This video presents a critical perspective on how pop culture, particularly hip-hop music, may contribute to negative behavioral patterns among American youth by normalizing certain speech patterns and behaviors that the speaker considers inappropriate, arguing that cultural products can significantly influence societal values and youth development.
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We're LOSING HOPE For AMERICAS YOUTH at an ALARMING RATE Thanks to Pop Cultures SOCIAL PROGRAMMINGAñadido:
I think the American youth is is pretty well cooked. I'm not going to lie, man.
The American youth have been led astray by pop culture brainwashing.
Keep in mind, I'm in Seattle. I just left the gym and I'm in the bathroom going to wash my hands and there's just a big group of young men. looked like high schoolers hanging out in the bathroom.
Again, from Seattle, living in Seattle.
And the amount of cornball hood speak that I heard in that bathroom.
It's bad out here, dude. It is bad out here.
We've got young people in cities on the West Coast saying, "Hey yo, hey, what y'all hitting today, bro?
What you I don't even like mimicking it because it's so embarrassing.
I cannot believe more people don't speak out against that. I cannot believe people actually overlook the cornball hiphop culture fakeness. Like that's a crazy one to me.
That is an absolute crazy one to me that people just refuse to call that out. I'm like the only person on YouTube that makes fun of that and calls it out.
Like, bro, you're living in Seattle. We don't say y'all.
We don't say y'all in Seattle. We've never said y'all in Seattle.
We don't say y'all in Los Angeles. Or if you're not from the South, you don't talk like that. What is that?
And why does nobody call it out? If I meet somebody and they speak hood speak, I immediately stop taking them seriously.
If I meet you and you're not from the south and you you speak in hood speak, I'm done with you already. Like, I'm mentally checked out. I'm mentally checked out. I can't take you serious.
I can't take you serious.
I get a lot of heat for calling out hip-hop culture. I've noticed that I get a lot of heat from people, which I don't understand because to me it's the most glaring issue in our society easily.
Hip-hop culture, like I've said in many videos, is is to blame for most of the decline of behavior in our society. the acceptance of trash behavior. I mean, hip-hop culture has has pushed that and normalized that more than anything else. There's not even a close second, bro. There's not even a close second. And I don't care what you listen to. You can like it. You can love it. But the fact that you're that you're going to try to defend it is just goofy to me. It's just goofy. Hip-hop culture is literally to blame for most of the issues in our society as far as people go. behaviors of people like you guys actually date women out here that speak hoodspeak. You guys actually date women who respect that culture and and idolize that culture.
That is wild to me.
I've had so many women that are very attractive who have hit on me or tried to message me online or on this stupid dating app if I'm logged into one of those who look phenomenal on the outside and then I find out they're like entrenched in hip-hop culture and music and stuff. I'm done, dude. Not a chance I'm hanging out with you. Not a chance.
There's no way I can take you serious if you respect cornball rappers, bro.
There's no way I can take you serious if you have an ounce of respect for that cornball culture.
It's weird to me that saying this offends people. Like, it's really weird to me that saying this actually brings people out of the woodwork that are offended. That's crazy to me.
When I hear myself speak this, in my mind I'm like, "This is common sense."
The fact that anybody disagrees with this is crazy to me.
Like, the music is is cringey.
Trash. Like, it's it's not even good.
None of it's good. None of these cornballs that you guys idolize were good at all. The music is trash. I don't know how you guys listen to it.
And now I see people defending the corn balls that were the gods of this dog dew culture when people try to call it out. Now you got people blaming the music industry and deflecting completely off of the pioneers who built this stuff. Now they're not to blame at all for the youth that have been led astray either.
How hilarious is that? They've built a career off of being a victim of anything and everything. Made bazillions off of playing the role of a victim and pushing anti-white garbage because that's what most of it is at the root of all of it. They've made bazillions pushing this garbage, supposedly writing all these lyrics because they're such talented lyricists.
And now I see these guys coming out in interviews talking about how much damage that culture has done to their community and they're blaming producers and stuff and they're blaming the people who are really behind this music. Well, aren't you behind this music? You're the one that supposedly wrote the lyrics. You're the guy out there that supposedly lived the life that grew this dog crap culture and dog crap music.
Now, you're still going to be a victim after you've made bazillions off of supposedly being the one that walked that walk and talked that talk and sold it to the young people. Now, you're not going to take any blame. Now, you're just going to divert all of that to the producers.
Give me a break, bro. Give me a break.
I'm all for sharing blame with them, too. But when you guys actually try to make these guys a victim now again in the end stages of the bazillions of dollars they've made, what are we doing? What are we doing? Is this just like a sport now?
Like I cannot get over that. I can't get over how much the once great nations that we have on this earth have just gone down the drain by being brainwashed by this corny hip hop culture that just highlights the worst of the worst people and the worst of the worst behavior. It highlights it.
It normalizes it.
And I immediately just call it out. Like when I hear this and see this, it's the fakest of the fake. To me, it's the corniest of the corny.
Like you guys date women that go to hip-hop nightclubs. That is crazy to me.
You know many women that have messaged me that look beautiful that I turn down immediately when I find out they as a hobby they want to go to hiphop nightclubs. Bro, if you if you find any of that culture even remotely appealing, I am done with you. I wouldn't you couldn't pay me to go on a date with you. Not a chance.
It's just crazy to me. And I know that this sounds wild to you guys because this is what's popular. It is like the most mainstream popular thing right now.
So, I get it. If you want to date, to date a woman that doesn't at all uh enjoy this culture is going to be damn near impossible. Let's be real. Let's be real. To find a woman that I'm talking about is going to be damn near impossible. I bet you the girls in the Amish villages are still listening to this cornball music. So, I get it. I'm not knocking you because you've happened to hear the songs that have been force-fed on everybody for the last 30 years. I'm not gonna I'm not going to go after you too hard because you happen to like a few of these catchy tunes that have been force-fed on you the last 30 years. I get it, bro. I get it. But you must realize what it is and you must call it out for what it is.
Like stop refusing to call out this trash that is the that is leading the charge in the normalizing of this bad behavior and bad crappy culture and decline of behavior of our people in our countries. Like don't refuse to call it out because if you want to listen to it cuz you think it's neat, whatever, bro. But don't act like it's not garbage. It's garbage.
And we have we have a society full of American youth that are living in places like Seattle and walk around saying, "Hey y'all, you feel me, y'all? That's on hood, y'all."
Like, even hearing myself say this is just it's torturous. I can't even I can't even say this stuff without feeling like I need to take a shower.
It's crazy to me.
And and for the record, this has nothing to do with race because I know people are going to bring that up obviously.
I would I would love to see hip-hop culture get called out more so everybody of every race can benefit from it. Like if you think me calling this out is more hurtful than the damage being caused by the uh idolizing and and glorifying of this trash culture. If you think me calling this out is damaging, but the fact that garbage music and culture is being pushed and idolized by our youth isn't a problem, I'm sorry, but we're never going to see eye to eye.
We're never going to see eye to eye.
Anyway, that's enough rambling for one video. Let me know what you guys think.
What did I miss? What can you add? Let me know, y'all. You feel me? Let me know, y'all.
Anyway, God bless.
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