West Coast Connection Forum

Lifestyle => Train of Thought => Topic started by: J Bananas on November 23, 2005, 05:32:06 PM

Title: Nature of the Threat - An anthropology class in one song
Post by: J Bananas on November 23, 2005, 05:32:06 PM
Let freedom ring with a buckshot, but not just yet
We need to truly understand the nature of the threat
And a pale man walks in the threshold of darkness
Roughly 20,000 years ago the first humans evolved with
The phenotypical trait, genetic recessive blue eyes, blonde hair and
white skin
Albinism apparently was a sin to the original man, Africans,
So the mutants traveled north of the equator
Called Europeans later, the first race haters
So here's the devils' alpha to the beta
Cuz history's best qualified to teach one
Quoting German philosopher Schopenhauer
'Every white man is a faded or bleached one'
Migration created further mutation
Genetic drifts, evolution through recombination
Adaptation to the climate
As the Caucus Mountain man reverted to that of a primate
Savage Neanderthals until the late Paleolithic age
That's when the Black Grimaldi man came
With the symbol of the dragon
Fire and art
Check cave paintings in France and Spain to the Venus of Willendorf
Around 2000 B.C. southern Russians migrate in small units
Those who traveled west populated Europe
Those who went east settled in Iran, known as Aryans
1500 B.C. some crossed the Khyber pass into India and
Created Hinduism, the first caste system
The origins of racism
A white dot on the forehead meant elite
A black dot-the feet
Untrustable, untouchables
They wrote the holy Vedas in Sanskrit
That's the language that created Greek, German, Latin and English
Now the Minoans also around 2000 B.C.
Start on the island of Crete in the Agean Sea
The Greek culture begins Western Civilization
But 'Western Civilization' means 'White Domination'
Myceneans learned from Kemet, called Egypt in Greek
It had existed since at least 3000 B.C.
Creating geometry and astronomy
This knowledge influenced Plato, Socrates and Hippocrates
Cuz Imhotep the real real father of medicine
Was worshiped in Greece and Rome in the form of a Black African
The word Africa comes from the Greek Aphrike meaning 'without cold'
 
The word philosophy means 'love of knowledge'... stole from first man
Greek power expands
The first Greek fraternities band
The word gymnasium is Greek for 'naked'
This was the place where adolescent boys were educated and molested
This was accepted cuz Greek culture was homosexual
for example, Sappho trained girls on the island of Lesbos
Hence, the word lesbian (let these muthafuckas know)
December 25, the birth of Saturn
A homosexual god, now check the historical pattern
December 25, now thought the birth of Christ
Was Saturnalia, when men got drunk, fucked each other then they beat
their wife
Fact is, it was still practiced, until they called it Christmas
So put a gerbil on your Christmas list

The Hellenistic Era, Alexander the Great
Conquers all the way to India leaving four successor states
By the Fifth century B.C.
R.O.M.E. succeeds to be
The conqueror of Egypt and Greece
But had the threat of the Black Phoenicians in Sicily
The Punic Wars began 264 B.C.
The Black general Hannibal and Carthaginian Peace
In 146 B.C. Carthage fell after a six-month siege
Rome sold every citizen into slavery, the first genocide in history
And more bisexuality in sight
Julius Caesar was known as 'every woman's husband and every man's wife'
Spartacus Revolt-a slave rebellion that lost
Where 6,000 slaves got nailed on a cross...
Cross? Aw, shit! Jesus Christ!
Time for some-act-right
Christians get your facts right
Cuz Christ was not his name, that's Greek for 'one who is anointed'
Yoshua Ben  Yosef was his name, do Christians know this?
So who do you praise, do you know his name?
Or do you do this in vain?
Accepting the religion they gave slaves to behave
Peep the description of historian Josephus
Short, dark, with an underdeveloped beard was Jesus
He had the Romans fearing revolution
The solution was to take him to court and falsely accuse him
After being murdered by Pilate how can it be
Title: Re: Nature of the Threat - An anthropology class in one song
Post by: Sikotic™ on November 23, 2005, 05:40:12 PM
It's a very bias perspective, but dope ass song nonetheless.

Put a gerbil on your Christmas list
Title: Re: Nature of the Threat - An anthropology class in one song
Post by: Shallow on November 23, 2005, 06:15:39 PM
We get one these threads every now and then. It's an alright tune, but fighting propaganda with different propaganda doesn't help anything.
Title: Re: Nature of the Threat - An anthropology class in one song
Post by: Lincoln on November 23, 2005, 06:17:08 PM
I'd rather just read the Isis Papers.
Title: Re: Nature of the Threat - An anthropology class in one song
Post by: Shallow on November 23, 2005, 06:24:28 PM
I'd rather just read the Isis Papers.



Nah, I'd rather just get through all that bullshit in a few minutes rather than take hours to read it.




Now when's Vanilla Ice or Em gonna put "Mein Kampf" to music. That would be something.
Title: Re: Nature of the Threat - An anthropology class in one song
Post by: Real American on November 23, 2005, 06:26:14 PM
I'd rather just read the Isis Papers.

That is single handedly the dumbest book of all time.

The chapters on sports are priceless.
Title: Re: Nature of the Threat - An anthropology class in one song
Post by: Sikotic™ on November 23, 2005, 06:30:29 PM
Now when's Vanilla Ice or Em gonna put "Mein Kampf" to music. That would be something.

We'll riot in the streets god damn it!
Title: Re: Nature of the Threat - An anthropology class in one song
Post by: Lincoln on November 23, 2005, 07:25:13 PM
Lol, I was just kidding about reading it. C-Walker, what are the sports parts?
Title: Re: Nature of the Threat - An anthropology class in one song
Post by: Trauma-san on November 23, 2005, 08:56:29 PM
I love when celebrities show us how "deep" they are. 
Title: Re: Nature of the Threat - An anthropology class in one song
Post by: Sikotic™ on November 24, 2005, 01:23:15 AM
Celebrities and artists aren't allowed to? It's called expression.
Title: Re: Nature of the Threat - An anthropology class in one song
Post by: 7even on November 24, 2005, 01:36:32 AM
racist propaganda with a non-existant 'flow'

but you didnt even paste the whole text, some funny parts are missing

let me son ras kass in a minute:
Quote
Albinism apparently was a sin to the original man, Africans,
So the mutants traveled north of the equator
Called Europeans later, the first race haters

ok, being white was a sin and shit, so the whites were driven out, but those white are the first race haters then?  :loser:
not even to talk about how made up it is.
Title: Re: Nature of the Threat - An anthropology class in one song
Post by: Trauma-san on November 24, 2005, 07:24:05 AM
Celebrities and artists aren't allowed to? It's called expression.

They're allowed to have an opinion, sure... but whenever they want to present themselves as 'deep', we're allowed to ridicule them. 

Title: Re: Nature of the Threat - An anthropology class in one song
Post by: J Bananas on November 24, 2005, 12:07:59 PM
Definetly Ras Kass is biased and a little bit full of shit, but there are several interesting facts i didn't know about prior to hearing the track. I didn't know what Saturnalia was, I didnt know julius caeser was a fag either, I also didnt know white people came out of the caucus mountains (but that makes sense), I'm not saying take it whole heartedly, but it's still one of my favorite tracks of all time just thought i'd share with yall
Title: Re: Nature of the Threat - An anthropology class in one song
Post by: Sikotic™ on November 24, 2005, 01:09:50 PM
I didn't know Julius Ceasar was a fag either. We should of known though, look at what he wore.
Title: Re: Nature of the Threat - An anthropology class in one song
Post by: BizzyR.I.P. on November 24, 2005, 01:13:45 PM
I didn't know Julius Ceasar was a fag either. We should of known though, look at what he wore.
Most Greeks & Romans were gay/bisexual. They didn't have a problem with it until the spread of Christianity. The church said it was wrong to be gay.
Title: Re: Nature of the Threat - An anthropology class in one song
Post by: white Boy on November 24, 2005, 01:15:56 PM
yea, this beat sucks and rass has no flow, ill just give him props on what he tried to do, but you really wana go in depth in the song and do your research, hes just splurting out a lot of shit from his asshole...
Title: Re: Nature of the Threat - An anthropology class in one song
Post by: Shallow on November 24, 2005, 02:32:11 PM
I didn't know Julius Ceasar was a fag either. We should of known though, look at what he wore.
Most Greeks & Romans were gay/bisexual. They didn't have a problem with it until the spread of Christianity. The church said it was wrong to be gay.


A lot of well read and philosophical Greeks and Romans were bisexual. There is no proof that most were, and there is next to know proof that the common man was.

The elite of every culture had fucked up shit going on. Many high class Egyptians would marry their sisters and have children. I've even heard of one case where a pharoah marrried his mother. The average Egyptian like the average Greek just lived a normal life.

That's a question for the ages; if you had to choose between fucking another man or your mother or sister which would you pick?


P.S. I'm not sure if Caesar practiced bisexuality. I'm pretty sure Augustus Caesar greatly rejected it.
Title: Re: Nature of the Threat - An anthropology class in one song
Post by: makaveli11 on November 24, 2005, 02:43:05 PM
^^^damn...talking about a question. Man or mother/or sister... :puke: :puke: :puke:

*gun laying on the table looking rather appealing...*

None. I would never have sex. :'( :'( :'( I hope... :-\
Title: Re: Nature of the Threat - An anthropology class in one song
Post by: Sikotic™ on November 24, 2005, 03:30:40 PM
Depends on how good my sister/mother looked (http://www.mjnewsonline.com/board/images/smilies/raiseroof.gif)
Title: Re: Nature of the Threat - An anthropology class in one song
Post by: J Bananas on November 24, 2005, 08:40:15 PM
Quote
*gun laying on the table looking rather appealing...*

haha word
Title: Re: Nature of the Threat - An anthropology class in one song
Post by: [sepehr] on November 24, 2005, 09:01:06 PM
It's a lot of BS, but it's still a sick song to me..I really hope he doesn't fully believe that tho
Title: Re: Nature of the Threat - An anthropology class in one song
Post by: nibs on November 26, 2005, 12:11:32 PM
it's mostly real shit he's kicking.  some of it is slightly questionable (the origins of man and race), but if a person summed up judiasm or christianity in a song, 80% of that shit would be fiction too, seeing as it's a fictional religion.  ras' song is more meaningful and accurate than what you'd hear in the historical accounts that most religions espouse.  people that don't like the truism's ras speaks try to pick out a line here or there and then try to dismiss the whole work based on a couple questionable lines.

i agree that his flow is horrible on this track, the beat is horrible as well.  ras stepped it up 200% on "interview with a vampire" and "music of the business" in terms of dropping knowledge in a song.
Title: Re: Nature of the Threat - An anthropology class in one song
Post by: Machiavelli on November 26, 2005, 01:02:56 PM
Quote
Roughly 20,000 years ago the first humans evolved
with the phenotypical trait, genetic recessive
Blue eyes, blonde hair and white skin

Albinism apparently was a sin to the original man, Africans
So the mutants traveled North of the equator
Called Europeans later, the first race haters

wow what a dumbass
Title: Re: Nature of the Threat - An anthropology class in one song
Post by: Eihtball on November 26, 2005, 01:43:33 PM
Songs like this (probably this one in particulary) are the main reason that "Soul On Ice" got pulled off a lot of record store shelves when it first came out...which of course meant that he started ripping on white folk even MORE on his next album about censorship.  Ras has always struck me as being obsessively Afrocentric, often to a lunatic extent that's pretty much racist.  He still has a sick flow, though, but not as good as Chino XL (remember that "Riot" song?  Chino obviously outshined him on that).
Title: Re: Nature of the Threat - An anthropology class in one song
Post by: Sikotic™ on November 26, 2005, 02:35:51 PM
I've been getting into Chino alot more lately. Dude's got really crazy shit, its a shame he isn't recognized for it.
Title: Re: Nature of the Threat - An anthropology class in one song
Post by: BizzyR.I.P. on November 26, 2005, 02:38:37 PM
it's mostly real shit he's kicking.  some of it is slightly questionable (the origins of man and race), but if a person summed up judiasm or christianity in a song, 80% of that shit would be fiction too, seeing as it's a fictional religion.  ras' song is more meaningful and accurate than what you'd hear in the historical accounts that most religions espouse.  people that don't like the truism's ras speaks try to pick out a line here or there and then try to dismiss the whole work based on a couple questionable lines.

i agree that his flow is horrible on this track, the beat is horrible as well.  ras stepped it up 200% on "interview with a vampire" and "music of the business" in terms of dropping knowledge in a song.
I also like Interview With a Vampire alot more then Nature of the Threat. Nature of the Threat is still dope.
Title: Re: Nature of the Threat - An anthropology class in one song
Post by: J Bananas on November 26, 2005, 02:40:50 PM
yeah interview with a vampire i one of my favs, but theres something off about the way the vocals were recorded at certain spots which i cant get over
Title: Re: Nature of the Threat - An anthropology class in one song
Post by: Shallow on November 26, 2005, 03:36:42 PM
it's mostly real shit he's kicking.  some of it is slightly questionable (the origins of man and race), but if a person summed up judiasm or christianity in a song, 80% of that shit would be fiction too, seeing as it's a fictional religion.  ras' song is more meaningful and accurate than what you'd hear in the historical accounts that most religions espouse.  people that don't like the truism's ras speaks try to pick out a line here or there and then try to dismiss the whole work based on a couple questionable lines.

i agree that his flow is horrible on this track, the beat is horrible as well.  ras stepped it up 200% on "interview with a vampire" and "music of the business" in terms of dropping knowledge in a song.


The difference is that blatant evidence proves a lot of what Ras says as wrong. With the Bible there really aren't many sources that say otherwise because there aren't any other sources. Someone writing about Christianity as you say would be writing fiction but what is writing fact? There is nothing that documents Jesus's life other than the Bible (and the Quran I guess, plusa few otheer sources about his lost years). What you write about it is based on what you believe it was. You can believe the Bible or the Quran, or you can believe neither, but you cannot say it is fiction unless you have solid evidence or proof. Nature of the Threat has many theories and descriptions that are disputed by hundreds or primary sources that state otherwise.
Title: Re: Nature of the Threat - An anthropology class in one song
Post by: nibs on November 26, 2005, 03:50:20 PM
Someone writing about Christianity as you say would be writing fiction but what is writing fact? There is nothing that documents Jesus's life other than the Bible

the reason it's not documented is because it's mostly fiction.  it largely represents an accumulation of stories, tales and myths that were passed down.  it's like if i started arguing that the "chronicles of narnia" was a true story, but the problem is that it's only recorded by the one source (c.s. lewis)...
Title: Re: Nature of the Threat - An anthropology class in one song
Post by: Shallow on November 27, 2005, 08:17:26 AM
Someone writing about Christianity as you say would be writing fiction but what is writing fact? There is nothing that documents Jesus's life other than the Bible

the reason it's not documented is because it's mostly fiction.  it largely represents an accumulation of stories, tales and myths that were passed down.  it's like if i started arguing that the "chronicles of narnia" was a true story, but the problem is that it's only recorded by the one source (c.s. lewis)...


Again, the difference is that you could probably find interviews of Lewis talking about it as fiction and it was implied as fiction. Early christians weren't voluntarily feeding themselves to lions based on what was implied ficition. They believed it was true. I'm not saying one way or the other. I'm just saying you can't for certain say one way or another.
Title: Re: Nature of the Threat - An anthropology class in one song
Post by: TraceOneInfinite Flat Earther 96' on November 29, 2005, 02:34:07 AM


A lot of well read and philosophical Greeks and Romans were bisexual. There is no proof that most were, and there is next to know proof that the common man was.

The elite of every culture had fucked up shit going on. Many high class Egyptians would marry their sisters and have children. I've even heard of one case where a pharoah marrried his mother. The average Egyptian like the average Greek just lived a normal life.

That's a question for the ages; if you had to choose between fucking another man or your mother or sister which would you pick?


P.S. I'm not sure if Caesar practiced bisexuality. I'm pretty sure Augustus Caesar greatly rejected it.

"I've heard Egyptians"...?  Man... bring your proof, you got a reputation for making up stuff just to push your "everybody's messed up" doctrine.
Title: Re: Nature of the Threat - An anthropology class in one song
Post by: TraceOneInfinite Flat Earther 96' on November 29, 2005, 02:40:10 AM
I love when celebrities show us how "deep" they are. 

^^^ I know ever since celebrities like Micheal Moore became critical of the Bush administration, what your saying has become the new, cool thing for Zionist-Christian Conservative boys and girls to talk about at their coed volleyball tournaments.  But there's just one problem, Ras Kass isn't a celebrity, and he surely wasn't a celebrity when he dropped this album and made his record.  He was a hip-hop artist.  To be a great hip-hop artist you have to be a great writer and you have to convey your perspective on the world, that's his job; and at that time he was one of the best at it. 
Title: Re: Nature of the Threat - An anthropology class in one song
Post by: Shallow on November 29, 2005, 06:40:54 AM


A lot of well read and philosophical Greeks and Romans were bisexual. There is no proof that most were, and there is next to know proof that the common man was.

The elite of every culture had fucked up shit going on. Many high class Egyptians would marry their sisters and have children. I've even heard of one case where a pharoah marrried his mother. The average Egyptian like the average Greek just lived a normal life.

That's a question for the ages; if you had to choose between fucking another man or your mother or sister which would you pick?


P.S. I'm not sure if Caesar practiced bisexuality. I'm pretty sure Augustus Caesar greatly rejected it.

"I've heard Egyptians"...?  Man... bring your proof, you got a reputation for making up stuff just to push your "everybody's messed up" doctrine.


Incest in ancient Egypt is no secret. I'm just not sure about the mother/son marriage. Close cousin and brother sister marriaiges were common.

"Marrige was a very important part af ancient Egyptian society. Some people say it was almost a duty to get married. Husbands could marry more than one wife, and people of close relations (first cousins, brothers and sisters, ect.) could also wed one another. For the most part, however, incest was frowned upon, except in the royal family, where incest was used to safeguard the dynastic succession."

http://www.crystalinks.com/egyptianwomen.html


"Incest was used as a way of keeping the immediate royal family exclusive; the throne was passed to a son and incest would ensure he was of royal blood. (For example, Ramesses II was married to three of his daughters and Hatshepsut was married to her own brother). It was also a way of linking pharaohs with the gods as they were believed to be incestuous. For the rest of Egyptian society, marrying a relative was exceedingly rare (see Akhenaten)."

http://www.pbs.org/empires/egypt/life_pharaoh.html



Satisfied?
Title: Re: Nature of the Threat - An anthropology class in one song
Post by: TraceOneInfinite Flat Earther 96' on November 29, 2005, 10:17:05 AM


A lot of well read and philosophical Greeks and Romans were bisexual. There is no proof that most were, and there is next to know proof that the common man was.

The elite of every culture had fucked up shit going on. Many high class Egyptians would marry their sisters and have children. I've even heard of one case where a pharoah marrried his mother. The average Egyptian like the average Greek just lived a normal life.

That's a question for the ages; if you had to choose between fucking another man or your mother or sister which would you pick?


P.S. I'm not sure if Caesar practiced bisexuality. I'm pretty sure Augustus Caesar greatly rejected it.

"I've heard Egyptians"...?  Man... bring your proof, you got a reputation for making up stuff just to push your "everybody's messed up" doctrine.


Incest in ancient Egypt is no secret. I'm just not sure about the mother/son marriage. Close cousin and brother sister marriaiges were common.

"Marrige was a very important part af ancient Egyptian society. Some people say it was almost a duty to get married. Husbands could marry more than one wife, and people of close relations (first cousins, brothers and sisters, ect.) could also wed one another. For the most part, however, incest was frowned upon, except in the royal family, where incest was used to safeguard the dynastic succession."

http://www.crystalinks.com/egyptianwomen.html


"Incest was used as a way of keeping the immediate royal family exclusive; the throne was passed to a son and incest would ensure he was of royal blood. (For example, Ramesses II was married to three of his daughters and Hatshepsut was married to her own brother). It was also a way of linking pharaohs with the gods as they were believed to be incestuous. For the rest of Egyptian society, marrying a relative was exceedingly rare (see Akhenaten)."

http://www.pbs.org/empires/egypt/life_pharaoh.html



Satisfied?

Fair enough.