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George Bush Doesn't Care About Black People

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Wikipedia article




"'George Bush Doesn't Care About Black People'" is a protest song by Houston-based hip hop duo The Legendary K.O.John Leland, "[https://www.nytimes.com/2005/09/25/weekinreview/25leland.html?_r=0 Cultural Politics Art Born of Outrage in the Internet Age]", 'New York Times' (September 26, 2005). Cindy Rodriguez, "[http://www.denverpost.com/rodriguez/ci_3023178 A rap song Bush doesn't want to hear]", 'Denver Post' (September 13, 2005). It was released[http://www.rappersiknow.com/?p=35 Myone "Hands Up" featuring Kay, produced by Symbolyc One b/w The Legendary K.O. "George Bush Doesn't Care About Black People", produced by Kanye West]. on September 6, 2005, just days after Hurricane Katrina. The song was made available free on the Internet. The song was a single first made available from FWMJ's Rappers I Know website. It was released using the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 2.5 license.[http://www.ourmedia.org/node/53964 Ourmedia: George Bush Doesn't Like Black People] . It has been described as "vividly topical",Dorian Lynskey, '33 Revolutions Per Minute' (2011), p. 530. and "one of the best political protest songs of all time".Greg Kot, 'Ripped: How the Wired Generation Revolutionized Music' (2009) p. 181.

History



The politically charged song is a response to the Bush administration's heavily criticized response to Hurricane Katrina.Mary Ruth Marotte, Glenn Jellenik, 'Ten Years after Katrina: Critical Perspectives of the Storm's Effect on American Culture and Identity' (2014), p. 102-103. Its title comes directly from a statement Kanye West made on U.S. national television.

It is a mash-up which gets its beat from Kanye West's song "Gold Digger".Jon Dolan, "The Year In Music", 'SPIN' (Jan. 2006), Vol. 22, No. 1, p. 85. The first line in the song is a quote from West speaking at A Concert for Hurricane Relief.[http://www.boingboing.net/2005/09/08/katrina_kanye_remixe.html Katrina: Kanye remixed, "George Bush Don't Like Black People" - Boing Boing] . The song was "recorded on home computers and composed through emails and instant messaging", and spread widely over the Internet for several weeks after the catastrophe,David Caplan, 'Rhyme's Challenge: Hip Hop, Poetry, and Contemporary Rhyming Culture' (2014), p. 51-52.Charlotte Pence, 'The Poetics of American Song Lyrics' (2012), p. 21-23. in some cases backing video mash-ups with photo montages from the hurricane.[https://web.archive.org/web/20101201223126/http://submedia.tv/stimulator/2005/09/16/katrina-angst/ Katrina Angst] (September 16, 2005).

The song specifically criticized George W. Bush for his slow reaction to the plight of New Orleans. It "vividly recounts the plight of those who endured the hurricane", telling its story in part in the voice of a Katrina survivor giving a first-person account of the hardships of the time, alternating with direct criticism of President Bush and his perceived priorities.

The refrain of the song asserts that "George Bush ain't a gold digger, but he ain't messin with no broke niggas" (a modified version of the line from the original 'Gold Digger'), and implores, "come down, Bush, come on, come down" to New Orleans. Similar themes, including the characterization of black victims of the hurricane as looters, were covered by Public Enemy in a contemporaneous single, "Hell No We Ain't All Right!" The narrative thereby seeks to shift the perception of Katrina victims, effecting "a reconfiguration of storm survivors, from threatening others to abandoned Americans".

References




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