Editorials
Tuesday, March 11, 1997


Rap singer's murder
should sound warning

THE drive-by killing of Christopher Wallace, known in the music business as the Notorious B.I.G., shows just how frighteningly authentic "gangsta rap" is. Wallace was shot to death early Sunday in Los Angeles while sitting in a sports utility car outside a party celebrating the Soul Train Music Awards. Last September, another star rap singer, Tupac Shakur, was killed in Las Vegas in another drive-by shooting.

Wallace, who was just 24, sang about his past as a crack cocaine dealer in New York City, which he boasted was proof of his authenticity as a rap exponent. He was considered a rival of Shakur, who once accused Wallace of involvement in a robbery in which Shakur was shot. Wallace did not attend a "rap summit" last fall held to ease tensions between West Coast and East Coast rappers after Shakur's slaying.

It is disturbing that millions of teen-agers and children are buying records that feature brutally violent and sexually vulgar lyrics.

Part of the appeal of rap appears to be the outrageous personas of the artists. Their violent deaths are the ultimate evidence that they are as authentically criminal as they boast they are.

Even the worst of gangsta rap may not meet the Supreme Court's difficult standard for obscenity and thus be subject to censorship. But the dissemination of such material surely has a harmful effect on the nation's youth.

The record companies that produce it have rightly been accused of social irresponsibility.

Former Education Secretary William Bennett two years ago told Time Warner it "should stop its involvement with and support of gross, violent, offensive and misogynistic lyrics." Bennett and C. DeLores Tucker, who heads the National Political Congress of Black Women, issued a television commercial charging that Time Warner promoted "music that celebrates the rape, torture and murder of women."

Tucker also spoke of her visit to a household in Dayton, Ohio, where an 11-year-old boy had shot and killed his 3-year-old sister and wounded his 5-year-old sister. "He said he was imitating Tupac Shakur," she reported.

The chairman of Warner Bros. Records, Danny Goldberg, responded by asking, "Why should a corporation listen to a bunch of middle-aged people who don't like the music and don't listen to it, and ignore the people who do love it and who do buy it?"

However, Warner Music Group subsequently announced it was dropping its stake in Interscope Records, home to several gangsta rappers. That was an important first step, but the problem persists.

Perhaps the murder of a second gangsta rap star will bring the record executives who deal in this poisonous material to their senses.

Appellate judges

HAWAII'S legal community is understandably disturbed that it has been unrepresented on the 28-judge 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals since Judge Herbert Choy took senior status in 1984. With eight of those seats unfilled and two more vacancies expected this spring, the time is ripe for seeking White House assurance that one of those will go to Hawaii. Surely that would improve the court's understanding of legal issues deriving from Hawaii's unique history.

Cloning and the UH

MORE evidence of the worth of the University of Hawaii as a research center comes in connection with the furor over the cloning of a sheep in Scotland. A UH official said the feat would not have been possible without the work of the Manoa campus' Ryuzo Yanagimachi. However, the only cloning being done at UH is on plants, which doesn't draw headlines.




Published by Liberty Newspapers Limited Partnership

Rupert E. Phillips, CEO


John M. Flanagan, Editor & Publisher


David Shapiro, Managing Editor


Diane Yukihiro Chang, Senior Editor & Editorial Page Editor


Frank Bridgewater & Michael Rovner, Assistant Managing Editors


A.A. Smyser, Contributing Editor




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