And this thread is a perfect distillation of the dichotomy in the black community. These dudes could have pulled their pants down and mooned the crowd, and you'd get some people coming in with "Man, them dudes just having fun at an NBA game, why you hating?" Or "Bu but white people".
It's not about not liking to have fun, or being serious all the time or any of that nonsense. It's about
time and place. This is something that a lot of people struggle with in our "anything goes" culture. Some of us don't care for simpleton, attention seeking "I need a spotlight whether positive or negative" behavior. And that would go for if they were black, white, purple or whatever color. That's why people "bu bu white people"ing would only have a point if people felt like it would be ok if they did it. I'd call them simpletons too. Also, why can't people have our own standards, fukk what white people are doing? Why is it a comparison? It's just a way to deflect from poor behavior.
Those that defend this aren't going to change their mind about it, and vice versa. It's just an example of the two trains of thought about stuff like this.
One of the brothers is sitting there with a set of diamond studded handcuffs, that same brother claims to be a member of the Aryan nation in lyrics, a "metaphor" he often uses to help illustrate just how much he doesn't like "n*ggas"
These guys are no more than mercenaries for white people.
And people will defend this too. Why you hating? Dude's just having fun in his lyrics. Taking it too seriously. It's art. Bu bu white people talk about being in the Aryan nation too. You ever think about that? Checkmate.