I am Black and 30, your stance is lazy and driven by lazy moral grandstanding, classism, and an analysis dependent on not understanding agency and the role of institutions. It is not necessary to depend on a "psychological warfare" narrative because it is much more nefarious and dramatic.
You have intellectuals like Dr. Carl Hart who has expounded on the role of drugs in the Black community and how it especially impacts poor Black people, but if you are invested in classist fueled moral grandstanding you will probably miss that point.
You are on here regurgitating old Republican talking points about the impact and role of Hip-Hop and dressing it up with this "psychological warfare" shtick, which in turn leads to analysis that does not take into adequate consideration of the role of history, government, policy, and lineage. And so instead of looking at the relevant variables and confronting them in a multifaceted manner you create this grand abstract paradigm that even if not explicitly done on your part implicitly puts forward a insurmountable foe.