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Freeway Rick Ross Addresses Hip Hop Authenticity

Posted on January 5th, 2014
by
Staff Editor


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Recently Rick Ross won the legal battle against former drug kingpin Freeway Rick Ross in efforts to keep his name.

Freeway Rick Ross spoke to AllHipHop.com recently about authenticity in hip hop as far drug activities and the affect on today’s youth.

In the statement to AllHipHop, Freeway stated, “I respect Hip Hop as an art form and consider many of its artists some of my close friends. But I believe the art form owes an obligation of authenticity. You cannot go out and say you sold cocaine at Kilo to Metric ton scale and be so detached from the experience. If you do, you have an obligation to the youth to tell them the truth and not lie about the facts of your circumstance to try to further validate the mistruth.”

Freeway’s statement referring to authenticity goes hand in hand with his recent case against the Maybach Music leader who he feels capitalized off of his reputation.

To read the full statement from Freeway Rick Ross hit the jump…

I respect Hip Hop as an art form and consider many of its artists some of my close friends. But I believe the art form owes an obligation of authenticity. You cannot go out and say you sold cocaine at Kilo to Metric ton scale and be so detached from the experience. If you do, you have an obligation to the youth to tell them the truth and not lie about the facts of your circumstance to try to further validate the mistruth.

There is a teachable moment about the state of our community when a man who has a respectable job as a correctional officer, has to recreate himself in my former image as a large-scale kingpin to gain what he feels is social acceptance as a successful man. I along with many others would have given it all up for stability and opportunity, when Reagan came into office with Trickle down gutting assistance programs, and privatization of public sector jobs ripped through our cities it strip-mined those types of stable jobs in a very short period from Black America.

I will continue to go around the country and speak at schools, speaking to the need for the youth to avoid getting caught up in the dope game. Also I will be going city to city giving artists that don’t get looks by labels Mixtape exposure. I look forward to the release of my autobiographical book due out in February, and film in development to help tell the truth about how Black American Cities developed and turned to drugs, the dope game and its consequences.

– Freeway Rick Ross

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