Who The Fuck Is This Nigga

Who The Fuck Is This Nigga




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Who The Fuck Is This Nigga
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I'm going to assume that every white person has said "nigga" at least once in their life. Respect to those who haven't—even when singing along to rap music by themselves—but it seems like they account for an extremely small percentage of the population. I don't know how to feel about this. I'm not sure how I'm supposed to respond to that word anymore. My gut tells me that I should be offended every time a non-black person uses it, but as much as I hate to say it, I'm not. That's not some Uncle Tom shit either. It's just a waste of time to be up in arms over a single word every other day. I don't give a fuck if Justin Bieber said "nigga" in a joke when he was 15. It happens. Welcome to planet Earth.
Obviously, whites who use the word with malicious intent are liable to get cursed out or hit in the face , but those people would probably say "nigger" before they said "nigga" and they're not who I'm talking about anyway. Fact is, there is a difference between both words and only with the latter are lines blurred on the acceptableness of use by non-blacks. Yeah, it'd be great if no white person ever said "nigga," but that's unrealistic, and part of the blame falls to black people. We made the word cool. We use it incessantly in the most popular music. We took away its racist connotations so effectively that it's gotten to the point where some white people call each other "nigga" as a term of endearment.
Though I love that blacks have subverted "nigga" as a pejorative, and while I'm fairly desensitized to other races using it now, it hasn't always been this way. The first time I heard a white person use the "N-word"—that I can remember in detail—was similar to that scene in White Chicks . I was in a car with two white girls, passing a joint as they cruised the icy streets of Chicago's western suburbs on a cold winter night. I had my iPod on me at all times like everyone did in 2004 and these girls wanted me to play "Forgot About Dre." They rapped each word emphatically and did not censor themselves whatsoever. I sat in the back seat shocked. I wanted to rip out the auxiliary cord on them, but I didn't as my thoughts shifted between, "I don’t want to fuck these girls anymore," to, "It’s just a song, why do I even care?" Were they really being racist? I've never seen two people rap a song as passionately as those girls were rapping "Forgot About Dre" on that night.
Is that what ScHoolboy Q and Meek Mill are thinking when they say they don't mind if white people say "nigga" at their shows? At one of the first concerts I ever went to, Kanye West ranted about how "Gold Digger" had been the No. 1 song in America for 10 weeks and before the chorus kicked in he screamed, "White people! This is your one chance to say nigga!" And believe me when I say that most of them did, just like they do during the Michael Jackson part on "All of the Lights," if you’ve been to any of his recent tours. What can you do? Around the same time, Kanye told TIME that he didn't like the word and attempted to replace it with "homie" on "Crack Music," but that it "just didn't have the same impact."
But lately, more and more, I’m beginning to feel like it doesn’t matter. I guess enough rap concerts will do that to you.
It's all about context. Despite the fact that I was okay with, like, 15,000 white people yelling "nigga" around me at a concert, it was only a few months before that I punched a white boy in his mouth for doing the same thing at a party. This kid kept trying to get my attention in what appeared to be a benign manner. I'd be at the keg and he'd come up to me like, "Ernest, when you get a second, I have a question to ask you." Finally, he goes, "Don't get offended, serious question, I'm only curious. What's the difference between a 'nigga' and a 'nigger'?" He was being a smartass and, not even seconds later, regretted asking me that question.
I'm sometimes left with a feeling of regret if I let a white person say "nigga" in front of me and don't check them. I'll say, "Don't say that shit around me," 95% of the time and it used to be that other 5% when I didn't speak up would haunt me. But lately, more and more, I'm beginning to feel like it doesn't matter. I guess enough rap concerts will do that to you.
I try not to be egregious with my own use of the word—black people who call all of their white friends "nigga" are the corniest motherfuckers in the world—and, honestly, the same goes for calling other black people "nigga" all of the time like it's some kind of superpower. Of course I'm glad that I don’t have to edit myself when rap music is playing and sometimes there's nothing more profound than being able to tell a homie, "You're a real nigga," but I'll never go out of my way to make white people feel like "nigga" is a word that's totally acceptable.
Alas, white people do say "nigga," and always will. Ultimately, it's up to you to gauge each situation for yourself, whether you're black or white. Should I have been mad at my teacher when we read Adventures of Huckleberry Finn aloud during AP English? What's a white person supposed to do when they're rapping along to "My Nigga" and "Lookin' Ass Nigga" and "Hot Nigga" and "Niggas in Paris"? I would probably rap the songs in full myself if I was white. But I'm not. I'm black and empathetic to my race and I fully grasp the meaning and history of that word. It's still difficult to hear and sometimes I feel like white people are getting away with something when they quote lyrics or retweet tweets with "nigga" in them and I wish it didn't happen but I know that it does.
Ernest Baker is a writer living in New York. Follow him on Twitter here .
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[Hook] Wir haben damals Farbe in das Land gebracht Und heute wird die Farbe einfach abgekratzt? Ekho, ich schwöre dir, mein Leben ist so abgefuckt Meine Brüder sind in Einzelhaft Mütter am weinen, Eltern am streiten Kinder alleine am verzweifeln Mein Viertel [Part 3] Irgendwie, irgendwo, irgendwann Nein (niemals), ich gebe keine Informationen an Die Bullen, die uns einbuchten wollen Ja, sie hoffen, was zu finden bei 'ner Ausweiskontrolle (Schwachsinn) Doch alle meine Knollen hab' ich gebunkert Unter dem Bett meiner Ollen, wey Es geht hier nicht um Demokratie Denn im Endeffekt wollen Bullen nur Sternchen verdien'n Das heißt, mehr Parra fließt, für uns aber wenig Das juckt sie doch eh nicht, so ist die Politik Fick die deutsche Justiz (fick sie) Gruß an jeden Beamten Hurensohn, der Türen abschließt Ekho, überall Krieg, Wahrheit verheimlicht Armut verbreitet und Medien lügen Nun Therapie, es ist nie zu früh Aber öfter zu spät, trotzdem besser als nie
[Hook] Wir haben damals Farbe in das Land gebracht Und heute wird die Farbe einfach abgekratzt? Ekho, ich schwöre dir, mein Leben ist so abgefuckt Meine Brüder sind in Einzelhaft Mütter am weinen, Eltern am streiten Kinder alleine am verzweifeln Mein Viertel [Outro] Who the fuck is this? Who the , who the fuck is this? , Nimo Who the fuck is this? Who the fuck is this? , Ekho Who the fuck is this, this? Who the fuck is this? Who the, Who the fuck, who the fuck is this? N-I-M-O
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Part of HuffPost Black Voices. ©2022 BuzzFeed, Inc. All rights reserved.
If you're not black you shouldn't be saying "Nigga". It doesn't matter how many black dudes or girls you've slept with or that your best friends are black or that your best friend's dog is black or even that you live in the "ghetto"; if you're not black that word should not leave your mouth.
if this writing stuff doesn't pan out catch me residing in the suburbs owning a bunch of burger king franchises
Sep 26, 2015, 05:01 PM EDT | Updated Dec 6, 2017
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if this writing stuff doesn't pan out catch me residing in the suburbs owning a bunch of burger king franchises
This article contains explicit language.
If you're not black you shouldn't be saying "Nigga". Plain and simple. It doesn't matter how many black dudes or girls you've slept with or that your best friends are black or that your best friend's dog is black or even that you live in the "ghetto"; if you're not black that word or any variation of it should not leave your mouth. There I said it. Simple right? This thinkpiece should be over. This might just be the shortest thinkpiece in history right? Wrong.
Somehow, the topic of who and who shouldn't say "Nigga" has become some complex abstract discussion. Don Lemon has a panel discussion on CNN about who can say 'nigga' or something similar to that discussion at least once a month. The result of this panel discussion is always an ether from Marc Lamont Hill with a supporting ether by whatever rapper Don managed to get on his show. To some people like Don, no one should be saying the word. His logic echoes respectability politics; how can we expect others not to say it if we can't stop saying it ourselves? While others, like a large portion of our favorite rappers, feel as though 'nigga' has become a positive term of endearment instead of the original racist negative sub-root.
Rap music is the biggest generator of culture in human civilization. You see all those companies tweeting things for their lame products while simultaneously finding "creative" ways to interject rap lyrics into those tweets. The things rappers rap about and the clothes they wear in their music videos people want to emulate. Don't even front like you've never rocked a bandana around your head like Pac or attempted to find a pair of shutter shades after seeing Kanye wear them in the 'Stronger' video. If you're saying you never have then you're just lying to yourself and should find a confessional and a rosary as soon as possible.
Rap music holds an even bigger impact on our vernacular, whether it be Pimp C with "Trill"(1987), Lil Wayne with "Bling Bling"(1998), Kanye with "Cray"(2011), Chief Keef with "Thot/Thotties"(2013) or Drake with "Woes"(2015); when people hear these words they add it to their everyday vernacular. The people hearing these words aren't just black people anymore. Rap has evolved as a genre and the listeners are just as diverse as the rappers themselves. It's not just a black 17 year old listening in Harlem anymore, there's the white boy from small town Iowa listening and not just adding "woes" to his vernacular but "nigga" as well with a sense of unabashed entitlement. If you ask him why he uses it he'll just tell you it's just a word and everyone should be able to say it because it's just a word. The blame falls at the feet of people like him who find it so hard and simply refuse to erase a word from their vocabulary out of the respect and comfort of black people and not at the feet of the rappers who use the word in their songs.
Is saying 'nigga' something that is so important to you and the way you go about spending your 24 hours? When it rolls of your tongue do you feel better about yourself? Does saying 'nigga' make you feel a little more black? If you can omit 'faggot' and 'bitch' from your vocabulary then why is it so hard and strenuous for you to omit 'nigga'? Is it easier to omit the former of the three because there's bigger societal ramifications if caught throwing those words around or is that you just feel entitled to use 'nigga" because you feel that you are part of the culture of 'nigga' even though your only ties to the culture is through an iTunes purchase? "I might see Trinidad James on the street and call him 'my nigga.' You know why? Because he is my nigga. And the difference between Trinidad James and you, is that Trinidad James has to deal with the same oppressive situations. He was born into a world where anti-black racism prevails. He lives in a world where police might shoot him on the street no matter how much money he has. We share a collective condition known as 'nigga.' White people don't." - Marc Lamont Hill
It's not just white people who have no problem using "nigga" but non black people of color as well. The problem with the term People of Color (POC) is that it has lampooned a group of people together as if they each face the same struggles and have been facing the struggle since the beginning of time. What get's lost is that the term "People of Color" derives from "Free People Of Color" that people who had African ancestry in the late 1700s and 1800s were called when white people didn't feel like calling them a "nigger" or a "colored". Just because we are living in the same hoods and being denied the same jobs and opportunities. it doesn't mean that our struggles have been sewn by the same thread to make the same ugly polyester sweater.
I'm sure some of the black people reading this are thinking, "hey it's just a word there are bigger issues we need to worry about like police brutality and Donald Trump trying to deport our muslim brothers and sisters" but, who said we can't chew gum and walk at the same time? All three issues are not mutually exclusive and to say it's just a word is hypocritical. Because, to act like you wouldn't be running to HR like you're Usain Bolt with your lawyer on the line ready to sue the minute your white boss switched up the "man" in his daily "hey man how was your drive to work today" to nigga; is another thing you're lying to yourself about and need to hit up a confessional and find a rosary for.
At the end of the day not every non-black person isn't going to say nigga or not want to. There's always going to be some Sally who names her group chat name "my main nigs", a cornrow wearing boy named Post Malone who looks how Shia LaBeouf would if he didn't shower and says 'nigga' in a short vine and refers to people on Titter by it, a Carlos who pleads daily to his black friends to say 'nigga', a Madonna who is a mother of two adopted black children and calls her white son a 'nigga' on an Instagram post , or a Ben who listens to 'niggas in paris' in his moms Subaru one friday night after a highschool football game with his friends and raps every single word. But, if you want to say 'nigga' then be ready to get treated like one and if you don't then keep that one syllable five letter word out of your mouth unless you're ready to be crossed up by some 'niggas' who aren't like that token black friend who lets you call them one.
if this writing stuff doesn't pan out catch me residing in the suburbs owning a bunch of burger king franchises

[Pre-Chorus] Ayy, ayy, ayy, ayy [Chorus] I'm a gorilla in a fuckin' coupe, finna pull up to the zoo, nigga Who, nigga? Who the fuck is you? I don't know, nigga No, nigga, pull up on your block, we gon' blow, nigga Go, nigga, run, nigga, run for the po', nigga (Police, nigga) Gas what I smoke, nigga (Nigga, smoke) Feds at my door, jump out the window, nigga (The window) No, you can't get no money, silly ho (Silly ho) I just hit a stain, faneto (Faneto) [Post-Chorus] Fine—, ayy, fine—, ayy [Verse 2] I just hit a stain, fanagoe (Finesse) I just hit a stain, faneto (Finesse) I just got twenty for a fuckin' four (Twenty bands, nigga) I spent that shit on a fuckin' coat (On my motherfuckin' coat) Ripped my ear, now I got one earlobe (Bling, bling) But I'ma still put some diamonds on it (Gang, gang, bling, bling) Baby girl, these diamonds are not phony (They not phony, huh?) This car I got, it came from Barcelona (Barcelona, huh?) These shoes I got, came from fuckin' Paris (Fifteen hun'?) This bitch mad 'cause I don't do marriage (I don't want no marriage) Let a nigga slide, no we don't do scary (Skrrt-skrrt, dah) We tote pistols, no we don't do worry (Bang-bang, bang, bang, bang, bang)
[Chorus] I'm a gorilla in a fuckin' coupe, finna pull up to the zoo, nigga Who, nigga? Who the fuck is you? I don't know, nigga No, nigga, pull up on your block, we gon' blow, nigga Go, nigga, run, nigga, run for the po', nigga (Police, nigga) Gas what I smoke, nigga (Nigga, smoke) Feds at my door, jump out the window, nigga (The window) No, you can't get no money, silly ho (Silly ho) I just hit a stain, faneto (Faneto) [Outro] Ayy, Finesse
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Genius is the ultimate source of music knowledge, created by scholars like you who share facts and insight about the songs and artists they love.
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“Faneto” is Chicago rapper Chief Keef’s self-produced tribute to what many would refer to as the “gangster lifestyle”. In the song, Keef delivers raps about smoking marijuana, stacking cash, shooting his enemies, and evading the police, reassuring his listeners that he really is about that life.
The song has gained additional popularity due to two unrelated incidents where this song, in combination with intoxicated partygoers and a packed house, resulted in the floor of a building being damaged. The first incident had occurred in November 2015, when a photo of a destroyed floor with the caption “when you play faneto at a kickback” began circulating. The second incident occurred on October 21, 201
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