Told ya'll. That contrarian free thinker bs always leads down the same path.
All the posters that saw through that suspicious "platinum plan" BS right before the 2020 election are vindicated.
breh is getting played like a pawn
"Free Thinker"
Never fails.
Never fails.
thegrio.com
Et tu, Ice Cube?
OPINION: When Ice Cube decided to record a feature for a white nationalist with attitude, it was not a good day.
Michael Harriot
Aug 1, 2023
Ice Cube performs at Yaamava' Theater at Yaamava' Resort (Getty Images) (Getty Images for Yaamava' Resort)
Ice Cube performs at Yaamava' Theater at Yaamava' Resort (Getty Images)
Editor’s note: The following article is an op-ed, and the views expressed are the author’s own. Read more opinions on theGrio.
Would you invest in cocaine?
During my time as an economics professor, I used this question as an allegory for the basic laws of supply and demand. Using the illegal drug as an allegory for free-market economics gave students a better, less abstract grasp of the social, political and real-world complexities of a free-market economy. Invariably, one student would introduce morality into this theoretical exercise in economics. The student was almost always Black and would argue that investing in cocaine made them a drug dealer. To them, dealing drugs was immoral, no matter how profitable it seemed. They had seen it ravage neighborhoods and ruin lives. To them, this was not a game. Instead of explaining that this was just an extended allegory, I would pose another question:
“OK, what about baking soda?”
Anyone who grew up in a household that forbade talking during thunderstorms understands Black people’s semi-religious relationship with sodium bicarbonate. In Black households, baking soda is a toothpaste for the Crest-fallen and a deodorant for Tussyless grandmothers. I still keep it in my refrigerator, although I don’t quite know what it does.
In the economics of cocaine, sodium bicarbonate is the economic equivalent of a unicorn. It is a magic ingredient that somehow increased the supply
and the demand. By adding baking soda to cocaine, dealers made
more money from the same supply.
According to government data, during the crack boom 1980s, the price of pure cocaine decreased but profits
increased. Baking soda created new customers and made the old customers spend more. It was a capitalist’s dream and a community’s nightmare.
During the crack epidemic of the 1980s and ’90s, baking soda was more profitable than cocaine. In 1981, Arm & Hammer baking soda manufacturer
Church & Dwight made $231 million in sales. By 1998 the company’s sales had nearly tripled to $684.4 million. If someone anticipated the crack explosion in 1980 and invested $1,000 in Dwight & Howard, they would have netted more than $500,000 by 2010. By comparison, that same investment in Apple stock over the same time period would have made about $80,000.
Investing in baking soda is neither illegal nor immoral. But if someone purposely invested money with the intention to profit from crack, are they a drug dealer? Is profiting from crack sales the same as selling crack?
This question is about Ice Cube.
The White NWA (Nationalists With Attitude)
I’ll never have dinner with the president
I’ll never have dinner with the president
I’ll never have dinner with the president
And when I see your ass again, I’ll be hesitant
— No Vaseline,” Ice Cubenone
Is white supremacy a good investment?
If white supremacy is a narcotic, then Tucker Carlson was the Fox News cartel’s No. 1 dope boy. From his corner, Carlson pushed the “social, economic, and political systems that collectively enable white people to maintain power over people of other races,” into drug-addicted white neighborhoods across America. His rant on how whites weren’t designed to live around immigrants was a pure uncut version of “the belief that the white race is inherently superior to other races and that white people should have control over people of other races.” Tucker Carlson is not a white supremacy dealer, he is a kingpin.
Last Wednesday, rapper, filmmaker and
white supremacy investor Ice Cube appeared on “Tucker on Twitter,” Carlson’s new show on Elon Musk’s version of Fox News (No, I will not provide a link because I’m not a drug trafficker). The white replacement theorist began the interview by asking Mr. Cube the question everyone wanted to know. Why did Cube sit down with a white nationalist? Why would someone who cares about Black people go on a platform with the guy who makes
crude jokes about Black people being murdered by police officers?