Stop Snitchin'
Rapper Cam'ron: Snitching Hurts His Business, "Code Of Ethics"
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Stop Snitchin'
In Full: CNN's Anderson Cooper reports on how the hip-hop culture's message not to cooperate with the police in any way has undermined efforts to solve murders across the country.
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Rapper Cam'ron On Snitching
Rapper Cam'ron tells Anderson Cooper there's never a reason to help the police. He says he is so against the authorities, he wouldn't even turn in a serial killer.
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Cooper's Reporter's Notebook
CNN's Anderson Cooper talks about the conflicting messages conveyed through hip-hop culture and how record companies are doing little to address these concerns.
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(CBS)
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Cam'ron, a.k.a. Cameron Giles (CBS)
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Geoffrey Canada (CBS)
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In most communities, a person who sees a murder and helps the police put the killer behind bars is called a witness. But in many inner-city neighborhoods in this country that person is called a "snitch."
"Stop snitchin'" is a catchy hip-hop slogan that embodies and encourages this attitude. You can find it on everything from rap music videos to clothing. "Stop snitchin'" once meant "don’t tell on others if you’re caught committing a crime."
But as CNN's Anderson Cooper reports for 60 Minutes, it has come to mean something much more dangerous: "don’t cooperate with the police – no matter who you are."
As a result, police say, witnesses are not coming forward. Murders are going unsolved.
Reluctance to talk to police has always been a problem in poor, predominantly African-American communities, but cops and criminologists say in recent years something has changed: fueled by hip-hop music, promoted by major corporations, what was once a backroom code of silence among criminals, is now being marketed like never before.
The message appears in hip-hop videos, on T-shirts, Web sites, album covers and street murals. Well-known rappers talk about it endlessly on DVDs. It is a simple message heard in African-American communities across the country: don't talk to the police.
"When I was growing up, kids used to talk about snitching…. It never extended as a cultural norm outside of the gangsters," says Geoffrey Canada, a nationally recognized educator and anti-violence advocate. "It was not for regular citizens. It is now a cultural norm that is being preached in poor communities."
Canada has been working with children in Harlem for more than 20 years. He grew up poor in a tough New York neighborhood, but says the message kids are getting today is very different and dangerous.
"People are walking around with shirts. People are going out making, making music. People are saying things that if you're a snitch it's like being an Uncle Tom was when I was growing up," Canada says. "It's like you can't be a black person if you have a set of values that say, 'I will not watch crime happen in my community without getting involved to stop it.'"
"So this slogan, this 'stop snitchin'.' It now extends to rape, robbery, murder, really any crime?" Cooper asks.
"Any crime," Canada says. "It's like we're saying to the criminals, 'You can have our community. Just have our community. Do anything you want, and we will either deal with it ourselves, or we'll simply ignore it.'"
Canada could no longer ignore it on Feb. 5, 2006, when Israel Ramirez, a student he had mentored and loved like a son, was shot to death outside a soundstage in Brooklyn.
Ramirez was working as a bodyguard for the rap star Busta Rhymes, who was making a music video.
A person who was there told 60 Minutes Ramirez was shot in front of Busta Rhymes. He died at the scene two days before his 29th birthday, leaving a wife and three children behind.
"You know, I just think of him, being shot, falling down, probably thinking, 'This might be it.' And I just wonder, who held his hand? Who caressed his head? Who told him, 'I'm gonna be here?' Who stayed with him? Who made sure this man just didn't die alone for nothing?" Canada wonders.
New York City Police Commissioner Ray Kelly says there were at least 25 people who may have witnessed the shooting. But he says nobody has come forward to testify.
"The people that we've located, either were inside and didn't see anything. Or you'll get a version of, 'I have to work in this business. Ask Busta Rhymes what happened,'" Commissioner Kelly says.
The police would like to ask Busta Rhymes what happened but, even though he talked vaguely about the killing on a cable TV show, he refused to talk to investigators, or to 60 Minutes.
Geoffrey Canada believes it's because Busta Rhymes doesn’t want to jeopardize sales of his music and videos; Canada says being labeled a "snitch" might have damaged Rhymes' "street cred."
"One of the things that sells music is when the artist is looked at as someone who's come up from the streets. Not just any streets, but the toughest, meanest streets of the urban ghetto. And that's called 'street credibility,'" Canada says.
Busta Rhymes did put a tribute to Israel Ramirez on the video he was making when Ramirez was killed. "Just wanted to make sure people seen this so they know you ain't die in vain. Love you and I miss you, Homie. Hope we make you proud," Rhymes said in the video.
"I think that's horrid," says Canada. "I ask you Busta, as a man, if that was your son and you watched someone kill your son, would you remain quiet or would you get justice for your son? This is murder. This is murder. This is watching someone getting murdered. How do we walk away from this?"
Produced By Andy Court and Keith Sharman
© MMVII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.

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See all 578 CommentsPlease do not judge a book by it color, ALL police are NOT bad. We have bad apple in that segment of officials like we do everywhere else. Most police are dedicated individuals who have genine concern for their fellowman.....
He declares he is a real chicken by stating ""I wouldn't call and tell anybody on him %u2014 but I'd probably move" to the question what would he do if he found out he's living next to a serial killer. bock bock brawwwk!
No street creed there.
please try and be fair here. He may be very talented. Have you heard his "music" Mr R'hink. Don't judge his music against his apparently being an idiot until you hear him sing/ you may like his beat even if you don't like his message. Now come on, be fair, don't judge him, I am sure he wouldn't judge you...
Rap used to be about speaking up against sin and trying to be about society. (Queen Latifah, Public Enemy, et al, had some thought provoking stuff.) What the hell is rap about these days? Not the same thing; not when dweebs like Cam'ron see fit to act solely out of self-interest; not caring who may be slaughtered because he doesn't see fit to give a ***.
"street cred". Give me a break.
At least Cam'ron is being honest. So many in our Country are not when they sit back and let other people hurt innocent lives. Oops, I meant Cameron - not Cam'ron, his street name. Mustn't mix the street name with the real name. Kinda like street cred vs real cred. One's phony; the other isn't... funny, that - does he really have EITHER?
Thank you for the article, CBS.
With luck the media will also show people who do put their "cred" at risk. Whistleblowers, Samaritans, et cetera...
Trust me where he lives the police probably don't care who got killed. They only investigate if it is black on white crime. We are both from Mississippi we know that! Just look at Miss's history. That nickle you want to send, place it on a good ethical education for yourself!
Stop telling on yourself, you have been to the "black community", for what I don't know.
Your comments and dialect is very convincing.
Second, Cam'ron is living a surreal life- he's rapper, gets paid money off his "gansta" image and 60 minute is nothing but another stage for him. Let something happen to that precious lil' child of his, and then see what he would do... In fantasy it's a lot easier to talk about than in reality being about it.
If anything, a majority of the minorities wouldn't report a crime due to the fear of it coming back on them- a real fear issue not a social fad of being "hard".
Finally, as I see it- there are really only 3 types of peoples...Cool, A**holes and Wierdos/Sickos. And Hhusted, you and Cam sound like y'all fall in the middle category. Dead in the middle.
What has happened to the saying,"If you can't do the time don't commit the crime". Why do we wonder why every black dominated hood, is prone to crime,its because of trash talking idiots like this, that spread nonsense and brainwash our society. I weep,though there is very little i can do, but i will start by making sure that idiots album is not in any of my kids collection, or anywhere in my house.
What has happened to the saying,"If you can't do the time don't commit the crime". Why do we wonder why every black dominated hood, is prone to crime,its because of trash talking idiots like this, that spread nonsense and brainwash our society. I weep,though there is very little i can do, but i will start by making sure that idiots album is not in any of my kids collection, or anywhere in my house.
What has happened to the saying,"If you can't do the time don't commit the crime". Why do we wonder why every black dominated hood, is prone to crime,its because of trash talking idiots like this, that spread nonsense and brainwash our society. I weep,though there is very little i can do, but i will start by making sure that idiots album is not in any of my kids collection, or anywhere in my house.
What has happened to the saying,"If you can't do the time don't commit the crime". Why do we wonder why every black dominated hood, is prone to crime,its because of trash talking idiots like this, that spread nonsense and brainwash our society. I weep,though there is very little i can do, but i will start by making sure that idiots album is not in any of my kids collection, or anywhere in my house.
What has happened to the saying,"If you can't do the time don't commit the crime". Why do we wonder why every black dominated hood, is prone to crime,its because of trash talking idiots like this, that spread nonsense and brainwash our society. I weep,though there is very little i can do, but i will start by making sure that idiots album is not in any of my kids collection, or anywhere in my house.
What has happened to the saying,"If you can't do the time don't commit the crime". Why do we wonder why every black dominated hood, is prone to crime,its because of trash talking idiots like this, that spread nonsense and brainwash our society. I weep,though there is very little i can do, but i will start by making sure that idiots album is not in any of my kids collection, or anywhere in my house.
What has happened to the saying,"If you can't do the time don't commit the crime". Why do we wonder why every black dominated hood, is prone to crime,its because of trash talking idiots like this, that spread nonsense and brainwash our society. I weep,though there is very little i can do, but i will start by making sure that idiots album is not in any of my kids collection, or anywhere in my house.
their 'street credibility'"
"Street Cred"- More like Street Crud.
This guy promotes the protection of criminals because of some BS "code of ethics"? Obviously he has no children who have ever been molested or shot down by drive by drug/gun gangsters.
When I was a kid the neighbourhood kids & I had our cool club house in a strip of woods next to one kid's house. We plotted, planned & defended our club house untill we were called in for dinner. Then came the fateful day when we moved on to high school, college, careers, marriage, children, responsibilities. The club house now only exists as a childhood memory.
This whole "gang mentality" is just a sad bunch of little boys who refuse to grow up & be men. Real men don't need to be part of a club house gang. Real man stand as individuals & take care of their families by feeding, nurturing, teaching & loving them. Not by being "bad boys" strutting around trying to take over "the turf".
Oooo you "own" the turf. Big whoop. Puh-leeeze! Pull your pants up from around your ankles, buy a belt or pants that fit, & get a life that doesn't require you to every day proove how stupid & childish you can be.
This threat is made even if a person never snitched. The best way not to be targeted is to be like lil kim--don't see, hear or say anything--because the other part of the story is--snitches are expendable. They get killed by gangs, or others, and dirty cops often will be the ones to set a snitch up to be killed--after all, when they have no use for them anymore--who cares? Even police do not respect snitches.
Actually it just describes the all too true reality of the streets and originally was just underground street poetry set to music for other blacks. It was whites that, upon how fascinated suburban white children were with rap--parlayed it into a billion dollar industry. Rap will esixt whether it makes the big bucks or not--because it is describing a very real life experience--keep in mind that most black teens do not have the money to pay the price for CDs, it is white teenagers that support the industry (70% of people who buy rap are white) It is all about the money--but what you should also realize is that many of the things in the rhymes are TRUE and that should upset you--that this is/was their life. People rarely choose the lives they lead in the ghetto--but like with most circumstances--they work with what they have. If they are all out for themselves, the may sell drugs or hustle and not care who they hurt--in this way, they have a lot in common with a politician who says and does anything (like send our kids to wars based on lies) to keep the power and make money. The only difference is--one is doing illegal stuff and the other is doing similar stuff but they say it is legal.
Hopping down the ignorant trail
HIPity HOPity -- The Jungle Bunny's on His Way!!!
Please do not judge a book by it color, ALL police are NOT bad. We have bad apple in that segment of officials like we do everywhere else. Most police are dedicated individuals who have genine concern for their fellowman.....
Posted by winchester59 at 07:57 AM : Apr 20, 2007
Unfortunately, the good ones are quite rare in the ghetto.
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