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Hip hop culture has traditionally been a voice for people in poverty. Poverty usually increases crime. Although RapIndie's vision is an innovative rewrite of what it means to be a rapper, tolerance for the norms of hip hop culture is something we expect from our audience. It's ok to prefer the best of hip hop (we do), but we would like to ask for a little understanding for the worst of it.

Quality is usually important. It's impactful, infectious, and evokes attachment. However, intentional lack of quality may be doing more good than simply making the world less critical.

1. In a world of digital art, real artists are often more inspired to try new seemingly easy things.

2. Are curator standards different than the casual audiences? Maybe people are satisfied.

3. Artists that blend in are more accepted and unified.

A while back, some people got together and over-powered exclusion. 

One of the biggest issues was that mob-mentality appropriation was inescapable in every community. Is the refusal to shout out "RapIndie" culture shock? Passive aggression?

The hip hop football team needs every position. Someone needed to showcase the potential of the culture, someone needed to use that potential to create a community, and someone needs to share/translate that community to every audience.

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