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Breakdown FM: An Interview w/ Snoop Dogg & Stan Tookie Williams mp3 download

by Ytzhak (montfu65 [at] hotmail.com)
Today December 8th the Governor of California is holding a private hearing for Tookie Williams to hear him out and will later make a decision…we caught up with Snoop who held an impromptu press conference as he was leaving San Quentin and asked him what he thought about the whole situation… He spoke about the spirit of Tookie and how he was moved by him. he talked about what Tookie meant to fellow gang bangers and why he would be better alive then dead.
Listen now:
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http://victoria.indymedia.org/news/2005/12/46714.php



Will Clemency be Granted? We Interview Snoop Dogg Will Clemency Be Granted?
An Interview w/ Snoop Dogg & Tookie Williams


audio download: MP3 at 17.7 mebibytes

http://radio.indymedia.org/uploads/breakdown_fm__an_interview_w__snoop_dogg___stan_tookie_williams.mp3

You can peep the interview by going here:
http://odeo.com/audio/490410/view


Yesterday, (Dec 7th) we rolled up to San Quentin prison and caught up with Snoop Dogg who finally was allowed inside the walls to visit with ‘Big Tookie’ aka Stan ‘Tookie’ Williams.

For those who don’t know Mr. Williams is the co-founder of the Crips gang and was convicted of murdering 4 people 25 years ago. During his time behind bars he rehabilitated and started calling for peace and renounced his Crip affiliation. He has written a number of children’s books advocating for kids to go down the right path and to avoid gang life. So profound was his work that he got nominated for a Noble Peace prize 5 times.

One thing is certain his redemption has inspired current gang members to move in the direction of peace. He has definitely inspired Snoop Dogg…

In any case we caught up with Snoop who held an impromptu press conference as he was leaving San Quentin and asked him what he thought about the whole situation…

He spoke about the spirit of Tookie and how he was moved by him. he talked about what Tookie meant to fellow gang bangers and why he would be better alive then dead. he also talked about the enormous responsibility Arnold Schwartznegger had in terms of turning down or granting him clemency. Snoop was definitely on point with his remarks.

Earlier this week fellow journalist and community activist Jasmyne A. Cannick got a chance to interview Stan Tookie Williams. He talked to her about his redemption and why he was hoping to the Governor will do the right thing and spare his life.

We play excerpts from that interview… You will also hear sound excerpts from Malik Shabbazz from the New Black Panther Party, Fred Hampton Jr. of the POCC and Aqeela Sherill of the Peace Warriors.. Also big shout out to author Adissa Banjoko for the commentary which is also included on here

Today December 8th the Governor of California is holding a private hearing for Tookie Williams to hear him out and will later make a decision…

You can peep the interview by going here:
http://odeo.com/audio/490410/view


davey d

http://p076.ezboard.com/fpoliticalpalacefrm57.showMessage?topicID=683.topic


http://radio.indymedia.org/uploads/breakdown_fm__an_interview_w__snoop_dogg___stan_tookie_williams.mp3

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by anti-celebrity
When a talentless nursery rhyme robotic rapper like snip dawg becomes the spokesman for peace and justice, we are in trouble. Screw the pimp thug image and glorification of exploitation!

Stop the Execution
but find a more credible voice than snap diggy!

Don't forget the young Eritrean man Phillip Woldemarian gunned down by the Dogg's chaufeur in L.A.

Don't forget the girls gone wild and fur coat bullshit.

If Snoppy Dig has a conscience, then renounce the gangsta rap millionaires and phony idiot preschool rhymers.
by L.A. Times
Erin Aubry Kaplan:
Who let this Dogg out?
OF ALL THE celebrity wattage that has lately illuminated the cause of saving Crips founder and convicted murderer Stanley Tookie Williams from execution — a cause that will prevail or not within the week — no light has shone more unexpectedly than that of rapper Snoop Dogg.

The media has largely missed that point, viewing his presence as par for the course.

Snoop (nee Calvin Broadus) is a north Long Beach native and the self-proclaimed "doggfather" of West Coast gangsta rap who is intimately familiar with Crip life and who helped build a whole musical and cultural paradigm on black gang culture. He's recorded on the genre's definitive (and crime-plagued) label, Death Row. For Snoop to show up at Save Tookie rallies and to speak at the mike, his favorite tool of expression, therefore appears, on the surface, unsurprising — one street-bred brother supporting another.

But it's a lot more complicated than that.

Though they come from the same place in many more ways than one, Snoop and rappers of his ilk have actually worked at cross purposes with Williams for years. While Williams has been busy in prison denouncing the gang life and violence in the 'hood, Snoop's music has accepted it, at least, and glorified it at most.

Certainly this made business sense, if nothing else: Gangsta rap's popularity, which quickly spread far beyond black circles, was fueled much less by overt social commentary or activism than by inherent elements of pulp fiction and a certain moral detachment from the harrowing events it described. It made young black men iconic instead of socially irrelevant. And with his laconic air and laissez-faire attitude toward "niggas" and street life, coupled with his seductive hooks, Snoop epitomized the L.A gangsta doyen, and the city's regard of its own black ghettoes — don't care, don't fix, but be sure to mine for whatever shock and entertainment value is there.

Snoop learned the lessons of Hollywood well, branding himself as "major playa" through his music and through ventures like a line of porn videos that solidified his quasi-benevolent thug/pimp image. The unwaveringly earnest, unsexy works of people like Williams seemed the furthest thing from his mind, to say nothing of his business plan.

But then, Williams' 25-year-long stay of execution ran out, and Snoop found himself at an unexpected critical moment. It was coming; the aging star (he's 33) has been coaching Pop Warner football for the last several years and started a youth foundation. Hard-core gangsta rap's popularity has been steadily downshifting and, in the racially oppressive age of George W. Bush, hip-hop figures such as Russell Simmons and P. Diddy are finding their political voices either by design (the "Vote or Die" campaign) or default (like rapper Kanye West's tortured conclusion, after Hurricane Katrina, that Bush "doesn't like black people").

But although I always thought that those guys, rooted in the East Coast, had serious things to say that were waiting for an outlet, I never felt that way about Snoop. So when he began appearing among crowds gathering around the state to call for clemency for Williams, I was genuinely shocked.

His eyes, usually at a drugged half-mast, were wide open. His voice was urgent and clear, in contrast to the emotionally vapid purr, punctuated by insider wordplay like "telefizzle," that is his trademark. Most remarkably, he described himself as a role model who felt a responsibility to carry on Williams' message about the destructiveness of gang life.

"Tookie transformed a little bit of me," Snoop told an audience of young people recently at the Central Library, where he took part in a celebrity-studded reading of Williams' works. "So many people on the streets don't write books and don't care about y'all."

It's official: Snoop Dogg cares. I'm not so naive to think that he'll change his tune wholesale and start preaching peace and cooperation in the 'hood from the pulpit of his CDs; that's simply not what's made him rich and famous. And in the bigger picture, although black popular music has always coded and reflected social problems, it has never itself been an engine of social change — that's been the job of politicians, community leaders and others, too many of whom are spending too much time fretting about hip-hop's failure to lead black people out of their current troubled state (talk about projection).

It seems particularly deluded to expect gangsta rap to do the leading. Which is why I take such heart from Snoop's unequivocal stance on the significance of Tookie Williams, not just to him but to young folks a couple of generations removed from the grim, entirely unglamorous beginnings of the Crips.

Snoop Dogg as a missing link of black leadership? It's a stretch. But so far it's holding.
by Anon
Murderers should be killed. Tookie should die for what he did before. He was convicted of killing 4 people and I'll bet that he has done much more. Have you ever had gun barrels of gang bangers pointed at you? I have. It made me want to kill the people pointing them at me. They didn't shoot me. I was left unharmed. I still wanted to kill them when they left. It's a very bad feeling of powerlessness and frustration that you get when someone even threatens to kill you and you can't move because there's a gun pointed at you. Abosolutly no freedom in that situation.

Tookie took people's freedom from them and also their lives. If I was Arnold, I'd set an example and have him killed.

It doesn't matter if you believe he's a good boy now. It's what he did before.
Damn, I see all negative comments.
There may be some facts in two of the posts. However the facts are clutered by poor jokes, fancy wording, and the authors hate for hip hop.
The other post I feel is quite troubling. I feel the need to address the author of the "kill all gang members" post. It is not healthy to live with so much anger. I don't know all the details about what happened to you but it must have been terrible. I would definently seek counseling to help free yourself of the pain.

God Bless
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