Lupe Fiasco speaks on the culture in Chicago that’s given rise to Chief Keef and his frustrations with rappers like Chief Keef being “celebrated” in youth culture.
If you’ve been following me on twitter, you know I went over the other night on Lupe, while I was being my usual half-joking/half serious self, I do think I ether’d him.
Nothing wrong with making a rap song with a positive message the thing is (a) is the song good? (b) whose making the song?
— yorapper (@yorapper) August 24, 2012
People that listen to
@lupefiasco already think calling women “bitches” is bad. So what change is he doing?— yorapper (@yorapper) August 24, 2012
That’s why it looks like
@lupefiasco is preaching to the choir to sell records. Not to make guys that say “bitch” change.— yorapper (@yorapper) August 24, 2012
@lupefiasco has a Ferrari collection. How can he be taken seriously as the alpha conscious rapper? Gandhi had to give all that stuff up.— yorapper (@yorapper) August 24, 2012
If
@2chainz came out with a positive track like@lupefiasco Bitch Bad it would change the people Lupe wants to change.— yorapper (@yorapper) August 24, 2012
If a rapper really wants to make change they have to be admired by the people they want to change or else what’s the point?
@lupefiasco— yorapper (@yorapper) August 24, 2012
Basically ratchet niggas and ratchet bitches don’t listen to Lupe Fiasco. So how can he teach them?
— yorapper (@yorapper) August 24, 2012