(en) US, First of May Anarchist Aliance - STRAIGHT OUTTA COMPTON - NWA's righteous anger at the police and reactionary view of - A Review By Miriam, Detroit

(en) US, First of May Anarchist Aliance - STRAIGHT OUTTA
COMPTON - NWA's righteous anger at the police and reactionary view of
- A Review By Miriam, Detroit

I was drawn to the film, Straight Outta Compton because this is where I'm from: Compton, 
California, where I lived from 1954 through 1967, when I graduated Compton Senior High. My 
family were Communists and so were active in a variety of community organizations - the 
Compton Council on Human Relations, the NAACP, my mother's union. As a result I was 
active, too, in picketing Woolworth's as part of the northern civil rights movement and 
joining union picket lines. As a family we attended various CP programs, hootenannies, 
bazaars, etc. and watched television news reports of the southern civil rights movement, 
the police and dog attacks and so forth. I was aware of Black/white dynamics at an early 
age and I was especially aware of the police and how they treated my friends, differently 
from me.

In Hieronymous' review of this film on libcom.org he discusses the economic situation of 
Compton and Long Beach, the loss of work after the downsizing of the aircraft industry, 
the increased militarization of the police and the increase of Mexican immigrants into the 
community.

Straight Outta Compton portrays a realistic view of the police from a young Black man's 
point of view - hostile, brutal, a very clear enemy. None of the "we are your friends" 
rhetoric promoted by school-law enforcement programs or by the mainstream media. The 
opening scenes of a police battering ram tearing apart the front of a home has shock 
value, but I don't forget that this is the real.

The main criticism of the film has come from the women's community who rightfully protest 
the erasure of the violence done to women by members of NWA. The film is promoted as a 
documentary, and because of this, the treatment meted out to Dee Barnes and other women in 
Andre Young's (Dr. Dre) life should have been shown, in all its ugliness.

This aspect of the culture (male rap) is very anti woman - women are b's and h's, useful 
for p and for fetching and carrying drinks, to be ordered around. This over the top sexist 
behavior is not limited to male rappers, nor is it limited to Black or Latin communities. 
To greater or lesser degrees it exists wherever power is exalted, and power over people 
(men over women) is either celebrated or accepted as normal behavior.

Another criticism of the film is its treatment of the 3 Jewish men who represent the 
record industry. Because they are the only white people in the film (except for police, 
judges and the people stomping on NWA's cds in a demonstration organized by Tipper Gore) 
their Jewishness stands out. One manager is ready to fight after hearing an anti-Semitic 
remark: "Did you hear that?! I'm going to call my friends in the JDL [Jewish Defense 
League]!!" He doesn't get nearly as emotional or disgusted even when he witnesses the 
police humiliation of NWA outside his studio.

The true fact is that while not all recording industry personnel are Jewish, many are. 
Historically, it has been the Jewish promoter approaching the Black musician to be the 
in-between - the person promising big money to the artists and promising to represent them 
to the rest of the industry. This relationship of middleman is loaded with opportunities 
for fraud and that is what happens in this movie, too.

The young rappers wanting to believe they are That Good to get a record deal, the 
suspicions of the "white man," the 3-inch thick contracts they don't read, the promotion 
of parties, drugs, drink and women all conspire to keep NWA unaware of exactly how much 
money they made and how much is taken from them. "It's business," they're told, "this is 
the way it is."

I especially appreciated the unmasking of police violence and how this experience affected 
the Los Angeles rebellion after the cops who beat Rodney King were acquitted. One striking 
scene shows a red bandanna knotted to a blue bandanna as both advanced on the police. This 
signifies the Crips-Bloods truce that took place during the rebellion.

The call-in comments to the local radio station here in Detroit were all along the lines 
of "it is so good to see us on the screen" and "they are finally showing our story."

Reality rap is called Gansta Rap by promoters; it is bought by youth Black and white; it 
is a focus of hostility directed at young Black people; its misogyny and over the top 
swearing keeps many parents from letting their children listen to it. It remains one of 
the few places Black youth feel they can speak their truth in language that is familiar. 
It is here that they touch the hearts and minds of other youth - worldwide, of all 
cultures and backgrounds - facing similar oppression.

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