Author Topic: The wonders of the hip hop culture  (Read 948 times)

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Offline SavetheWest

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The wonders of the hip hop culture
« on: June 22, 2008, 02:32:06 AM »
How many girls end up like this?  With the popularization of rap/hip hop all over the world, stupid kids from middle class, rural, suburban, or wealthy backgrounds want to emulate the culture.  The culture promotes pimping, drug dealing, murder, etc. which is nothing new.  What is unbelievable is that the media hides the fact that the culture is hand in hand with the pimp and drug culture.... who are very often international syndicates.  How many ghetto pieces of garbage recruit through hip hop clubs, just to get women into prostitution?  These sub humans take pride in ruining women's lives and have no problem recruiting women from their own community, never mind women from a culture they resent.  There are so many women in America like this but this is yet another example of how the media tries its best to hide hip hop from its true legacy. 

Here's the story:

http://www.amw.com/missing_persons/case.cfm?id=31826

Lindsay Harris left her small hometown of Skaneateles, N.Y. in January 2003 with a plan in mind. She left on a cross-country drive to the west coast, eager to start a new and adventurous chapter of her life.

The shy, funny 19-year-old had a new boyfriend, then 26-year-old Solomon Barron, who she had met at a jazz festival in Syracuse, N.Y. Barron was a hip-hop promoter with businesses in Syracuse and Las Vegas, and it was in Sin City that Lindsay planned to start her life anew.

Initially, Lindsay lived with her aunt in San Diego, but two months later, relocated to Las Vegas and secretly moved in with Solomon. Martha and Robert Harris, Lindsay's parents, knew nothing of Solomon Barron until she brought him home for Christmas 2004. On May 5, 2005 -- just five months after their visit -- Solomon was calling the Harris family with bad news: Lindsay was missing.


Lindsay's disappearance quickly exposed her double life: she had been working as an escort in Las Vegas.
A Tale of Two Lindsays
Shortly after she moved in with Solomon, Lindsay told her family she was dancing in a nightclub, but they didn't know about the double life she was really leading.




Her disappearance quickly exposed the truth: she had been working as an escort in Las Vegas, and was even arrested for solicitation. Yet despite the sting of this reality, Lindsay's parents were only concerned with locating their daughter.



Police say Lindsay made a bank deposit near her home in Henderson, Nev. at 3:36 p.m. on Wednesday, May 4, in the last independent confirmed sighting of the young woman.



Lindsay's boyfriend, Solomon, was in Syracuse, N.Y. at the time of her disappearance. Solomon says he received a voicemail message from Lindsay nearly 12 hours after her trip to the bank, on the morning of Thursday, May 5, 2005.



Solomon says Lindsay said she was leaving the Monte Carlo Casino and heading to the Luxor Casino, where her Mercedes was parked. After repeatedly calling Lindsay's cell phone with no success, a concerned Solomon flew back to Las Vegas. He later phoned the Harris family to find out if they had heard from their daughter, but they hadn't.



As for Lindsay, authorities say she never made it to her car. Las Vegas Metro Police found Lindsay's Mercedes on May 9 in a parking lot between the Excalibur and Luxor casinos.