By Karu F. Daniels, AOL Black Voices

When I think of a rapper telling Al Sharpton to perform oral sex on them, the last person I think of is David Banner.
But it just so happens that the Mississippi lyricist has done just that to the revered civil rights activist.
Hip-hop website SOHH published blistering comments Banner (legally known as Levell Crump) said, addressing Sharpton, which included "The next time you see Al Sharpton, tell him I said f*ck him and he can suck my d*ck. I might change the name of my album from 'The Greatest Story Never Told' to 'F*ck Al Sharpton."
In response to the statement, Kirsten John-Foy -- a member of Sharpton's National Action Network -- responded in a very particularly peppered fashion, taking shots and Banner's once fledging rap career and even his sexuality.
"From time to time we do encounter people that have sexual fantasies about Reverend Al Sharpton, but they are always women and Crump's proposition is a first," she wrote in a statement released to the media. "However, in keeping with the National Action Network's Decency Initiative, I am sure Rev. Sharpton would not call Crump the "N" "B" or "H" word. And, despite Crump's personal request, I am sure Reverend Sharpton would not call him a f-g--t. He would just pray for him. We at NAN are pro civil rights for everyone, even Levell Crump who has not had a banner year since his debut album in 2003."
Ouch.
Now, Banner -- who appears to be one of the most politically active hip-hop artists in the business (specifically with his groundbreaking Hurricane Katrina fundraising initiatives) -- responded to the Sharpton staffer, noting that his quotes were taken out of context.
Apparently the comments were from a "conversation on a DJ conference call," and not "from a formal interview. ...The manner in which it was delivered was not how he would respond in an interview," he clarified. In addition, he wrote an open letter to Sharpton, Oprah Winfrey, Jesse Jackson and other "so called leaders."
The letter, first published via EURweb.com, was reportedly written before the SOHH.com controversy. The impassioned diatribe is below in its entirety below ...
Wrote A Letter To The Government The Other Day!
Stop Attacking The Kids
To all the black 'so called leaders'. Al, Oprah, Jesse, etc, etc, etc... I'm saddened by your current direction and current 'pet projects' you guys have taken under your wing at the expense of Young Black America. As an urban professional living in this crazy world, I dare ask, who are you leading? I listen to
what you say, I hear you complain about the youth, and about the direction of our lives, the kids, and where Black America is going and yet I still ask – who are you guys leading? And most importantly, where are we going? Do we know the goal we are trying to reach before we get there? Have we identified our end before articulating our means to an end! Who are you REALLY reaching? Why do you feel the need to attack the young generation for the things we are doing? "WHO DID WE LEARN THESE THINGS FROM? We are trying to have fun in the midst of our traumatic circumstances.
People are trying to make a living by any means necessary, people are voicing their experiences, people are speaking the truth about situations and honestly the truth hurts and sometimes it's ugly. If music/hip hop/ rappers are wrong with the language they use, the images they portray in their videos – then come talk to us – I use the term 'us' as a collective because I'm defending what I have a passion for so this also involves me. Pull us to the side and say "hey kids, that's not the way to go" and then we can say "change what we see daily so we cansing and rap about the roses and not about the bullets". We will say, help give us better situations to create better verbal material". Don't just go running off to the media to air the dirty laundry of the family and not expect us to fight back in some kind of way. What you are doing is wrong and it's pissing off a lot of people with less money and camera time!
Young Black America's problem is not Hip Hop or the music, Young Black America's problem is Old White America.
In the young black community, there is a growing level of resentment toward the 'so called leaders' because you guys DON'T WANT TO REALLY FIX OUR PROBLEMS. You guys don't really want to be on our side fighting for better school systems, more after school programs, more money for college funding! Where areyou leaders at when there's a need to break down to freshman in college on how not to get caught up with credit cards by singing up for an MBNA card, with high interest rates that eventually screw up your credit and makes it that much harder for you to become a homeowner after you graduate college pending you can find a job in your field after you've spent all this money in student loans! Where are those seminars? Dubois had it right when he spoke of the Talented Tenth! Rally around us to help teach us about THIS life! It's not our fault that the world is messed up and filled with debauchery. It's not our fault that our communities are screwed! The problems in our community should not fall on our lap. And if you begin to hold us accountable for simply our words – then I will begin to hold you accountable for your actions; or lack there of. Right is right and wrong is wrong. You as our leaders should have taken a better approach to gaining the attention of those that you are dissatisfied with and had a conversation with them. You don't scold your child in public without fair warning!
Al Sharpton: You run around towns and cities speaking words of wanting to better our community by cleaning up the airwaves. You hold rallies in front of radio stations saying turn off the music and clean the airwaves. You want to shut down local stations that are playing urban music when most of these local stations house and employ the same
people in your community – the black community. When you visit any station in any city (big or small) playing urban/rap music, the staff is generally black. Now if those stations were to ever shut down – where do those employees go? Al, if you are for the people, where was your rally when the 3 college students were executed in New Jersey by black men. Where is the rally atfor those families and that neighborhood??? I don't see you out there asking for justice yet that incident happened in a black community. If someone was to rap about "how f**** up black on black crime is and how even if you go to college you aren't safe on the streets and nigga's aint' s---" – that kind of tone is offensive to you and you want to stop that! If that's the truth, then why are you censoring it? No, you need to stop the crime before it happens so that there is no gangster song about a gangster situation.
Oprah: You recently you held a town hall meeting dedicating 2 days of talk to have an open forum about the "Nappy Headed Ho" comment from Imus. Everyone had their 2cents to say and yet the people that needed to REALLY be there were not at all on your panel of 'experts'. The questions all were about "why use the word ho or b**** or nigga
etc" yet the rappers in question ala Nelly, Snoop, Ludacris weren't anywhere present on your panel. In my eyes you had all the wrong people on there representing and speaking on behalf of other people. Common is great but he's not gangsta. If you had a problem with the true content of rap songs then where were those that do that kind of rap 100%? You want to talk about change, and about having us not call women in rap songs "bitches" and "hoes" but one thing I noted, you had all men on your panel of executives. Russell is wonderful but he's not the Zenith when it comes to new school rappers or their new school mentality. Kevin Liles is great but what happened to Sylvia Rhone the head of the label that Nelly is signed to, or [C]athy Hughes the head of Radio One or Deborah Lee the head of BET. If the problem really was about women and the "bitch, ho" term being used, where were those ladies to speak on their stance on this issue! They are the ones with the ultimate say pulling all the strings and yet they weren't dully noted as absent from your panel! Oprah you are suppose to protect us, I can find more harm being done to the black community by the movies and sponsors you promote than any rap song.
Just like your son or daughter, niece or nephew... rappers are just kids growing into their own. They aren't always right, but they aren't always wrong either. If our path is misguided, then help us get back on the right road. I'm young, I'm black, and I'm a hard worker. I'm from the hood where mother's leave their kids in the hands of strangers and never look back, I've been with killers, dope dealers, b******, church folk, grandparents, bad parenting from good parents, pushers, junkies, robbers, middleclass workers, but that's the life I've been around. Gunshots and church hymns usually go hand in hand in most neighborhoods. The grim reality for a lot of kids out there living alone is that life is harsh and cold; kids grow up faster than they want to because they are forced too! Kids are growing up in situations that are f***** up. So the songs we listen to mirror the things we see, the things we dream about and the fantasies we have! Don't change the songs I listen to, change the circumstance from which it comes from---then the situation will be better!
Growing up in this world of hip hop it's disheartening to see our 'so called leaders' leave us out to dry. Fine you don't like what we say. Fine disagree with our choice of topics; however, the things we talk about aren't new. We didn't invent the term pimps, pushers, hoes, tricks, doobies, nigga's and gangsta's. Hip Hop didn't create that. Those words were left here for us to use by you guys, your generation. This life we are continuing to live was handed to us by the people before us who didn't do much to clean it up. There may never be a time that we agree on anything, but there is always room for change. As a family – we will agree to disagree but it's the synergy in which we do it. If you are on one extreme tangent, and I'm on another, we will never meet eye to eye. At the same time, I will not allow you to bash, yell, condemn, and have a condescending tone on my source of refugee and happiness. As you leaders call out the hip hop community saying that we are wrong for what we do and how we do it, I am CALLING EACH OF YOU OUT saying you are wrong for what you are doing to us. How dare you guys not call Nelly, Snoop, Lil Wayne, David Banner, Jim Jones, Akon, Rick Ross, Fabulous, 50 cent, Young Buck, Bun B, Too Short and say lets talk this through. Do you even know who ANY of these people are??????? You are so disconnected from us that we don't even look at you for guidance. If you really want to change something, start by changing your dialogue. Don't talk at us, talk to us!
Signed
David Banner


Comments: (526)
Add a comment
By: VJ on 8/16/2007 12:26PM
THIS DUDE IS JUST TRYING TO GIVE HIS DEAD CAREER A BOOST. PUBLICITY WILL MAKE SOME PEOPLE CURIOUS. BEING CURIOUS MIGHT MAKE THEM BUY HIS DEAD CD. JUST ANOTHER DISRESPECTFUL OVER 21 THINKS HE'S 16 KID.
Reply to this Comment | Report This
By: Toney Tone on 8/20/2007 11:50AM
WOW,Mr.Banner said a mouth full and I agree with alot of what he has to say,but here is my problem with his statement.He is almost saying we can't do know better then what we are doing,I thought the whole thing about hustling in the streets,was to get out of the street to lead a better life.GOD give everyman one thing that nobody can take from you and that is freedom of choice,Mr,Banner and the rest of the guys he name made a choice to rap about what they rap about,so my thing is stop whinning now,and take it like a man.The young rap community do not want to hear from people like oprah are al are jesse because they think doing thing right is week,what is week is not being proud to be black regradles of how you grow up. How long are we going to use that as an excuse not to be good men and women,and if you do not want to change them stop complaining about what white folks do to you.The main reason white america treat you the way they do is that they see no pride in you,what real man would build his empire of back of his women,then ask the world to respect me as a man.Brother you are to intelligent to lose the fight that way,but you are 100% right when you stated that we should stop taking our problem to the media,but you owe brother AL an apology for what you said he could do,you lost the battle with that statement,your a bigger man than that.One last to all black people it time to stop getting mad and get smart we are losing the game because we have no power and no system to feed from.Think about it PEACE
Toney Tone (holler Back)
Reply to this Comment | Report This
By: Kevin on 8/16/2007 1:57PM
Banner the way you responed in your letter is respectful and hits a lot of key points. I only wish you'd taken the time and "thought" before you responed about Al on that radio show. The language used there, makes me question the "authenticity" of your open letter.
KE http://wbls.com/pages/752603.php
Reply to this Comment | Report This
By: Lisa on 8/16/2007 2:15PM
Banner is just another ignorant brother and always will be. I hope no one buys his music let's all hurt him real hard do not put one cent in his pocket let him grow up. His jaw need some good bleach and heavy duty detergent... foul mouth idiot.
Reply to this Comment | Report This
By: Morgan on 8/16/2007 3:08PM
While I think that he had some valid points, the comment about Sharpton was a bit much. It doesn't matter if it was a conference call or formal interview, the statement was made. If you don't want it repeated, then don't say it.
Reply to this Comment | Report This
By: brown suga on 8/17/2007 2:53PM
I don't get it why is everyone downing what he said it was so true
Reply to this Comment | Report This
By: big mike on 8/18/2007 5:34AM
This is directed at Lisa's comment. You ignorant witch! How dare you have the audacity to speak against this man when you don’t know the first thing about him.... grow the hell up and open your eyes. I know the man personally from high school and to me this aint nothing new. David (Lavell) has always been this way and just because he made it out...you want to start pouring 40oz of haterade on him. Actively "listen" to what he says and you'll then realize he is making a conscious statement indicting all of young black America and asking not only them, but for us to take a stand. Only ways for us to do better is the get up and do better...Now get your azz up and start making a difference.
Reply to this Comment | Report This
By: Lisa Jackson on 8/17/2007 2:23PM
I totally agree with David. I think his points were valid and thought provoking. He sounds extremely frustated with the black community and wants the leaders to do more than talk negatively against the young black community. Oprah gives too much money to Spelman!! Cosby too much to Morehouse!! There are several smaller black colleges without huge endowments that could really use extra money to provide scholarhsips to students (Fort Valley, Albany State). I agree that it is not Hip Hop, but definitely the world young people are living in today. I never knew too much about David, but I will definitely buy his next CD. Job well done David!
Reply to this Comment | Report This
By: JOLENE ROYAL on 8/16/2007 3:12PM
THAT IS PART OF THE PROBLEM WITH MOST RAPPERS, THEY THINK THAT THEY ARE STILL CHILDREN.IT IS A TIME WHEN YOU ARE SUPPOSE TO GROW UP AND STOP MAKING A BAD SITUATION AS AN EXCUSE NOT TO DO BETTER.YOU HAVE COMMON SENSE AND IT NEEDS TO BE USED.WE ALL HAVE A RIGHT AND A CHANCE TO CHANGE OUR SITUATION IF WE CHOOSE TO,WE HAVE CHOICES BUT WE ALWAYS CHOOSE WHAT'S EASIEST AND MORE CONVIENT FOR US SO THAT WE DO NOT HAVE TO WORK HARD OR STRIVE FOR EXCELLENCE.IT IS SO EASY TO POINT FINGERS AND BLAME EVERYONE FOR OUR ACTIONS BUT OURSELVES.WE HAVE GREAT LEADERS THAT ARE TRYING TO MAKE OUR GENERATION AND FUTURE GENERATIONS BETTER AND SAFER,WE AS SO-CALLED ADULTS SHOULD PLAY OUR PARTS AND STOP THE FOOLISHNESS.I LIKE RAP MUSIC BECAUSE OF THE BEATS,THE WORDS CAN BE DELETED.IF YOU HAVE NICE BEATS WITHOUT ALL THE TERRIBLE LANGUAGE,YOU WILL STILL HAVE A HIT.TAKE SOME RESPONSIBILITY FOR WHAT YOU RAPPERS PUT OUT THERE FOR THE KIDS TO LISTEN TO.THINK ABOUT IT,WHEN YOUR SONGS ARE FIRST HEARD,IT IS ON THE RADIO,WE DO NOT HEAR THE CUSSING AND SWEARING,AND YOUR CD'S ARE STILL BOUGHT,SO WHY NOT MAKE THE MUSIC WITHOUT THE SWEARING AND HAVE GREAT BEATS? PLEASE BE RESPONSIBLE AND TAKE CHARGE OF YOUR LIFE,YOU DO NOT HAVE TO FORGET WHERE YOU CAME FROM BUT YOU CAN GO FORWARD DOING GOOD AND POSITIVE THINGS FOR YOURSELF AND YOUR GENERATION. THANK YOU
Reply to this Comment | Report This
By: Ladybug37 on 8/16/2007 3:44PM
I TOTALLY AGREE WITH DAVID BANNER, INSTEAD OF CONDEMING US THEY SHOULD BE TEACHING US. I ALSO AGREE CHILDREN LEARN WHAT THEY LIVE AND OUR COMMUNITY IS NOT LIKE THIS FOR NO REASON WE HAD TO GET THIS FROM SOMEWHERE IF MY MOTHER WAS CRACK AND FATHER IN JAIL WHERE IS YOUR GUIDANCE THE STREETS AND IF YOU HAPPEN TO MAKE IT OUT THAN THAT WAS GOOD FOR YOU. EVERYONE ISN'T THE SAME AND EVERYONE CAN'T HANDLE CERTAIN SITUATIONS THE SAME. ALL I KNOW IS PEEP PRESSURE AND TEMPTATION IS A MOTHER. EVERYONE DOESN'T MOTHER THE SAME AND I BELIEVER THE TIMES THAT WE ARE LIVING IN NOW IS WORST THAN EVER WE HAVE KILLINGS EVERYDAY OF THE WEEK I'VE NEVER SEEN SO MANY BLACK PEOPLE ON DRUGS IN MY LIFE, NO REGARD FOR HUMAN LIFE. ALL I KNOW IS WE NEED SOME SERIOUS HELP FROM OUR LEADERS STOP BLAMING THE HIP HOP COMMUNITY FOR EVERYTHING NO ONE BLAMES HEAVY METEL AND HARD ROCK WHEN THEY TALK ABOUT HOW TO KILL YOURSELF OH THAT'S RIGHT THEY DON'T HAVE ANY IMPACT ON THE COMMUNITY. DRUGS IS THE ROOT TO OUR PROBLEM TELL THE GOVERNMENT TO STOP ALLOWING DRUGS TO COME IN THE COUNTRY AND THEN MAYBE WE CAN START FROM THERE. YOU GOT SO MANY PEOPLE HOOKED ON THEM PEOPLE WOULD DIE FOR SIMPLY NOT HAVING THE DRUG IN THEIR SYSTEM NOT TO MENTION EVERYBODY GETTING KNOCKED OVER THE HEAD BECAUSE THE FIEND CAN'T GET HIGH. ALL I KNOW IS I WISH MALCOLM X WAS STILL HERE MAYBE THINGS WOULD BE A DIFFERENT.
Reply to this Comment | Report This