Rick Ross chased outta detroit Update: Ross gives his side of the story, Trick Trick responds

Status
Not open for further replies.

HoLLaBaCK

SOHH ICEY
Joined
May 28, 2012
Messages
3,165
Reputation
660
Daps
5,251
Reppin
New York
:yeshrug:

Who gives a fukk at this point, Ross aint a super thug...and we been knew this. He's caught so many L's at this point and he's still going...because at the end of the day it's about the music. As long as Ross continues to put out good music this will pass as well.
 

DATMAN$

Pro
Joined
Jun 7, 2014
Messages
564
Reputation
-970
Daps
587
Reppin
in your momma
William's career was built on the premise that he is from "the streets" and he was a "street nikka" from the jump and a big drug dealer. He's never said anything different. With that being said: REAL "Street nikka" principles were applied by a REAL "Street nikka" whose about that life. Anyone one whose hustled knows you Can Not hustle on somebodies block without a pass, an ok, or an arrangement for lack of better words . So those street principles were applied
 

Ronnie Lott

#49erGang
Joined
Jun 12, 2012
Messages
63,173
Reputation
10,300
Daps
225,538
William's career was built on the premise that he is from "the streets" and he was a "street nikka" from the jump and a big drug dealer. He's never said anything different. With that being said: REAL "Street nikka" principles were applied by a REAL "Street nikka" whose about that life. Anyone one whose hustled knows you Can Not hustle on somebodies block without a pass, an ok, or an arrangement for lack of better words . So those street principles were applied

If this is true, why doesn't trick trick tax white artists that perform at that same venue :lupe:
 
Last edited:

Scientific Playa

Superstar
Supporter
Joined
Oct 13, 2013
Messages
13,930
Reputation
3,255
Daps
24,889
Reppin
Championships
thread related



http://topdocumentaryfilms.com/rollin-rise-drug-economy-detroit/




Rollin: The Rise of the Drug Economy in Detroit
2010 Home » Drugs - 82 min 6 Comments
rollin-drug-economy-detroit-95x125.jpg


Detroit was once the seed of the world's greatest economic empire - the auto-industry. Whether you came from Southern Europe, the Middle East or the American South the factories were always hiring and the pay was good. But as this empire of cars weakened and crumbled the city's economy began to revolve around a new business - illegal drug distribution.

Between 1965 and 1970 violent crime more than doubled in the United States. Why this happened has never been fully explained but the drugs, the breakdown of social control associated with the civil rights movement and the war in Vietnam were certainly key factors.

Nowhere was more out of control than Detroit, Michigan, which had suffered the deadliest riot of the 60's and had become the murder capital of the country by 1971. In the spring of 1972 the bureau of narcotics sent John Sutton to Detroit on a special assignment to infiltrate and bring down the city's largest black heroin dealers.

Agent Sutton arrived in Detroit to find the city divided. On the one hand Detroit had the most thriving black middle class in the country, mostly thanks to the auto-industry, and many people were living a good life. On the other hand it was a city were the entire police force was overrun by heroin dealers and stickup men.

Detroit had few black police officers in the 1950's so the department had a hard time infiltrating the city's burgeoning drug infrastructure. Henry Marzette was a hometown boy and Korean war veteran when he entered the Police Academy. Starting off as an undercover narcotics cop in the 1950's Marzette set arrest records. But soon started playing both sides of the fence and he was convicted of corruption in the late 50's.

After a short prison time Marzette came home determined to take over the streets. In 1970 he calls a meeting of top heroin dealers, known as the "West Side Seven", he proposes that they work together to purchase and distribute heroin without the Italian mafia who controlled a group known as the "East Side Twelve" made up of mostly white high-level dealers. The alliance falls apart when certain dealers won't bow down to Marzette kicking off the deadliest drug war in Detroit's history.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Top