Summary Of The Song 'F * K The Police'

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NWA’s Hit That Hit Back
Martin Luther King once said, “returning violence for violence multiplies violence, adding deeper darkness to a night already devoid of stars.” In a time when racism was prevalent among the police in Los Angeles, the rap group NWA set out to condemn the wrongs committed by the police. However, they incited more hate against the police and raised tensions between the police and black community. NWA’s hit song “F**k Tha Police” showed the struggles of a black man in Los Angeles, but it’s hateful words and violent suggestions made the situation worse, rather than improving it. First, the song “F**K The Police” portrayed well the struggles of black young men in Los Angeles. Under the leadership of Daryl Gates during the late 1980’s and early 1990’s, the Los Angeles Police Department executed Operation Hammer, which involved an extreme sweep of South Los Angeles …show more content…

Each rapper gives their “testimony” against the police. At the end the jury finds the police to be “guilty of being a redneck, white bread, chicken s**t motherf****r” (NWA, 1988, 138-139). They use irony here by accusing the police of nothing but being a stereotype, which is what the police did to blacks. The police would charge blacks with little evidence, but the color of the defendant’s skin was often enough to get them convicted. While showing the plight of black men, they do so while using homophobic language. Speaking of the police, Ice Cube says, “I don’t know if they fags or what/ Search a n***a down, and grabbing his nuts” (NWA, 1988, 32-33). In an attempt to insult the police by calling them homosexual, NWA reinforces homophobia in society at the time. As Baker says, “the apparently self-centered braggadocio of gangstas like Compton’s N.W.A…. offer chronicles of sex, violence, and substance abuse, a lyrical direction that Geoffrey Baker Kitwana has labeled ‘regressive’” (Baker, 2011,

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