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Sunday, September 25, 2011
Madlib x Inspectah Deck x Raekwon- Speak Real Words/ Fire Water (remix)
This is from the Beat Conducta's MEDICINE SHOW #12. He takes Deck's verse from 7L & Esoteric's SPEAKING REAL WORDS & Rae's verse from Big Pun & Fat Joe's FIRE WATER then marries the two over his own production for a brief exercise in dopeness. Enjoy. Props to Okayplayer.
Green Street ft. Sunny Jones- Runways
Derek 32Zero ft. Talib Kweli- Lift 'Em Up (prod. by Nottz)
Derek 32Zero is Nottz' new artist. He's getting set to drop his newest project I'M NOT BARGAINING soon. So to mark the occasion He hooks up a feature from Kweli & goes to town over some fresh Nottz production for the first single off that project. Props to 2Dopeboyz.
brandUN DeShay- 1UP (prod. by Battlecat)
Daily Bread (Hassan Mackey & Apollo Brown)- Night Time
Saturday, September 24, 2011
Steve Jobs' Substitute (with Chistopher McDonald)
It's all fun & games until someone loses a Macbook. I swear this happened every time we got a sub in the 3rd grade. Props to College Humor.
Web Hits Dislike Button On New Facebook Layout
Let's face it the common man hates change. Not because they fear it (well, maybe) or don't understand it (well, maybe that too) but because it's generally uncomfortable & icky. So it came as no surprise to anyone that the public would pitch a bitch fit over the layout changes to facebook implemented by Mark Zuckerberg & Co. this week.
A recent survey taken of over 1,000 people conducted by Sodahead, the social voting-based site discovered 86% of Facebook users hit the dislike button (seriously, why isn't there one of those on Facebook yet??) to the new design changes announced by Zuckerberg at the Facebook F8 conference this week. Teens & women (haters) led the lynch party with approximately 90% of each group really not feeling the changes. Dudes & twenty-somethings came in second with about 80% not feeling the switch up.
Ironically the only group of folks that didn't mind the Facebook changes were IT workers. College students and Ballers (people that make over $100,00) didn't hate on the changes that much either. Upon hearing about the negative comments made about the changes which include a Twitter-like news ticker as well as profile design changes Mark Zuckerberg went on the defensive driving home the fact that the changes to Facebook had been tested by folks who both worked for Facebook & didn't have anything to do with Facebook at all. He did express also that community feedback was much appreciated & would be taken under consideration.
To appease the haters users do have the option of not applying the new version to their profile pages initially, but will eventually have to switch to the timeline layout so that all users are social networking on the same "page" so to speak. The Timeline profile mode is still being tested by Facebook designers and will be introduced to the mainstream profile modes gradually over time. So I guess if you're into change & progress you're ultimately a communist and should take that shit to Cuba. Oh well, so much for utopia. Props to International Business Times.
Industry Celebrates Jim Henson's 75th Birthday
Happy belated 75th born day to the underground Walt Disney. Check out google.com for the amazing home page animation.
Jelani- Race Matters (prod. by Durkin)
Jelani links up with Durkin once again to address the this country's biggest elephant in the room. Props to Okayplayer.
Dirty Ninja Live- 9.20.11
Video streaming by Ustream
The Chaotic Logic continues with this week's episode of Dirty Ninja Live. "But she's a zombie."- Tone LMAO HAHAHAHAHAHAHA!!!!
Monday, September 19, 2011
Goapele- Play (vid)
Yes, Goapele's upcoming full length is dropping October 24, 2011. Yes, it is called BREAK OF DAWN. Yes, this is the official music video for the first single off the album. Enjoy.
Sunday, September 18, 2011
Republicans Call President's Tax Plan "Class Warfare"
President Obama recently proposed to impose a minimum tax rate on the country's wealthy. A tax rate on those making more than $1 million a year won't go into effect if republican lawmakers have anything to say about it. They've called the proposal "class warfare" and "a political tactic intended to portray his opponents as indifferent to the hardships facing middle-class Americans."(which they really don't need help playing the part at all.) The proposal would go into effect in 2013 and potentially limit the deductions & credits those in the "ballin'" tax bracket could get once they reach that promised land that is the million-dollar threshold. Its just a part of the Pres' big plan to reduce the deficit by $2 trillion. President Obama is scheduled to uncover his plan no earlier than this Monday. Rep. Paul D. Ryan who is the chairman of the House Budget Committee & a leading supporter of cutting spending on cutting benefit programs like Medicare (booo!!) said the President's proposal would "weigh heavily on a stagnating economy."(hater) Dude man actually went on Fox News Sunday to say the tax plan would add "further instability to our system, more uncertainty, and it punishes job creation." The proposal itself adds "a new and populist feature to Mr. Obama’s effort to raise the political pressure on Republicans to agree to higher revenues from the wealthy in return for Democrats’ support of future cuts to Medicare and Medicaid. This is all in a greater effort to cut at least $1.5 trillion in our country's spending over 10 years. (dayyyyummm!!)
The Pres' calls his plan the "Buffett Rule" after billionaire investor (& king baller) Warren Buffett who has called attention to his fellow wealthy American bastards being allowed to pay a smaller share of their income in federal taxes sticking us the middle-income earners because investment gains are taxed at a lower rate than wages.
There are many detractors to the President's proposal, as to be expected. Among them Republican Senator Lindsey Graham & Senate minority leader Mitch McConnell who went on popular news programs like Meet The Press & CNN to tell the public that taxing the rich is generally a bad idea. Senator Graham was quoted as saying: "raising taxes on billionaires and millionaires would add a minimal amount of money to the Treasury to pay off the debt." Mitch McConnell joked, “if Warren Buffett would like to give up some of his benefits, we’d be happy to talk about it.” Then went on to say there was “bipartisan opposition to what the president is recommending,” which he said would slow growth in difficult times. He also told Meet The Press,"Republicans were ready to consider means testing as part of a broader overhaul to the big entitlement programs, meaning that the well-to-do would receive less from programs like Social Security."
All in all both sides of the aisle could agree that there needs to be some kind of drastic reform to the current tax code. The President's proposal would see those with a taxable income of more than $1 million would pay a closer rate to those that they employ. Meaning everybody pays the same amount of taxes. There aren't any specific numbers in regards to the actual rates, the Pres wants to leave that to the bean counters. Administration officials said that the number of millionaires effected by this new tax plan would be fewer than 450,000 taxpaying Americans; 144 million returns were filed in 2010 alone. So You do The Math. Should we even bother? Props to nytimes.com.
Alice Smith & Aloe Black- Baby (vid)
The gorgeous Alice Smith links up with this lucky bastard you might've heard of named Aloe Black for this superb slice of breezy soul. The track can be found on Red Hot & Rio 2 which is out now. Enjoy the visuals.
Mac Miller- Face The Facts (prod. by Dj Premier)
What ever your feelings you have about Mac Miller's skills the fact remains that he's now got a track from Premo & boy is it a doozy. Not sure where this is gonna end up but who care just enjoy this shit!! Props to DjPremierblog.
Curren$y- N.O. Shit
Curren$y's got a million of 'em!! (projects that is) This track is off of Spitta's MUSCLE CAR CHRONICLES album/movie that doesn't have an official release date yet but enjoy this track while you wait. Props to okayplayer.
King of The Beats: The Movie (part 1)
This is really dope!! Director Pritt Kalsi delivers his first full length feature documenting creation of King of The Beats. For more info on the movie & competition head over to kingofthebeats.com. Got this from cratekings.
Phonte- The Good Fight (prod. by 9th Wonder)
Phonte once again links up with his once lost recently found homie 9th Wonder for another track off his upcoming CHARITY STARTS AT HOME album dropping September 27th. You love it. Props to 2Dopeboyz.
Styles P ft. Sheek Louch- Brothers
This is a track off of Pinero's MASTER OF CEREMONIES available Oct 4th. Dope beat, classic Styles & Sheek, what more can you ask for?? Props to 2Dopeboyz.
Neutral Grey Nike Air Max 90 (Ninja Must Haves)
Oh hell muhfuckin yea,
A ninja's affinity for grey as close as it comes to the shade of smoke from disappearing in plain sight.
These remind of an older pair I had that had just a hint of yellow but these are definitely just as dope.
Thanks to the price tag being only $95 and probably negotiable at most of your local sneaker shops to probably around $80 most ninjas will be able to have these, easy... or you can be one of those guys that wait till foot locker has their infamous 50% sales, na mean.
Make sure your ninja attire matches up with these hot pairs which look like they can go with just about everything.
So get yours, cause I'ma get mine!
(thats what she said)
Wednesday, September 14, 2011
Showbiz & A.G.- Here And Now (prod. by Showbiz)
Man I cannot wait until this album comes out!! Here's another dope cut from Show & Andre's upcoming full length MUGSHOT MUSIC executive produced by DJ Premier. You love it. Props to 2Dopeboyz.
Dirty Ninja Live- 9.13.11
Video streaming by Ustream
Once again the guys convene to deliver the chaotic logic. Peace to Burnside & Random for stopping by, y'all are dope. I'd wanna apologize for missing out on posting these up for the last few weeks (a brotha was moving & Verizon had to reclaim their triple play) Anyways as always you can catch the ninja's every Tuesday @ 7pm eastern 4pm pacific.
Nikki Lynette- Live & Let Die (vid)
This is the latest video off of Nikki's ROSES N' GUNS 2: THE BADDER ASSED MIXTAPE, which is out now. BTW Wings is the shit!!
Apollo Brown & Hassan Mackey- Megaphone
Monday, September 12, 2011
Sage Francis- Makeshift Patriot (2001)
Sage recorded this song in October 2001 after the tragic attacks on 9/11. It's my opinion that Since 9/11 we've all been living on a kind of "auto pilot". Not taking the time to rationally & logically make sense out of the new world we found ourselves in. Choosing to act & react out of fear, hate, misinformation, greed, lust, envy or what have you. The scars we as a nation carry from that tragic day in history have come to define us amongst our own country men & the world at large. Now i'm not posting this to get on any "soap box" and preach but only to spark conversation & provoke thought. Whatever your position is on the war, immigration, rap, reality tv, Sarah Palin, the tea party, or the President doesn't really matter in the big picture. Those are your opinions and you're in the right country to have them. What does matter though are the facts and the unfortunate fact they all to often get muddled over by peoples opinion. This song is one man's opinion on what's was really going on in the hearts, minds on the streets & in our homes the days, months & years following September 11, 2001. Take from it what you will but please TURN IT UP!! Oh and don't forget to take more than a second and think. Peace. Props to 2Dopeboyz.
One & Done (by Angela Caputo)
Word to Tone on the below posts. New World Order is in full effect!! This is nuts, so nuts in fact i couldn't stand to paraphrase this compelling piece by Angela Caputo so i transcribed it. Stay Woke y'all. Props To Angee for putting me on to this story. Picked up from thecrimereport.org.
National guidelines for the eviction of public housing tenants who have had one brush with the law is taking a huge toll on already hard-pressed Chicago neighborhoods.
Jessica Moore showed up at Chicago’s Daley Center, shaken and without a lawyer. She had a bad feeling about how things might play out in court.
A lawyer hired by a company that manages Chicago Housing Authority (CHA) properties approached her. She followed him into courtroom 1302 and was ushered into a small conference area tucked away in the corner. A steady stream of eviction cases were called at the bench as they talked.
The CHA wanted to cut a deal: If she agreed to move out, the agency would let her and her six children stay seven days.
Moore balked.
“I’ll take it to trial,” she told him.
Moore, 39, is just one of hundreds of low-income residents the CHA has taken to eviction court for violating the agency’s one-strike policy during the past six years. The rule is part of a set of national guidelines created in 1996 to make public housing developments safer by ridding them of people who commit crime.
But there was a problem. Moore was no criminal.
One-Strike Rules
When the national policy was drafted, the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development empowered local housing authorities to tailor their own one-strike rules for best rooting out criminal activity as long as it was relevant to the peace and safety of its residents.
By the CHA’s standard, all arrests are subject to one-strike. As a result, tenants have lost their homes over nonviolent offenses, including shoplifting and marijuana possession.
The CHA had also chosen to evict leaseholders under one-strike for crimes committed by their children and anyone living in the unit, even if the crime occurred on property not owned by the CHA. Tenants are also culpable if their guests commit a crime on CHA property.
A new Chicago Reporter analysis found that from 2005 to 2010 the CHA opened 1,390 one-strike cases. The vast majority of them—86 percent in 2010—had nothing to do with the primary leaseholder.
When people were arrested, the person named on the lease was automatically summoned to eviction court, a civil matter, even though the criminal court cases were still pending in many instances.
If the CHA had considered how those cases played out in criminal court, it would have discovered that more than half of the defendants were found not guilty. Their cases were thrown out or they were never prosecuted, the Reporter analysis found. Instead, one in three tenants whose criminal cases were tossed out or ended with a “not guilty” verdict, had their entire household evicted or moved out without a fight, the analysis shows.
CHA lawyer Scott Ammarell said that his agency takes an across-the-board approach to pursuing a one-strike eviction policy, regardless of the severity of the charges.
“If we get an arrest report and the charge on the arrest report is an offense that will end somebody’s eligibility to continue to receive a subsidy from the federal government, we pursue it,” he said.
It’s a policy that newly elected Mayor Rahm Emanuel appears to stand by.
The mayor’s office declined an interview but issued a statement that said, “The Chicago Housing Authority has an obligation to provide the 30,000 individuals who currently reside in public housing with affordable and safe housing. The safety of CHA residents, its children and families as well as its neighbors is a top priority.”
Some critics say that the evictions are not only too harsh, but also premeditated.
Earlier this year, the CHA demolished the last of its 51 high-rise public housing buildings. It was part of the agency’s Plan for Transformation. Eligible residents will get new units in mixed-income neighborhoods or subsidies to move into the private rental market. By barring many from public housing, some speculate that the CHA can avoid having to move them into replacement units, which are currently in short supply.
The Reporter’s analysis found that the number of one-strike cases across the city increased sharply in CHA developments where demolition was eminent.
One-strike cases are the only type of public housing eviction where tenants have no chance to file a grievance or request an internal hearing. Their only shot at beating the case is in civil court.
But most CHA tenants can’t afford a lawyer. And they can face long odds at winning the case—even with a legal defense. Meanwhile, in the spring, the CHA attempted to revoke its “innocent tenant” clause, residents’ main avenue for fending off evictions in the courtroom.
The clause gives the head of household—the person who was not arrested, even if someone in their household was—a chance to plead their innocence and protect the housing unit for the rest of the family who wasn’t involved in the crime.
The CHA’s proposal to revoke the clause was quashed in late June after public uproar. But the defense is becoming a moot point in most of the newest one-strike cases because the private developers hired to create mixed-income communities aren’t required to consider culpability in pursuing an eviction.
That’s because the innocent tenant defense is not written into the lease agreement that tenants in the privatized developments are required to adhere to. Meanwhile, the number of one-strike cases continues to climb in these developments.
“We know the game,” said Shannon Bennett an organizer with the Kenwood Oakland Community Organization, which has been an outspoken critic of the policy for more than a decade. “These policies are intended to push people out.”
Cabrini-Green
No Chicago community has experienced more one-strike cases than Cabrini-Green.
The CHA had 74 public housing developments sprawled across the city. Yet, roughly one in five of the one-strike arrests involved Cabrini residents.
A decade ago, nearly 13,000 people lived in the Near North Side public housing community, which was anchored by 1230 N. Burling St. and seven other decaying concrete towers.
Today, the buildings are all gone; some have been replaced by mixed-income homes, apartments and condos. Many of the new residents of the area are increasingly white and college-educated, and just 444 of the units there are for public housing.
Moore moved in when she was 23.
Her paychecks never came close to covering rent in the private market. So for more than a decade, she and her children squeezed into a two-bedroom Cabrini-Green apartment at 624 W. Division St.
When a four bedroom at 1230 N. Burling St. opened in 2005, she and her children—whose ages at the time ranged from 1 to 13—jumped at the chance to spread out. She had just quit her job as a cashier at a Walgreens and enrolled in classes part-time at Robert Morris College working toward a business degree.
She crossed paths with her boyfriend Ricky Dyer not long after moving in. Dyer had a history with Cabrini. He was born in 1983 and grew up in the development. As a teenager, he earned a reputation as a drug dealer and was given the nickname “Rickdog.” By the time he was 20, he was convicted of selling drugs. He pleaded guilty to two felony counts and was sentenced to one year in prison.
Once he got out, Dyer moved back in with his mom and steered clear of major trouble, but he had a few run-ins with police. He was arrested for trespassing and public drinking, but both cases were tossed out.
Around that time, he and Moore began dating.
By 2009, their neighborhood had changed dramatically. Moore’s building was one of the last two Cabrini-Green high-rises left standing. Her building sat to the far left of a rusting gate that served as the official, but least used, entrance to the 15-story buildings known as “the whites” for their pale concrete exterior.
The other 21 mid- and high-rise buildings had been knocked down by the wrecking ball and replaced with red-brick town homes with lush shrubs, flawless concrete and quaint names, like North Town Village. Police were brought in to pay special attention to Burling Street, which was one of the last corners of the neighborhood occupied exclusively by public housing residents.
Under an agreement with the CHA, the agency and the Chicago Police Department freely exchanged arrest information. The two agencies signed off on the pact in 2000. If someone with a public housing address was arrested, or an arrest was made on the CHA’s property, police automatically passed along the police report to the CHA.
Burling residents became suspicious when police began showing up by the dozens. Moore knew that all it took was a single arrest to open a criminal-activity eviction. No conviction was required. No internal investigation was launched. And Moore knew from experience that the cops patrolling her building rarely flinched at throwing cuffs on her neighbors.
“The police would come into the building each day either knocking into somebody’s apartment or grabbing guys downstairs,” Moore said.
Arrests climbed as demolition of the building inched closer. Burling began to empty quickly. In the fall of 2010, only 39 of the building’s 134 units were occupied. During the last 20 months that the 1230 N. Burling St. building was occupied, 19 households were hit with a one-strike eviction. The leading cause for arrest was misdemeanor marijuana possession.
Love-Hate Relationship
Moore had a love-hate relationship with the police. On one hand, she feared them because she knew that her eldest son, Devonte, was becoming a troublemaker. At 16, he’d already been in and out of rehab after getting arrested for drugs.
While many of Moore’s neighbors did their best to avoid the police, she saw them as her last hope for reining in Devonte. He was hardheaded.
“I couldn’t tell him anything,” she said. She appealed to a couple of trusted cops known around Cabrini as “Eddie Murphy” and “Babyface” for their help. “I told them, ‘Stop him if he’s selling drugs. I don’t want to get put out.’”
Nothing prepared Moore for the morning of Sept. 25, 2009, when a team of 19 officers busted down her front door just after 8 a.m. as her children slipped on their shoes and backpacks on their way out to school.
For two hours, the officers picked through Moore’s four-bedroom apartment, finding $48 worth of marijuana stashed on a shelf in Devonte’s bedroom. During a pat down, a dime bag of cannabis, worth $12, was recovered from Dyer’s right shorts pocket. He was charged with misdemeanor pot possession.
Within days of the raid, Moore got her notice that her lease would be terminated.
The Reporter found that a growing number of families have similarly faced eviction based on low-level, misdemeanor charges. More than 70 percent of the one-strike cases involved drug possession; less than 10 percent were attributed to the drug dealing that one-strike was created largely to address.
A growing number of these cases are based on low-level crimes. In 2005, 40 percent of all one-strike arrests involved a misdemeanor charge. By 2010, that figure had grown to 76 percent, the Reporter found. A disproportionate number of those arrests involved black teens and men living in the two rapidly gentrifying Chicago wards, the 2nd and 27th, which have flipped from being majority black to racially mixed over the past decade.
Alderman Walter Burnett, whose 27th Ward includes Cabrini where he grew up, chalked up the spike in arrests in the area to the increased pressure city officials, the CHA and police face from new homeowners.
“Just look at 1230 Burling,” Burnett said. “Those [neighbors] complained about the building every day. Every day. Why? Because they wanted the building down. Why did they want the building down? One, because they thought it was affecting their property values.”
Moore fought for her apartment for six months. When her trial date finally came, police testified about Dyer’s pot possession. She lost, and a judge gave her and her children seven days to move.
“I’m like, ‘Where I’m gonna go with six kids?’” she asked.
In a gesture of mercy, Moore said, the CHA extended her move-out date to 60 days.
Cook County Sherriff’s police hauled the last bit of broken furniture out of her apartment on June 30, 2010. Nine months later, the Burling high-rise was demolished.
What happened to Moore, Burnett said, runs counter to what the CHA is given millions in federal anti-poverty dollars each year to do: stabilize families.
“CHA should be thinking about how to keep people in those apartments. They should be advocating toward helping people to keep their places, not finding ways to put them out,” said Burnett, who was convicted of armed robbery, a felony, at 17 when he was joy riding with friends in Kankakee.
“Everybody deserves a second chance.”
Sunday, September 11, 2011
Thursday, September 8, 2011
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