Oh. It's the part where he goes off about all the racist motherfuckers out there writing "nigger this and nigger that" on all his pages. The funny part is that in the same video he dropped the n-bomb like 15 times.
Oh, and the two guys in the background...what the fuck?
According to some members on the bengals.com forums, the n-bomb is "the ultimate disrespect" when uttered by a white person and if you are white you will never understand. I'm white and I guess these people are right: I don't understand, for the same reason you just outlined.
The context of this was in some details that came out about one of Chris Henry's (Bengals wide receiver) recent arrests where it was supposedly started by a white guy calling him the n-word, causing the white guy to get his ass beat by Henry and some of his thug friends. People on the forum were like, "I understand being mad but you can't throw a punch every time someone calls you a name." The black members said that we just didn't understand.
I guess it's like a cultural rule and they don't let that one slide.
Edit: As far as the rap/hip-hop discussion goes... I don't really listen to it now, but I used to like it a bit. From basically garbage by 50 Cent to more meaningful stuff from 2Pac and especially Nas. I think Nas really nailed it all down in "I Can" from
God's Son. That song is basically the anti-gansta hip-hop song. It's a song of encouragement for younger black kids. There's a line in there where he is speaking to young males and he says "You think life's all about smoking weed and ice" and I think that speaks volumes about the message of most of rap and hip-hop.
As much as I liked Dr. Dre's
The Chronic and think it was one of the very best examples of that era of rap, I think it's one of the worst offenders of promoting gangsta culture. I mean it was all basically fake: Dr. Dre is a producer, not a gangster.