You can’t spend two decades referring to other men’s daughters as b*tches and hoes, and then somehow decide that your own daughter is going to be exempt from the game. You, my brother, have given nearly every inch of your creative productivity toward murdering your daughter’s self and public image before she was even born. In other words, you brought Blue Ivy Carter into a world where most of your biggest fans will look at her and refer to her not as daddy’s little princess, but instead as a dirty little bitch. In fact, they will even get paid for it.

-Dr. Boyce Watkins regarding Jay-Z’s decision to stop using the word “bitch” after the birth of his daughter. (via zombiemovies)

Wait.

Wait.

Why are we reblgging this? What are we trying to say here? That we agree with this Dr. Boyce Watkins whoever the heck he is? Because I think that is a load of crock. Especially to agree with this. :|

Excuse me?

I understand Jay-Z not only contributed to but assisted in the cultivation of this culture. But he is acknowledging it was wrong, too. I don’t think you can fault someone that it took until the birth of a daughter to change the way they see the world. Sometimes, that’s what it takes - to be in those shoes and see the world the way a father does.

The way it I understand it, it’s not that he’s exempting his daughter, but that he’s choosing to stop using the word. Which is not bad. Why are we viewing this negatively? This is a GOOD thing, for someone to have changed his views and to give up that word. In a more hopeful vein, you could pray his choice affects his fans!

You can’t say someone cannot change because of what he’s done before. Isn’t that the point of change? Isn’t that WHY we change? I just.

afljdflajdlfjadljfaldjf

So many incoherent feelings right now.

PEOPLE LEARN AND PEOPLE CHANGE AND THAT IS WHAT SHOULD MATTER IN THE END. :|

(via alohomorashlie)

- No one is saying it’s bad (or impossible) that he changed.
But he and other people that profit from marketing sexism need to realize what they have done (or are doing), and changing their mind after years of feeding into it does not magically make whatever they fed into disappear. Change needs to happen now, not when it’s convenient. 

If no one had made this type of commentary, if all Jay-Z got were backpats, what would the message be? That it’s OK to get rich off of misogyny as long as you eventually apologize or change? Should people think it’s alright to make their living doing and saying awful things to/about other people, eventually change their mind, and be let off without any criticism at all? How many people would take responsibility for their actions if the idea of eventual change was a “get out of jail criticism free” card and they could get rich in the meantime? Why is it so bad to call people out when they have done just that? To learn from mistakes of the past (whether your own or someone else’s) you have to acknowledge and take responsibility for them, not ignore or write them off because the changes are in a positive direction.

The change he made was good, but the damage has already been done and he’s being called out on it. And maybe, just maybe, if people see this reaction instead of just “good job, Jay-Z!” they will better understand that change needs to happen sooner instead of later. Because “later” is often too late.

(via thinksaboutstuff)

LOL at “people learn” and “people change”. It’s hypocrisy at it’s highest. Jay had his mother talking on the intro in tracks and was quick to use the word in them same songs. It’s natural that people want better for their kids, but call a spade a spade. Dr Watkins said what needed to be said. Real change is about would be condemning it. Putting work into eradicating the word mainstream culture, it’s not about deciding to stop using the word through fear someone refers to your precious as such.

(via sabret00the)

(via thinksaboutstuff)

You can’t spend two decades referring to other men’s daughters as b*tches and hoes, and then somehow decide that your own daughter is going to be exempt from the game. You, my brother, have given nearly every inch of your creative productivity toward murdering your daughter’s self and public image before she was even born. In other words, you brought Blue Ivy Carter into a world where most of your biggest fans will look at her and refer to her not as daddy’s little princess, but instead as a dirty little bitch. In fact, they will even get paid for it.

-Dr. Boyce Watkins regarding Jay-Z’s decision to stop using the word “bitch” after the birth of his daughter. (via zombiemovies)

Wait.

Wait.

Why are we reblgging this? What are we trying to say here? That we agree with this Dr. Boyce Watkins whoever the heck he is? Because I think that is a load of crock. Especially to agree with this. :|

Excuse me?

I understand Jay-Z not only contributed to but assisted in the cultivation of this culture. But he is acknowledging it was wrong, too. I don’t think you can fault someone that it took until the birth of a daughter to change the way they see the world. Sometimes, that’s what it takes - to be in those shoes and see the world the way a father does.

The way it I understand it, it’s not that he’s exempting his daughter, but that he’s choosing to stop using the word. Which is not bad. Why are we viewing this negatively? This is a GOOD thing, for someone to have changed his views and to give up that word. In a more hopeful vein, you could pray his choice affects his fans!

You can’t say someone cannot change because of what he’s done before. Isn’t that the point of change? Isn’t that WHY we change? I just.

afljdflajdlfjadljfaldjf

So many incoherent feelings right now.

PEOPLE LEARN AND PEOPLE CHANGE AND THAT IS WHAT SHOULD MATTER IN THE END. :|

(via alohomorashlie)

- No one is saying it’s bad (or impossible) that he changed.
But he and other people that profit from marketing sexism need to realize what they have done (or are doing), and changing their mind after years of feeding into it does not magically make whatever they fed into disappear. Change needs to happen now, not when it’s convenient. 

If no one had made this type of commentary, if all Jay-Z got were backpats, what would the message be? That it’s OK to get rich off of misogyny as long as you eventually apologize or change? Should people think it’s alright to make their living doing and saying awful things to/about other people, eventually change their mind, and be let off without any criticism at all? How many people would take responsibility for their actions if the idea of eventual change was a “get out of jail criticism free” card and they could get rich in the meantime? Why is it so bad to call people out when they have done just that? To learn from mistakes of the past (whether your own or someone else’s) you have to acknowledge and take responsibility for them, not ignore or write them off because the changes are in a positive direction.

The change he made was good, but the damage has already been done and he’s being called out on it. And maybe, just maybe, if people see this reaction instead of just “good job, Jay-Z!” they will better understand that change needs to happen sooner instead of later. Because “later” is often too late.

(via thinksaboutstuff)

LOL at “people learn” and “people change”. It’s hypocrisy at it’s highest. Jay had his mother talking on the intro in tracks and was quick to use the word in them same songs. It’s natural that people want better for their kids, but call a spade a spade. Dr Watkins said what needed to be said. Real change is about would be condemning it. Putting work into eradicating the word mainstream culture, it’s not about deciding to stop using the word through fear someone refers to your precious as such.

(via sabret00the)

(via thinksaboutstuff)

Posted 3 months ago & Filed under opinion, 1,425 notes

Notes:

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Once described as an overtly opinionated IT Nerd by day, 'Faux Socialite' by night. Japanese learning, Manga loving, Music breathing, Gooner living in South East London.
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