Learning From NWA'saught Thai Police Song: The More Prohibited, The More Popular

JAKARTA - Racism is something black people hate in the United States (US). Racist behavior is getting worse because the stigma of black people leaning to become criminals appears. Black people gang members, drugs, and troublemakers.

The stigma made the US police see them as trash bins of society. The police easily beat and detained them just because of skin tone. The band of the post-Compton rapalista group, Nigas With Attitudee (NWA) also moved to expose police brutality with the song: Fuck tha Police.

Uncle Sam's country did not provide comfort for black people in the 1980s. White people are free to dream as high as the sky. Their lives are smooth. It's different from those who were born or came as black.

They are definitely familiar with racism. They are underestimated. Their existence is not considered. Their work is limited. Criticism sentiment is even included in the US police institution. Instead of being a fair law enforcer, the police continue to use the stigma of black people as criminals.

Black people are often suspected of being gang members, drug addicts, and troublemakers. The narrative also occurs in Compton, Los Angeles. Black people are stigmatized as gang members. This arbitrary view makes any black person suspected of being part of a gang.

Life characterizes the days of Eazy-E (Eric Wright), Ice Cube (O'Shea Jackson), Dr. Dre (Andre Young), DJ Yella (Antoine Carraby), and MC Ren (Lorenzomen). Their lives cannot be far from violent inter-groups.

The young Comptons understand that blacks are increasingly marginalized. They also continue to get racism from security forces. The police easily dropped the blow that held them back.

The five young Campton people tried to choose their own path. They don't want their lives and other black people to be considered low, or considered just a matter of making trouble. They choose the line of work.

They formed a super grub with alirangangsta rap, NWA. They try to express their experience of being marginalized citizens through songs in the 1980s. In particular, this step is fully supported by the parents of each personnel. Dr. Dre's parents, especially.

There are other lessons to learn. Gang culture developed rapidly during the chaos of social structure. Young people who are easily influenced are allied with some gangs. The criminal group like promising the future to those young people who want to join. Some of them may think that the benefits of profit are comparable to the loss of life.

Fully aware that those dangerous influences are right outside their doors. I Verina Griffin (Dr. Dre's mother) shows by example that to make better things you don't waste time blaming the world around you. You find a way; You find out. Then you work harder than other people until you achieve something," said Verna as written by Virginia Hanlon Grohl in the bookFrom Cradle to Stage (2018).

It could be that the police are considered to have chosen a big role as security guards. However, for black people in their Compton it is no more than a nuisance. Police like common enemies who must be on the top of the list of people who must be removed.

NWA agreed to this condition. They are not only tired of the actions of the police who seek justice at will. It is also unfair to black people. They tried to fight back. However, not by lifting a gun. They fought back by making the song Fuck tha Police.

The idea of the song came from Dr. Dred an Eazy E was arrested by the police. He saw for himself how the police without a second pointed a gun at both of them. At its peak, they then started going to the music studio and writing songs.

Beautiful tha Police was created. The lyrics are provocative: A Younghave got it bad 'Cause I'm brown/ And not the other color so police thought/They have the authority to kill a minority/ least that country, 'Cause I't the one. (A young man has bad luck because he is brown/And not other skin tones, that's how the police think/They have the authority to kill minorities/try with that nonsense, because I'm not the person).

The song was included in NWA's latest album, Straight Outta Compton in 1988.Fuck tha Police immediately won the hearts of black people throughout the US. The video clip is no less provocative. A video featuring NWA judges the police.

Later Fuck tha Police made a call for resistance against US police. The US Police and the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) have confidence the song could be dangerous for police existence in the US if it continues to play. The FBI also uses its power to ban the song from being sung in concerts, televisions, and radio.

They wrote directly to the record label, Ruthless Records. This condition made the television station, MTV released a video clip, Fuck tha Police from its playlist. The ban didn't make NWA die or stop.

The song Fuck tha Police continues to echo. People play the song again and again. In fact, to this day. Every time there is an act of police violence, the song continues to be played in the US, then the world. All one voice asserts that police atrocities must be eliminated.

The song was still in the same place before it was created. It's our legacy in the US with the problem of police brutality and all the figures of authorities who have to deal with us on a daily basis. Usually there is harassment and violence associated with the interaction, so when the 'Fuck tha Police' was created in 1988, it took 400 years to reflect it. And the song is still as relevant as it was before it was created, "said Ice Cube as quoted by Kory Grow in his writing on Rolling Stone magazine page entitled How NWA THAN Police Became the Perfect Protest Song (2020).