From the blaring siren
opening chorus, the drumbeat is showing us that a revolution is underway but
how seriously is it to be taken? Lupe
Fiasco, raised as Wasalu Muhammed Jaco on the south side of Chicago, breaking
through with his hit single “Kick Push” in 2006, has changed his sound.
Fiasco’s song “Words I Never Said” is often compared by critics to protest songs
from the Vietnam era, though the merit of the song lies more with the economic
complaints rather than the ones on foreign policy. The line “Crooked banks
around the world, would gladly give a loan today, so you can miss a payment and
they can take your home away,” and the line, “Your child’s future was the first
to go with the budget cuts,” make it work more as a clash of the classes song
since he only mentions the war on terror and attacks on Gaza in the first
verse. The sixties protest songs were short and simple, since it doesn’t take a
long rap verse to tell people that killing is bad. Protest-raps are
long-winded, which is fine but that leaves a lot of room for garbage. The lines
on the schools and banks carry a fact behind with the anger, which he lacks
with all of the lines concerning his conspiratorial politics.
By going after Rush
Limbaugh and Glen Beck, it seems rather hypocritical to stoop to their level by
asking, “9/11, building 7, did they really pull it?” Like Beck, Fiasco can get
the paranoid fired up while not really taking responsibility for what he says.
It is one thing to call the war on terror “bullshit”, since you can’t go to war
with an emotion, and the way we are approaching Al-Queda may not be the most
efficient or ethical. He could even go after the media for persecuting Muslims.
Though there is something cheap about questioning the perpetrators of the
September 11th attacks. Since he only gave that line in the form of
a question, he can just throw up his arms and go don’t look at me, I’m just
the guy asking questions, when put under pressure for saying it. It’s the
only line in the song with a question mark at the end of it that carries the
attitude of a conviction and it throws all reasonable credibility of the song
out the window.
While
a solution is not required of a protest song it is encouraged since the
skeptical will ask, “How would you handle the situation, or run things better?”
Fiasco indicts the American people for their docility by saying “I think that
all the silence is worse than all of the violence”. But what is his solution?
Not voting, “Next one neither”, referring to the upcoming 2012 elections. He
even stated in interviews that he wants to encourage kids to not vote, while
insisting they aren’t doing enough to fight the powers that be. Is there a
worse form of political silence out there?
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