Thug Mentality Fine for Tupac, Not for College Males
By Corbin Robinson
Black College Wire
"Silence is a must, violence is a plus."
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The Famuan
Corbin Robinson |
These are the words from legendary rap artist Tupac
Shakur describing, "living the thug life."
But is this the life an educated young Black youth would
want to live?
From incarceration to death, this "thug life" mentality
has turned into its own culture.
From the style of clothing, to the phrases used as
greetings, this culture has generated millions of dollars
off retail.
As a woman on Florida A&M University's campus, I notice a
lot of guys. I notice all different shapes, sizes, and
backgrounds.
For some reason, there's a particular group of guys that
intrigue me the most.
They are the ones who came from substandard living
environments and brought certain practices with them to
college.
This creates the thuggish college man.
I never understood how a guy could come from the 'hood,'
get an education, and still be 'hood.'
Some guys are balancing biology classes with trying to
get weed from a homeboy. Trying to study yet turning his
apartment into the local trap house.
It boggles my mind sometimes when I see these guys in my
biology class, and then turn around and see them have
run-ins with the law.
These "thugs" run back to their parents, not their
homeboys, to bail them out.
These "college thugs" need to choose one lifestyle or the
other.
Be the college student you know you were sent here to be.
It's not about being a "square," it's about having a mind
of your own.
A lot of people try to mimic what they see in the media,
and they want to be and turn into something they're not.
I see these same guys in the club smoking and drinking
like they were in a rap video. Yet, they come to class the
next day and are "Mr. Studious."
I can't blame them. Since they watch their favorite
rapper guzzle down a bottle of Moet, they can't help but to
imitate these people, right down to the thuggish mannerisms.
As the old saying goes, "monkey see, monkey do."
Everyone doesn't blame the thug culture on high homicide
rates, drug use, and the media. Many people blame the
environment that some Black youth grow up in.
Either way, there's no excuse for young Black men to
behave in a way that could jeopardize their college careers.
The thug movement isn't all bad. It has become a culture
where youth can express themselves through music, dance and
other venues.
It would behoove young Black men to stop coming to class
high and to embrace this chance to do something better than
what you were doing in the 'hood.'
Corbin Robinson wrote this article for The Famuan,
Florida A&M University's student newspaper.
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