Rapper, actor, writer, and director, Ice Cube is diving deep into activism ahead of the 2020 election.
Cube wrote an opinion piece for The Hill demanding concrete results from candidates in a piece called, “The Contract with Black America.”
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The editors made sure to note “the author uses the n-word in this story.”
“The Contract with Black America tries to address the root causes of racism in our society and develop a roadmap for a comprehensive solution,” he wrote.
“Beyond the obvious, we need to focus on the areas of banking and finance, justice, policing, education, Hollywood depictions, as well as a system of reparations. None of these work in isolation, this plan looks at the systemic core of racism as a whole, and only in that way can a true solution be born.”
In the opinion piece, Ice Cube wrote “Black Americans know the great lie that accompanied those words: A country that professed itself to be a beacon of freedom enslaved generations of men, women, and children, transforming us into ni**as to build a country where others, seen as a full five-fifths, could enjoy “life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.”
He noted that this country needs a “second reconstruction” to address systemic inequalities that are deeply rooted in America.
“As a writer, rapper, and producer, I have called out police brutality and other injustices for decades. I have been censored, smeared, slammed, and had my life threatened for my work — for speaking the truth,” Ice Cube wrote.
“As much as my art has contributed, I know that calls for change will not achieve the paradigm shift necessary to address four centuries of racial injustice. I am angry. And I’m not backing down. I want a better world for my children and their children, and platitudes about “progress” won’t produce it. We need a world where hate towards any people is not tolerated.”
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The superstar rapper praised the radical civil unrest and protests taking place across the country.
“It is great that people are in the streets; we are rightfully angry and hurt. But recent history shows that protests are not enough,” he continued,” Will a nation whose people put their own children in bondage ever pay for what they have done to themselves? Only when America admits the Founders’ lies can we begin to heal.”
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