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(AllHipHop News) Rap mogul Jermaine Dupri is at the center of a lawsuit over his 2005 Lamborghini Murcielago.
Premier Financial Services recently filed a lawsuit against the So So Def mogul in Georgia Superior Court, claiming he has failed to make payments on the car.
According to the lawsuit, Jermaine Dupri made a $70,000 down payment on the car and financed the remainder of the luxury vehicle at a price of $330,000.
He was to make 58 payments at a cost of $4,323, but around 2009, the mogul defaulted on the loan.
The lawsuit claims that Jermaine Dupri still owes almost $80,000 on the Lamborghini.
According to reports, Jermaine Dupri’s Lamborghini has already been repossessed and sold for $115,000, but the company is suing the rapper/producer for $79,095 damages.
NICKI AND KIM BREAKING DOWN BEEF?
What is going on? I am hearing buzzing that the ladies of Lil Kim and Nicki Minaj are working on peacing the beef. Honestly, this could just be jibber jabber chatter. I don’t know. At any rate, you know Nicki just released another “Roman” song where she is seemingly dissing Kim again. Anyway, on the flip side, Kim has a 5-song EP later in the month, a Christmas gift for the fans. I don’t know that she is going to be going at Nicki…with the talk of peace…we’ll see.
Lets get back to basics.

CANIBUS HAS LOST IT!
I saw this on Twitter yesterday and I couldn’t believe it. Canibus is dissing J.Cole for paying his respects to him. What the hell. Peep what he said on Facebook:
“Currently, new artists such as J Cole have continuously mentioned me as their favorite artist, shouted me out in articles, magazine/online interviews, and even gone as far as starting off show sets by playing some of my earlier material to warm up the audience and give off the impression that he is real hip hop and loves real lyricism. Cole might say he does this to pay homage, but in reality, by him playing my older material owned by my former label dating back to 1998, subsequently overlooking my current works and contributions which directly benefit me now, he is treating me less like an artist that has, and continues to contribute, influence, and inspire an even younger generation of MC’s coming up, and more like an artist that has physically passed on already(i.e. Tupac, B.I.G., Big L, Heavy D, Eyeda): you get the point I’m trying to make. I can’t help but to think that he is not nearly as sincere or genuine as he would like real hip hop heads to think he is because he speaks about me like I am dead. What he is doing is underhanded and disingenuous and whether it is his idea or not, I don’t agree with his tactic and I have something to say about it. Some might look to label me as an older head picking on a younger head who claims to have been influenced by me, but I refuse to let anyone including him stand on what we built, and pompously extract only the parts that suit them and their undermining intentions under the guise of “paying homage”. I’m sick of it. That’s fake, fraudulent, and misrepresents mine and others contributions, and significance to hip-hop music. After watching many many interviews of Clone, I mean Cole “pay homage”, I decided to pay some homage to him myself because I am still alive and well and ready to throw down for Hip Hop.”
Check “J. Clone” from Canibus.
I don’t agree with this. J. Cole just went gold and now this is summed up in one line. Canibus said: “…we could have recorded a track, you could give me a stack for a verse…” Cole doesn’t owe Canibus anything. This is despicable.
(AllHipHop News) Special One of the Conscious Daughters has died suddenly.
Special One, nee Karryl Smith, is an artist long affiliated with The Coup and was one of the more infamous rappers that always carried a powerful message in the music.
CMG, the rap partner of Special One, wrote a note on Facebook, revealing the death of her friend.
“Thank you to everyone for your prayers I need them. I am sick over the loss of my sister. The cause of death is still unknown but I will try to share info when I get it. Pray for me and Karryl’s other sisters Jessica and Tonya. We are all together trying to get through this.”
Friends and family have poured their condolences over social media, including Facebook and Twitter.
Activist Dave “Davey D” Cook said on Twitter, “To those of us who knew Special One and to her family and her partner CMG who found her in her apt.. Hugs, prayers & support.”
The Conscious Daughters debuted in 1993 with Ear To The Street and they released two subsequent LP’s, Gamers (1996) and The Nutcracker Suite (2009).
Rapper Fat Trel Stabbed in Maryland!!
D.C. rapper Fat Trel was stabbed in the leg earlier today (December 11), and is currently posted up in a hospital in Prince Georges County, Maryland. Although he doesn’t really explain what went down, he did release the following “message”:
“L T GON KILL ME…BUT IM STILL DOING DEZE SHOWz I GOT KUMMIN UP! AYE YALL…SAY WZUP 2 MY NURSE…MS.HOUSTON…SHE CRYED4 ME…SHE SAY SHE GOT DA VIBE DAT PPL LOVE ME. DAMN…MY NURSE “JUS PRAY” SPEECH ALMOST MADE ME CRY…I DEFINATELY GOTTA GET NURSE HOUSTON A GIFT…SHE CALLED MY TWITTER A “PLATFORM.” DEY GOT 30 MOR MINz OF TIME…DEN IM ROLLIN OUT..DAMN. LFUKKKKKK I GOT STABBED ON SUNDAY!!! NO LIQUOR STORE… FUKKKKKKKKKKKKKLLKLKL. LLS DEY HAD DA NETVE 2 TELL ME IF I CANT WALK DEY KEEPING ME…LLS WISH YALL COULD OF SEEN MY FACE WEN DEY SAID DAT. WAIT YALL…NO SHOWZ WILL BE CANCELLED PLZ DONT START RUMORz. GUN SHOT AINT GOT SHYT ON A STAB WOUND! KILL…LEG WAZ NUMB B4 DEY DOPED ME UP”
A “be thankful,” “thank God,” and “get well soon” are always in order during these times, so we wish him a speedy recovery. For those not familiar, this is Fat Trel:
The MegaUpload Song featuring Kanye, Chris Brown, Diddy, and MANY MORE!!
Sigh.
Quickies:
-Via a new teaser announcement, DJ Khaled has revealed that his new album will be titled Kiss the Ring. No thanks, we’re good, but best wishes.
-A Jackie Robinson biopic is in the works and on the fast track to hit theaters sometime in late 2012. Any thoughts on who should play #42??
-R&B fans in the NYC area, Anthony Hamilton will be performing a free show at the Apple Store on W. 14th Street on Tuesday at 8:00PM.
-In a recent interview with Cipha Sounds and Peter Rosenberg of Hot 97, 50 Cent admitted to “smashing” TV host Chelsea Handler. Duh…tell us something we don’t know, Fif.
-Not only did Jay-Z mention a second Watch The Throne album last week, he also said do be on the lookout for new solo albums from both himself and Kanye West in 2012. Yes!
-In other 50 Cent news, he just announced plans to release a fitness book and fitness guide. Get that $$$ (and that constant attention you seek)!
-Canibus has just released a new diss track entitled “J. Clone”…guess who he’s going after?
-Saigon has announced that he’ll release a new mixtape on January 24 entitled WS3:One Foot in the Grave.
“I’m locked inside a cell in me, I know that there’s a jail in you”
People from across the country traveled for hours to attend the December rally in Chicago to demand the freedom of their beloved comrade in struggle. For hours, speaker after speaker pounded on the podium demanding that their brother be released so that he could, once again, be free to speak truth to power as the crowd chanted wildly. They weren’t chanting “Free Mumia” or “Free Mutulu.” Nah, they were chanting “Free Kanye!”
Despite the title of Kanye West’s 2004 cd “College Dropout” and the follow up “Late Registration,” both were hailed, by many , as the return of politically conscious lyrics to the mainstream. With songs like “All Falls Down” and “Diamonds from Sierra Leone,” if Kanye wasn’t the second coming of Chuck D, in a rap world dominated by the Ying Yang Twins, he was close enough. Expectations were lifted even higher when he made the infamous post Hurricane Katrina observation that “George Bush don’t like black people.” But then something strange happened on the Road to Revolution, Kanye’s lyrics were suddenly depoliticized and dumb downed. Nowadays, Kanye is more known for corny catch phrases and snatchin’ mics from lil country girls at award shows than political wit.
Of course, Kanye isn’t the only one. After all, Common’s latest song isn’t exactly droppin’ science, either. But Kanye is killing the game,right now, as he is leading the pack in Grammy nominations, making him the biggest waste of talent at the moment.
While some may argue that West and the others just had creative changes of direction, others say that they are victims of the same political repression that has plagued radical thinkers for centuries. History books are full of examples of people who were imprisoned, exiled or assassinated for their ideas.
Historically, oppressive, ideological societies have hated free thinkers. Even Galileo was locked down in 17th century Italy for teaching Heliocentrism (the sun is the center of the Universe). So, free thinkers have always been a threat to the status quo because of their potential to free the minds others.
In America, the persecution was no different.
According to Dr. Charsee McIntyre, in “Criminalizing the Race,” the colonization movement to deport free blacks to Africa was started because free blacks “served as models of Freedom to enslaved blacks and inspired resurrections. “
It must be noted that the threat of radical idealists within the music industry has also been a thorn in the side of the establishment.
In his book “The Covert War Against Rock” Alex Constantine alleges that the deaths of singers such as Peter Tosh, John Lennon and Bob Marley were really well orchestrated, politically motivated assassinations to silence them.
Perhaps the greatest threat to the social order has been Hip Hop. John Potash, in his book, “The FBI War on Tupac Shakur and Black Leaders” gives a rundown of artists who experienced government repression not because of club jams but because of their political activities. The book raises the issue that Tupac Shakur’s gangsta turn after being sentenced to life on Death Row Records after his release from prison may not have been a coincidence. Perhaps it was just a plot to render one of the most potentially, powerful voices to ever pick up a mic, politically impotent and socially irrelevant.
We must understand that even while in the slammer, freedom fighters such as Dr. Martin Luther King (Letter From the Birmingham Jail) and George Jackson (Soledad Brothers) still managed to get their words to the masses. Also, Mumia Abu-Jamal has still been able to smuggle information to the people by reporting “Live From Death Row.” The difference is, unlike many Hip Hop artists, they would not allow their minds to become incarcerated.
Although, some may consider comparing Hip Hop artists like Kanye West to political prisoners like Mumia and Mutulu Shakur ,blasphemous, when we consider that political incarceration is about locking down themind more so than the body the connection is clear. While many acts of political repression have been carried out with guns and chains, in Hip Hop, it has been done by a signature on a contract. There is little difference between someone sentenced to a 10 year prison bid and someone being confined to a 10 year recording deal that restricts their freedom of speech in terms of their relevance to oppressed communities.
This idea is not without precedence. Lupe Fiasco has been outspoken about the industry’s attempt to “dumb em down.” Also, it was once rumored that former G Unit soldier, Young Buck had to remove a song about police brutality from his cd because of pressure from a mysterious “lyric committee.”
Unfortunately, it is not just the artists that are in mental prisons but fans as well. As every time a rapper enters into a mental prison, he carries a legion of followers with him.
So, the question is how do we free Hip Hop artists and consequently, free the minds of their fans.
According to Peter Doggett, in his work, “There’s a Riot Going On,” back in the 60’s, activists formed the Dylan Liberation Front (later the Rock Liberation Front) to “liberate” artists, like Bob Dylan, who they felt had turned their backs on the struggle and “sold out to the man.”
Maybe, in 2011, we need a Kanye Hip Hop Liberation Front to do the same.
After all, if Jadakiss and his crew could stage a successful “Free the Lox” campaign back in the day to get released from Bad Boy , why can’t we politicize it and start a “Free Kanye Campaign” to free him from Roc-a-fella.
Something has to be done to free incarcerated minds and it has to be done now.
As Bob Marley once sang “Emancipate yourselves from mental slavery, none but ourselves can free our minds.
TRUTH Minista Paul Scott represents the Militant Mind Militia. He can be reached at mi*****************@***il.com website http://www.militantmindmilitia.com @truthminista