obstacle to their success is an external force that most have named, “the White Man.” Trust me when I say that I have encountered droves of African-Americans who share the daunting perspective that it is Whites who determine if they will be successful or not. Such a perspective frequently causes me to muse that the alluded to Black males are idolaters. Put simply; they have somehow managed to make Whites omnipotent (all-powerful) and omnipresent (always present). Despite their protestations to the contrary, many of my Black male students have given away their agency and made Whites the supreme determiner in their life fortunes. Such a belief system renders reliable success formulas of preparation, hard work, planning, and execution useless.

Although it is a daunting truth that no one is coming to save African-American males from their last-place standing in nearly every measurable known to the academic community. Consider the following data concerning African-American males and their counterparts.

  • In 2014, the four-year graduation rate for Black Males was 53%.
  • In 2014, the four-year graduation rate for White males was 73%.

Unfortunately for African-American males, this gap is increasing.

Among African-American adults ranging in age from 25 to 29, only 1 out 3 (33%) earned a two-year degree. When one considers that the above statistic includes African-American women who outpace African-American males in matriculation from higher education institutions, the actual number is worse when controlled for only African-American males.Although such data illuminates a historical problem that has dogged African-American males like a shadow, it does nothing to solve the worsening problem.

So what should be the path forward for African-American males?

Most reasonable-minded persons agree that the following steps are crucial to African-American males success.

  • Reprioritization of engagement with the educational system.
  • The development of a network of Black Male mentorship to teach success formulas within and outside of the classroom.
  • A relevant educational curriculum that encourages African-American males intellectual curiosity.
  • Serious reorientation of the utility of education from merely securing a “job” to entrepreneurship.

It is time to tell those African-American males mentioned above the truth regarding why they are languishing in both the educational and work arenas. It is imperative that Black males realize that they must save themselves via a regimen of hard work, planning, and the development and execution of a five & ten-year plan. African-American male collegians who have been taught that there is no chance of success, must unlearn that dastardly message and replace it with tried-and-true success formulas that lead to optimism.

It is time that African-American males follow the spirit of the great emcee Nas who answered the question of “Whose world is this?” with the words “The world is yours!!! The world is yours!!!”  

It truly is your world young brothers. Now it is time that you go out and claim it.

Dr. James Thomas Jones III

© Manhood, Race, and Culture, 2019.