
Many of you may already know about the "interesting" comments made by rapper Slim Thug and his frustration about the lack of loyalty among black women. His comments were met with resistance by myself and Dr. Marc Lamont Hill from Columbia University, who gave him the stable advice to keep his mouth shut. I say that he needs to be quiet, not because he's wrong but because this is a battle he can't win and still sell records. Getting every black woman in America to hate you is simply not good for business. Even Talib Kweli, a fellow hip-hop artist, had something to say about Slim Thug's remarks.
On his Twitter page, Slim Thug went out of his way to try to protect his image in the face of all the backlash, particularly the open letter he received from Hill:
First for the record I did NOT write that blog I was being interviewed on the phone by Vibe so they didn't put all I said In the blog. 2nd we started out doing a interview about a skit I did on comedy central so I was in a joking mood.
They not putting my whole blog on these other sites. The reason I said Black women have to lower their standards is because while Black successful woman or a majority Black successful men are a minority so if u want a Black successful man u have to work harder to find one and keep one. I'm not a professor, I'm a rapper so the women I meet and the women u meet are different.
He also argues that he actually favors black women, in contrast to public opinion since his unfortunate remarks.
It's my blog so I gave ya'll my story of my life and the women I meet. I NEVER been in a relationship with a white woman, If u go back and read my blog, [it says] my BROTHER dates a white woman and teases me about the drama I go thru with my Black women. So [if that is what I said, then] how did I put white women over Black women? I said this is what he jokes with me and says.
What we have here, my friends, is standard class warfare. Slim Thug is correct that as a rapper, he has a different lifestyle and meets different women than, say, Hill might meet as a professor. What makes this class warfare fascinating, however, is that Hill and Slim both represent the diversity, yet commonality, which exists among all black men. I'm reminded of an outstanding documentary made by Byron Hurt called 'Curtis & Barack,' in which he explains how much the rapper 50 Cent has in common with Barack Obama. I loved the concept of the documentary, because I completely agreed with Hurt's assessment that many successful human beings possess similar traits. Barack Obama is a brilliant leader who achieved the impossible, and the same can be said about 50 Cent -- the man who grew up in a home full of drug users and dealers and still became one of the richest celebrities on earth.
When I think about Marc Lamont Hill and Slim Thug, two men I respect, I see two brothers who've achieved very different styles of success using a common brand of hustle that ambitious black men tend to possess. I love what Hill brings to the dialogue, because he reminds us that the same ambition it takes to become a rapper or basketball player can be used to become a professor, doctor or lawyer. In spite of what some might suspect, I bet that Marc and Slim listen to the same music, play basketball on similar courts and admire the same women. Seeing them come together to debate the important topic of black relationships is actually quite informative and reflects the need to understand the growing diversity of successful black men. Also, we have to remember that not every hip-hop artist has issues with black women. There are many artists who adore black women, like the rapper Vigalantee out of Kansas City, who actually wrote a song dedicated to them.
All the while, I reiterate to Slim Thug that it's time to kill this conversation. If I were his manager, I'd tell him to write a song right now called 'An Ode to Black Women' and give money to some kind of charity for little girls. This is not a fight he's going to win, and he'd be better off leaving this conversation to scholars who aren't doing this just to make money.
Dr. Boyce Watkins is the founder of the Your Black World Coalition and the author of the new book 'Black American Money.' To have Dr. Boyce's commentary delivered to your e-mail, please click here. 

Comments: (39)
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By: DegreedUp on 6/13/2010 1:29PM
"he'd be better off leaving this conversation to scholars who aren't doing this just to make money."
For a moment, I (mistakenly?) thought you were implying that professional scholar-professors are doing what they do for more meritorious reasons than Slim Thug is doing what he is doing. That's not what you were implying was it?
Professional scholar-professors, particularly those who venture ambitiously into the exoteric public media realm to champion their ideas or their careers (or both), might not be doing what they're doing purely for money. But some of them venture into some social contests expecting to earn other forms of compensation, like prestige.
Influenced by Pierre Bourdieu's and C. Wright Mills's sociological ideas, I believe we compensate folks, particularly those who reproduce the most politically and economically powerful cultures excellently, with some combination of wealth, power, and prestige. The better one reproduces the most powerful cultures, the more money one makes, the more power one gets to wield, the more prestige one is granted, ceteris paribus.
Our professional scholar-professors almost always serve as the vanguards for those powerful cultures, even the tenured ones who are labeled as iconoclasts or activists. Moreover, they choose their roles in our society because, due to their circumstances, personalities, talents, or tastes, the professional scholar-professor's career path attracted them more than other career paths, such as the big law firm power-lawyer's, or the career politician's, or the emergency room physician's, or the gangsta rapper's.
So we might not pay our professional scholar-professors in cash as much as we pay our similarly intellectually talented and successful lawyers, doctors, entrepreneurs, or gangsta rappers, but we sure pay them a lot in prestige.
So, just like Slim Thug, they do what they do to get paid. And I'm not really sure how one would argue persuasively that their reasons for doing what they do, considering how they get paid, are more meritorious than Slim Thug's.
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By: carol on 6/13/2010 3:08PM
SLIM B****H NEEDS TO SHUT UP BECAUSE HE SOUNDS VERY IGNORANT. WHAT ABOUT LACK OF LOYALTY FROM MEN? I DATED ALL RACES & IVE SEEN TRIFLING THINGS FROM MEN OF ALL RACES SO ITS NOT A RACE THING ITS A PERSONALITY ISSUE. PLEASE IN THE FUTURE, THINK BEFORE YOU SPEAK, BECAUSE YOU SEEM VERY IMMATURE.
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By: sandi on 6/13/2010 3:35PM
Boyce, please stop trying to align yourself with Professor Hill in this matter. You did not come to the defense of black women the way he did. He is a lone ranger in a field of black males who either continue to remain silent in the media or actually agree with "Slim Thug." And I find it very catty that you would try to slyly discredit him by questioning his motivations.
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By: kim on 6/13/2010 5:11PM
Please, Dr. Boyce knows what he did. He is nothing but another black hustler who uses black people to further his career. What goes around comes around. I hope he remebers that. I also hope he knows that a lot of people are getting sick of his BS. He better learn to duck and role.
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By: Fashionedbygod33 on 6/13/2010 11:52PM
LOL @ Sandi and Kim. I hear you'll.
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By: tanisha on 6/14/2010 4:51PM
Sandi you are right. Boyce is using blacks for his gain. Most of what he writes about is ridiculous and has no merit. He is a phony.
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By: Observer on 6/13/2010 5:29PM
Who does this guy think he is having an opinion and all. He needs to just shut up and go back too rapping about being a boss in his slow motion style.
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By: Observer on 6/13/2010 5:34PM
I was going to go with white girl but you got me with that high blood pressure.....The answer is hispanic right? Oh wait you said eye rolling....gotta be asian, right? No asian have good eating habits. Wait a minute are you describing a gay man? Right after eye rolling you said "no talking" I've never met a woman that doesn't talk, but gay men can't have babies......I just don't know tell me........Tell me.......TELL ME!!!!!!
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By: dvine on 6/14/2010 12:28PM
lol...
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By: quitehonestly on 6/14/2010 3:39PM
your great grandma , your grandma ,your mother , and now you, do you have any children,if you dont we have a measure of hope ... though it's centuries away
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