Fanning the Flames

Waka-Flocka-Flame-evil-is-marketed

Rapper Waka Flocka Flame, wearing a cap with the words “Uncommon Sense,” is not afraid to speak his mind.

The 29-year-old rapper, Waka Flocka Flame, has made headlines with his recent comments…

…on Bruce Jenner and people with gender identity issues.  Friday, on Power 105.1’s The Breakfast Club, Waka Flocka Flame said:

“You know what the world is today, man?  Women are afraid to be a wife and young males are afraid to be men.  It’s like it’s not cool, they’re not marketing that.  They don’t market families and husbands and wives no more.  They’re marketing young girls, transgenders, they’re marketing evil, man.  It’s really evil, dog.  Nothing against that.  Evil is marketed.

Bruce-Jenner-marketing-evil

Is the chronicling of Bruce Jenner’s gender transition into Caitlyn Jenner on TV marketing evil?

“I ain’t got nothing against anybody’s preferences, but putting it on TV, that’s crazy, man,” Flame bellowed.  “I ain’t saying nothing against like a Bruce Jenner, you follow me, you are who you are when God made you, not who you became after he did.  That’s how I just feel. You rebuking God.  God ain’t put them feelings in you, that’s the devil playing tricks on your mind.  That’s a test from God.”

Kanye West, another rapper who is Not afraid to speak his mind, told Jenner during the premiere of I Am Cait:

“I think this is one of the strongest things that has happened in our, you know, existence as human beings that are so controlled by perception.  You couldn’t have been up against more.  Like, your daughter is a supermodel, you’re a celebrity, you have every type of thing, and it was still like, ‘F— everybody, this is who I am.’ ”

Kanye-West

Is he Yeezus or Yudas?

What?   Is Kanye West “Yeezus” or “Yudas”?

After Yeezus used his considerable influence to warm Kim Kardashian up to Bruce Jenner’s gender transition, the pre-transition Bruce Jenner used the warm numbing of Kim’s mind to warm and numb the minds of the confused millions who tuned into The Interview with Diane Sawyer.

As if the whole world sat around a warm and crackling campfire, the American sports hero used the words of Yeezus and spun a story to massage and melt our hearts (to match our minds) like marshmallows hanging on the end of one hella crooked stick:

“ ‘Look,’ ” Kanye said, “ ‘I can be married to the most beautiful woman in the world, and I am.  I can have the most beautiful little daughter in the world, and I have that.  But I’m nothing if I can’t be me.  If I can’t be true to myself, they don’t mean anything.’ ”

Since his public transition earlier this year, Bruce Jenner went on to say, “Since then, Kimberly has been by far the most accepting, and the easiest to talk to about it.”

Having said that, under the guise of bringing awareness to gender transitioning and the transgender community, Caitlyn Jenner is on a crusade to make the gullible and godless believe she is not the two-headed freak we know them, Bruce-ish Caitlyn, to be. Caitlyn’s transgender friend practically pried open her lazy eye with that truth:  ‘You’re doing this because you don’t want to be seen as a freak.’  In the words of Yeezus himself, no truer words were ever spoken.

Tatted-Believer-Rapper-Waka-Flocka-Flame

What about the tattoos (like a map to nowhere) on Flame’s body? Is this good old-fashioned American hypocrisy of Biblical proportions? Who put those feelings in him?

It’s obvious that Waka Flocka Flame feels that that warmth Bruce Jenner was trying to exude during The Interview and that crackling sound a confused America heard was simply the gates of hell creaking open.

While Flame, who has collaborated in the past with Kanye West, does not share Yeezus’s opinion, it should remind America that we are a nation of differing opinions. The “He’s homophobic” or “She’s just ignorant” name-calling the freak-friendly do is part of the Take-the-Freak-Outta-Freaky campaign.  But, to Fan the flames evenly, it’s no different than when the rest of us use terms like “two-headed freak” in an effort to save “the freaks” from The Big Flame and draw them back to this side of sanity—if not  righteousness.

God knows if rappers can have differing opinions without wanting to cause GBH (grave bodily harm), the rest of a hypocritical society can, too.  If we had not spit in God’s face and made a martyr out of one confused kid, America would still know right from wrong.  It is wrong to harm others.  But it is absolutely right to hate sin.

Do you believe Waka Flocka Flame is shining light when he says evil (or sin) is marketed?

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