When will âprotect Black womenâ finally become more than a popular hashtag?
If Megan Thee Stallionâs sit-down interview with Gayle King about the 2020 shooting involving singer Tory Lanez teaches us anything, itâs that Black women arenât allowed to be victimsâeven in the eyes of the people who claim to love us.
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When reports of the incident first surfaced, a few figures in hip hop immediately took to social media to share their thoughts on the matter. What they offered wasnât compassion but jokes, which ultimately turned Meganâs trauma into a punchline. 50 Cent shared a now deleted Boyz n the Hood meme mocking the incident.
He quickly apologized stating: âI wouldnât have done that if i knew you was really hurt sorry.â Camâron also shared a meme that implied the reason for Lanezâs reported violence toward Megan was that sheâs really a manâwhich led many to call the Purple Haze rapper transphobic. The ridicule got so bad, which encompassed commentary from celebrities like Draya Michele to Chrissy Teigen, that Questlove chimed in perplexed by the insensitivity.
âI just wanna know how come this isnât taken in a serious matter (Iâm dreading I already know the answer as I type each word) everything about this story is mad….fucked up? Hardly heard no news coverage, nothing….donât even know @theestalllon like that but I hope she recovers & gets justice?â
A few rappers spoke up defending Megan, including Bun B, Wale and 21 Savage, but outrage in the hip hop community was mostly replaced by skepticism: is Megan lying about being shot by Lanez? In her interview with King, which aired earlier today, she explained that initially telling police she stepped on glass was an attempt to protect everyone involved in the situation.
âI didnât want to see anybody die so I said I stepped on glass. So when I see people trying to use that against me like, Iâm lying. âOh, she stepped on glass, she never got shot.â Iâm the one who said I stepped on glass, I was lying to protect all of us.â
The evidence corroborating Lanezâs guilt is beyond mounting at this point and includes: video from the night of the altercation showing Megan and her bloodied feet limping while trying to follow police orders, the medical report, texts obtained from a witness in the car that said Lanez shot Megan, photos of her wounds and her own personal testimony saying she was assaulted. Yet, her pain is still being met with disrespect instead of benevolence.
DaBabyâwho nowadays is gaining more traction for his behavior outside of the studio than for his actual musicâwelcomed Lanez as his guest during his 2021 Rolling Loud Miami set. When the assault trial started in February, DJ Akademics fueled suspicion surrounding Megan by going to Twitter saying:
âTory Lanez trial just adjourned until April with Toryâs lawyer telling the court they have completed DNA results from the prosecution which is very pleasing to his client (I saw this doc myself .. it literally says it was inconclusive in finding TORY DNA on the gun or magazine).â
Megan quickly refuted his claims and Akademics has since deleted the tweet. Jack Harlow, who has collaborated in the past with Lanez, classified himself as a âgood guyâ in an interview with Rolling Stone earlier this month before explaining his decision to remain neutral on this topic. âIt doesnât feel right as a grown man to speak for other grown men all the time…One thingâs for sure, is that Megan got shot. And I wish her nothing but love and respect.â
We know that Black women are the most disrespected group of people on the planet, a point which Megan herself underscored in an op-ed for The New York Times published 3 months after the shooting occurred. We are the group that go missing the most and we are also the ones most likely to die from domestic violence. What Megan needs is solidarity from the hip hop communityâranging from those who curate the art form to mere enjoyers of it.
Itâs not âProtect Black womenâ until you realize itâs a Black man who is accused of abuse. Itâs not âProtect Black womenâ unless you enjoy the music of the abuser. It needs to be âProtect Black womenââfull stopânow more than ever because our lives are depending on it.
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