No surprise that an entire generation of black men excitedly cited Scarface as their favorite movie.
No surprise, since they're saturated with rappers constantly referencing the movie and it's imagery. People refuse to accept that someone who spends every waking moment of their day singing about committing acts of violence will be prone to committing acts of violence.
It's just natural. You can't give young people these rappers to worship and idolize -- some of which are real-life criminals -- and then expect their fans to be law-abiding angels. When your "hero" brags about killing anyone who "gets in his way," what comes next?
No surprise, since they're saturated with rappers constantly referencing the movie and it's imagery. People refuse to accept that someone who spends every waking moment of their day singing about committing acts of violence will be prone to committing acts of violence.
It's just natural. You can't give young people these rappers to worship and idolize -- some of which are real-life criminals -- and then expect their fans to be law-abiding angels. When your "hero" brags about killing anyone who "gets in his way," what comes next?