Rap music is a cultural force—a genre born from resistance, empowerment, and the raw expression of lived experiences. It’s a medium where truth and defiance converge, a powerful megaphone for calling out injustices, and an art form that resonates deeply with those who’ve been marginalized. But as much as I admire rap’s ability to confront societal issues, I can’t help but tie it back to the greatest injustice of our time: THE CLIMATE CRISIS. Because whether we’re talking about systemic oppression or environmental destruction, the underlying threads of greed, denial, and complacency are the same.
RAP: A VOICE FOR THE SILENCED
Rap has always been about giving voice to those who’ve been ignored, dismissed, or oppressed. From the gritty tales of survival in inner cities to the rallying cries against systemic racism, rap doesn’t just entertain—it EDUCATES and MOTIVATES. And if there’s any crisis screaming for such unapologetic truth-telling, it’s the climate emergency.
The fossil fuel industry, the corporate elite, and the climate-denial machine—they don’t want us to talk about the truth. But guess what? Rap knows how to cut through the noise and lay it BARE. Imagine rap’s unfiltered energy unleashed on the biggest existential threat humanity has ever faced. THE BEATS WOULD BE EARTHQUAKES, AND THE LYRICS WOULD BURN THROUGH LIES LIKE WILDFIRE!
DENIAL AND GREED: THE ENEMIES IN BOTH FIGHTS
Just as rap calls out systemic failures like police brutality and economic inequality, it must also tackle the SYSTEMIC DESTRUCTION of our planet. The same greed and apathy that fuel corporate exploitation of vulnerable communities are at the heart of the climate crisis. Fossil fuel executives rake in BILLIONS while the planet BURNS. Neighborhoods—often poor, often communities of color—are turned into sacrifice zones for toxic waste and pollution.
THIS IS ENVIRONMENTAL RACISM! And you know who has the power to shout it from the rooftops and drop the mic on climate deniers? RAP ARTISTS. Imagine lines like:
“They poison our water, they blacken our skies,
Profit from the pain while the Earth slowly dies.
It’s Exxon, it’s Chevron, the billionaires’ game,
But WE are the ones who inherit the flame.”
THE POWER OF RAP’S PLATFORM
Rap has the power to reach audiences far beyond the usual climate conversations. Politicians and scientists can write op-eds, but a rap track can ignite a MOVEMENT. Artists like Kendrick Lamar, J. Cole, and others have already proven that they can weave activism into their music. And we need that fire to fuel climate action, to make it IMPOSSIBLE for deniers to hide, and to inspire the youth who are already leading the fight for a sustainable future.
Picture this: a rap album entirely focused on the climate crisis. Songs about rising seas, disappearing species, and the millions displaced by environmental disasters. Tracks that call out the enablers of destruction by name. THIS IS THE ENERGY WE NEED!
RAP AND CLIMATE: THE ULTIMATE COLLAB
Rap thrives on raw emotion—anger, hope, defiance—and there’s no issue more emotionally charged than the climate emergency. What’s more heartbreaking than knowing the Amazon rainforest is being slashed and burned? What’s more enraging than watching politicians shrug while glaciers melt and wildfires rage? And what’s more hopeful than the realization that WE HAVE THE POWER TO STOP THIS?
Rap could be the soundtrack of the climate revolution. It’s the perfect medium for rallying the masses, for saying what scientists can’t always say: THIS SYSTEM IS BROKEN, AND IT’S KILLING US ALL. Rap artists can turn climate data into battle cries, transforming charts and statistics into unforgettable hooks that shake listeners to their core.
JOIN THE FIGHT FOR OUR FUTURE
Rap music is rebellion. It’s resilience. It’s truth. And in the face of the climate crisis, we need ALL OF THAT and MORE. Because the fight for our planet isn’t just about science—it’s about JUSTICE. It’s about standing up to the forces of greed and denial, just as rap has always stood up to oppression.
So to all the rap artists out there: PICK UP THE MIC AND JOIN THE FIGHT! Use your words to call out the climate deniers, the oil tycoons, and the politicians who delay and deflect while the Earth suffers. Spit bars that inspire action, that make people uncomfortable in the best possible way. Because if we don’t act NOW, there won’t be a stage left to perform on.
THE BEAT IS DROPPING, AND THE TIME IS NOW! WILL YOU RAP FOR THE PLANET? 🎤🌍
Discover more from Watts Up With That?
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.
Mann as a rap artist? He is more the Jonathan Edwards fire and brimstone preacher.
If’n I’m not mistaken, Mann sang back-up on “My Pal Foot Foot” with the Shaggs.
He is! You just have to remember that the C in rap is silent.
…or Elmer Gantry…or perhaps “Harold Hill” (played by Robert Preston) in “The Music Man.”
Naah! Those fictional characters knew they were frauds, I seriously think Mann is so far over the edge reality and him are strangers.
Great image at the top of Mann as a rap artist. An improvement might be Mann as a pimp.
Is there a difference?
🫣 ‘Defamation of a Nobel Prize winner’ 🤣.
Change that “m” to a “c” and “of” to “on” and you have it right.
Rap is probably the LOWEST form of music ever invented.
Matches Mickey Mann who is the lowest form of human and pseudo-scientist ever invented.
It is not music. Music has melody, harmony, and rhythm . Rap has only one of those elements.
…or like his BFF Joe Biden…..
I don’t have time for C…Rap.
🎵 Gulf Stream shutdown in the North Atlantic
Icebergs calvin’, sink you like the Titanic
Brother Mann’s warning, gonna make you panic…🎵
I’ll try to come up with the rest later…
“His pudgy mug looks satanic”
?
“The Earth’s gettin warmer, so I want to tell ya,
That it’s gonna get worse, so much, much hotta,
I go round the world, in my carbon spewin plane
Tellin everyone of the fate that is plain
New York isn’t flooded, that I know,
But that’s because change is a liddle bit slow
The sky will still fall, and gremlins appear
And that’s only half of it, the changes will scare,
All who survive the vast heat increase,
I know I’ve bin wrong, in the past that is sure
But, heh, look at the cash I’ve managed to procure.”
.”
…………
Sorry, no n-words in there. Not rap.
Yeah, and they have to use “bitch” and “Ho”, too. And lots of sexual innuendo.
Innuendo?
Let me introduce you to Cardi B and WAP
Here’s a start for some rap lines (first draft/sarc)
Graphs and maths, algorithms and measurements too, can change fundamental facts for me and you.
As far as temperature goes, the ocean rules, the atmosphere drools and deniers are fools
We have to redefine what peer-review is and fine Exxon too
We see the scary scenarios, make simple justice come true and be merry
Doesn’t matter what is true, it only matters that people believe in you
If it isn’t consensus, it isn’t science.
This is better.
That’s impressive!
Amazing, thanks for posting that, there is a future.
“and the raw expression of lived experiences.”
More like the raw expression of terrible life choices.
Just how many obnoxious narcissists has academia produced in the past few decades of its inability to root out those who falsely claim intelligence offering instead much opportunism?
No wonder the truth has gone missing in action.
While the parody is humorous, it is based on a false premise. Rap is something people with no musical talent do. It is not music, nor is it anything but a display of the ignorance of the performers and adherents alike. Or of con artists making millions by rapping to the ignorant masses.
All you need for evidence besides half a brain, is to watch the innumerable music reaction channels on YouTube, where Rap adherents listen to actual music and are flabbergasted and blown away by the talents and intricacies of real music.
Maybe Ray.Gun is available to help!
Her rapper name should be changed to “Cringe”.
Well, Rappers don’t have any evidence that CO2 is anything other than a benign gas, essential for life on Earth, either.
Mann is encouraging rappers to lie about CO2. Is anyone surprised?
Crap artist
Thank you for the Parody label.
Otherwise, I might have swallowed the bait!
The best parody is too believable.
Why are you giving guns to the Indians?
Maybe I am out of step with the rest of society, but I find “RAP”…hmmm, is that just a partial word with the leading “C” omitted?….but I digress….anyway, I find it irritating white noise, not at all entertaining, not even the least bit musical, and most of those who perform it are thugs and foul-mouth buffoons. Given the destructive effect “RAP” and “RAPPERS” have had on society, it follows that liars and frauds like Michael Mann would fit right in.
The fools who pay to listen to such filth have made the “RAPPERS” BILLIONAIRES. …so much for that “genre” being a medium to bring attention to “the struggles” of the “oppressed” and a “megaphone” for the “rebels.”…..gnome say’n…
I got looked at while a shoppin’
so the lawsuits started poppin’.
Evil people always say
that the data I misplay
then subject it to p-hackin’
so the deniers I can whack em.