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New Book puts the FBI and Death Row Records on blast


Author John Potash

A controversial book is continuing to making headlines fort its message, one that claims that the FBI used one of the most notorious Hip-Hop labels in history as a means of suppression for Black activism.

Titled “The FBI War On Tupac Shakur and Black Leaders: U.S. Intelligence’s Murderous Targeting of Tupac, MLK, Malcolm, Panthers, Hendrix, Marley, Rappers & Linked Ethnic Leftists, the book was originally published in 2008 but is being highlighted again along with its accompanying DVD.

According to Author John Potash, Death Row Records was a sham—a front company that was

filled with police officers working to stifle the creative genius Tupac Shakur from distributing his message of activism.

He tells the Baltimore City Paper,

“I believe that Death Row Records, which included dozens and dozens of police officers at all levels, according to a high-level police officer that investigated them, was a front company and was trying to continue penal coercion and mess up [Tupac Shakur's] head. Death Row, of course, published the most negative songs he ever produced.”


Potash, a Columbia University grad and former addictions counselor, admits that he doesn’t have a real background in Hip-Hop but was compelled to spend ten years researching the death of Tupac after seeing a coincidence in the infamous Quad Recording Studios shooting and a time when Pac was previously arrested.

The link made him think that the rap legend was being targeted, much like his parents who were well known Black Panthers.

He tells the Baltimore City Paper,

“I knew some rap–like Public Enemy But I didn’t really know Tupac Shakur at that time…one of the many strange twists in the case, the officer who raced to the scene after Shakur’s friends called 911 was the same officer who arrested him a year ago…..So I called [Shakur's] New York trial lawyer and said, ‘Do you think they’re targeting him in the same way they targeted his activist parents? So that’s how I got into it all.”


He also tells the Baltimore City Paper that U.S. Intelligence is known for controlling people through their thinking which posed a problem for Tupac who directly threatened their suppression tactic.

“What I think it was was that he had become the most influential black man in the black community in the country. CIA and U.S. intelligence, what they have to do is win the hearts and minds of the people. They don’t want to control us by force, they want us to control ourselves by having us believe in a certain way–that we don’t need national health care, for example. And here, Tupac was threatening to win over the hearts and minds of people, he was able to counter so much of the propaganda in the black community.”


This book sounds kinda deep, I’m a big PAC fan so i will be
getting this as soon as it’s available…

Bone Thugs On The Mo’nique Show

Bone Thugs N Harmony recently appeared on “The Monique Show”  to discuss their issues and success in the music industry, The show aired on June 15, it featured the group minus Bizzy Bone, they discussed they’re sudden fame and offered advice to the newcomers in the game who find themselves immersed in sudden fame.

“Read your contracts,” Bone Thugs said. “We were young kids and we didn’t have anyone to teach is what to look for and what not to look for, so we fell into the trap.”

Flesh  Bone also discussed his 10-year stint and his recent legal trouble stemming from a 1997 incident with his mother.

“[Being incarcerated] help me sort through some things, it helped me figure out what my priorities were, which was my family, career and Bone Thugs.   The incident recently was from something that should have been cleared up when I was in the California Department Of Correction, because it happened 10 or 12 years ago. No one knew about it until the police came to the show in Cleveland and when they showed up at the show it got dealt with.”

Bone Thugs N Harmony also discussed their relationship with on again off again member Bizzy Bone, who is currently in rehab for a drug addiction.

“We respect Bizzy and understand what he’s going through,” the group said. “We just hope that he recovers so that we can get together and make hits, because at the end of the day he’s still our brother.”

click play to check it out…