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Vindicator ago

We should have a megathread exploring the thesis that the pedovore globalists have deliberately cultivated the rap industry as part of a larger effort to control and weaponize the black population. I've seen so much research posted in bits and pieces that points to that: the rappers, the systematic lead poisoning, the aborting of the majority of black kids, the "war on drugs"...I think a case could be made that an entire segment of the population has been institutionally subjected to MKUltra techniques.

Vindicator ago

Holy shit! I know nothing about rap music and never heard of this. That is EXACTLY what I was thinking must be going on.

Mind, blown.

"He explained that the companies we work for had invested millions into the building of privately owned prisons and that our positions of influence in the music industry would actually impact the profitability of these investments...We were told that these prisons were built by privately owned companies who received funding from the government based on the number of inmates. The more inmates, the more money the government would pay these prisons. It was also made clear to us that since these prisons are privately owned, as they become publicly traded, we’d be able to buy shares."

Christ. When I made the comment above, I almost added "private prisons" to the list of stuff that gelled together in my mind as part of the "crazy" conspiracy.

Someone PLEASE do a thread on this! We need to dig into the connections between the music industry and private prisons, look at the timing in relation to political and geopolitical events, gerrymandering etc. And how many of these fuckers are also child rapers? This is sick.

That deliberate shift of the rap music industry to feed private prisons probably lines right up with the crack epidemic. They literally engineered a situation that would confirm the worst possible race stereotypes to polarize people against each other.

We need a timeline. We need documentation of business interrelations, political contributions, regulation changes.

fartyshorts ago

I read it when it was first published, it was widely spread in conspiracy circles. No way to tell if it's true, but it may as well be!

Remember the 13th amendment as well.

Thirteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution, which abolished slavery and involuntary servitude, except as punishment for a crime

Wikipedia on private prisons:

However, the 1980s ushered in a new era of prison privatization. With a burgeoning prison population resulting from the War on Drugs and increased use of incarceration, prison overcrowding and rising costs became increasingly problematic for local, state, and federal governments.

The modern private prison business first emerged and established itself publicly in 1984 when the Corrections Corporation of America (CCA), now known as CoreCivic, was awarded a contract to take over a facility in Shelby County, Tennessee. This marked the first time that any government in the country had contracted out the complete operation of a jail to a private operator.

https://imgoat.com/uploads/c5bde74a8f/181860.png

Vanderbilt has many distinguished alumni and affiliates, including 43 current and former members of the United States Congress, 14 U.S. Ambassadors, 13 governors, nine billionaires, seven Nobel Prize laureates, two Vice Presidents of the United States, and two U.S. Supreme Court Justices. Other notable alumni include Rhodes Scholars, Pulitzer Prize winners, Emmy Award winners, Grammy Award winners, MacArthur Fellows, CEOs of Fortune 500 companies, heads of state and other leaders in foreign government, academics, musicians, professional athletes, and Olympians.[15] Vanderbilt has more than 139,000 alumni, with 40 alumni clubs established worldwide.[16]

Truthseeker3000 ago

CoreCivic, CC = 33

Dailytacs ago

That article just enforces what I've suspected for so long. My family is very musical and I was exposed from an early age to all kinds of music from just about any genre and generation. I put it together pretty quickly that there was a huge shift away from 70's "come together" to later 90s hate whitey. I thought it off, as though this shift didn't happen organically. Other people who also know music like I did, didn't seem to find this odd, and put it off to music being dead, and or not creative in general.

Mbailey63 ago

They killed Rock in favor of hate music.