Rah Digga spoke to VladTV about female rappers always being pitted against one another and being asked about Lil Kim during their come up because they were so different from one another. She also spoke about Nicki Minaj not collaborating with other female rappers and thinking that it would've been smart if Nicki joined forces and signed Cardi B early on. To hear more, including thinking the media treated Lil Kim unfairly.
One of the nation’s largest neo-Nazi groups appears to have an unlikely new leader: a black activist who has vowed to dismantle it.
Court documents filed Thursday suggest James Hart Stern wants to use his new position as director and president of the National Socialist Movement to undermine the Detroit-based group’s defense against a lawsuit.
The NSM is one of several extremist groups sued over bloodshed at a 2017 white nationalist rally in Charlottesville, Virginia. Stern’s filing asks a federal court in Virginia to issue a judgment against the group before one of the lawsuits goes to trial.
Stern replaced Jeff Schoep as the group’s leader in January, according to Michigan corporate records. But those records and court documents say nothing about how or why Stern got the position. His feat invited comparisons to the recent Spike Lee movie “BlacKkKlansman” in which a black police officer infiltrates a branch of the Ku Klux Klan.
Neither Stern, who lives in Moreno Valley, California, nor Schoep responded Thursday to emails and calls seeking comment.
Matthew Heimbach, a leading white nationalist figure who briefly served as the NSM’s community outreach director last year, said Schoep and other group leaders have been at odds with rank-and-file members over its direction. Heimbach said some members “essentially want it to remain a politically impotent white supremacist gang” and resisted ideological changes advocated by Schoep.
Heimbach said Schoep’s apparent departure and Stern’s installation as its leader probably spell the end of the group in its current form. Schoep was 21 when he took control of the group in 1994 and renamed it the National Socialist Movement, according to the Southern Poverty Law Center.
“I think it’s kind of a sad obit for one of the longest-running white nationalist organizations,” said Heimbach, who estimates it had about 40 active, dues-paying members last year.
The group has drawn much larger crowds at rallies.
NSM members used to attend rallies and protests in full Nazi uniforms, including at a march in Toledo, Ohio, that sparked a riot in 2005. More recently, Schoep tried to rebrand the group and appeal to a new generation of racists and anti-Semites by getting rid of such overt displays of Nazi symbols.
It appeared that Stern had been trying for at least two years to disrupt the group. A message posted on his website said he would be meeting with Schoep in February 2017 “to sign a proclamation acknowledging the NSM denouncing being a white supremacist group.”
“I have personally targeted eradicating the (Ku Klux Klan) and the National Socialist Movement, which are two organizations here in this country which have all too long been given privileges they don’t deserve,” Stern said in a video posted on his site.
On Wednesday, lawyers for the plaintiffs suing white supremacist groups and movement leaders over the Charlottesville violence asked the court to sanction Schoep. They say he has ignored his obligations to turn over documents and give them access to his electronic devices and social media accounts. They also claim Schoep recently fired his attorney as a stalling tactic.
A federal magistrate judge in Charlottesville ruled last Friday that Stern cannot represent the NSM in the case because he does not appear to be a licensed attorney. That did not deter Stern from filing Thursday’s request for summary judgment against his own group.
“It is the decision of the National Socialist Movement to plead liable to all causes of actions listed in the complaint against it,” he wrote.
Stern served a prison sentence for mail fraud at the same facility as onetime Ku Klux Klan leader Edgar Ray Killen, who was convicted in the “Mississippi Burning” killings of three civil rights workers. Killen died in January 2018.
In 2012, Stern claimed Killen signed over to him power of attorney and ownership of 40 acres of land while they were serving prison terms together. A lawyer for Killen asked a judge to throw out the land transfer and certify that Killen and his family owned the property.
Rochester, New York spitter Twin Who releases an official music video for "Just Talk." This is the first single off of his forthcoming project titled "T.W.I.N," which is entirely produced by Chup.
Harlem, New York natives Dave East and Vado team up once again for a new banger. This times they nab the instrumental to Three Six Mafia's "Who Run It" for a banger titled "Blue Hundreds."
Chicago rapper G Herbo decides to release the full version of his freestyle over Three Six Mafia's "Who Run It" after Drake told him he had listened to the 30-second snippet for five days straight.
1. Nupac Intro [Prod. By Jamal Hall, Trilogy & Troy Ave] 2. Demonstrate_God Is Great [Prod. By Trilogy] 3. I Ain't Mad At Cha [Prod. By Trilogy] 4. Fight 4 My Life_Word Word [Prod. By Shemonluster_Quablab Productions Inc.] 5. Level 2 Orientation [Prod. By Troy Ave] 6. Press Spray [Prod. By Troy Ave & Trilogy] 7. Jail House_Im Home [Prod. By Trilogy] 8. Truth Be Told_PSA [Prod. By Trilogy & Troy Ave] 9. Never Switch [Prod. By Rubi Rosa] 10. How It Go [Prod. By Trilogy] 11. Praise Pays (Feat. Jamila Irish) [Prod. By Troy Ave, Trilogy & Jemell Hill] 12. Tonight 13. Don't 4 Get Who You Are [Prod. By Yankee & Trilogy]
Ace Hood recounts his many blessings and humble beginnings while also raining hell fire on his enemies over a trap-influenced beat produced by Scott Styles. "Turn a nigga to a beast / competition get deceased," he raps.
Original Block Hustlaz CEO and Cash Money Records/Rich Gang recording artist, Ar-Ab, teams up once again with Dark Lo to deliver the fourth effort in their "Blow" song series.
Ar-Ab is putting out one banger after another. The Cash Money Records/Rich Gang recording artist and Original Block Hustlaz (OBH) shot caller decides to drop an official music video for "Black Mob."
Directed by D.S. the Writer for Broad Street Films
For videos contact email: kpuck7@gmail.com
Follow Ar-Ab on Twitter and Instagram @AssaultRifleAb @Ar_Ab_32
Ar-Ab continues his lyrical rampage as he drops one hot joint after another. Check out his freestyle over the classic Luniz "I Got 5 On It" instrumental.
Original Block Hustlaz head honcho and Cash Money Records/Rich Gang recording artist, Ar-Ab, connects with Oschino from State Property to "Shut 'Em Down."
Cash Money Records/Rich Gang recording artist and Original Block Hustlaz boss, Ar-Ab, is in the lab cooking up the fourth installment of his "Who Harder Than Me" mixtape series.
Here's a sample of what to expect in the form of a song titled "Street Symphony."
Follow Ar-Ab @AssaultRifleAb on Twitter and Instagram
Three of the most thorough rappers in the game link up as Assholes By Nature(ABN) rapper and Houston native, Trae Tha Truth, connects Philadelphia's Original Block Hustlaz (OBH) representatives Ar-Ab and Dark Lo for a song titled "My Part of Town."
Podcaster Taxstone stirred up a hornet's nest Wednesday, May 25, during a Vlad TV interview where he called Tupac Shakur a snitch for what he believes was the late rapper's implication that The Notorious B.I.G. was involved in his 1994 shooting at Quad Studios in New York City.
Tax also included Cam'Ron in the same category.
In 2005 Cam'Ron was shot while driving his blue Lamborghini in Washington, D. C. At the time he and Jay Z weren't on good terms.
The following year Killa released a Hov diss song titled "You Gotta Love It."
"O.K. First off, you a bitch nigga / Only reason I'm doing this / I'mma just name 5 reasons real quick, got a hundred fifty / First - you stole Rocafella from Dame / Second - you stole Kanye from Dame / Third - you stole Rocawear from Dame / Fourth - I seen the nigga throw that diamond up before them shots was fired," Cam rapped.
Tax told Vlad that the reference toRoc-A-Fella Records'diamond logo would make police assume Cam was talking about someone from the label, which would make the Harlem rapper a snitch as well.
Cam soon hopped on Instagram and posted a response video.
"I just woke up and some nigga talking about I'm snitching," Cam says. "Let me explain something to y'all motherfuckers. Snitching is when you have paperwork that you tried to send somebody to jail or you sent somebody to jail. Not what you hear in a rap song. Not what you hear in an interview ... interrogation room. Not on the streets, jail bars. I actually went to jail for not snitching, nigga," Killa continued, "I violated my probation for being in D.C. and didn't tell. So I went to jail on Rikers Island for violating my probation."
Cam's video had the following caption.
"#FactsAndFabric I'm not even gonna say a nigga name.. But I'm wit the shits my nigga.. Get off my dick.. Lol.. And get to da money.. #UfinishOrYouDone and stop try and dis Tupac"