Afrika Bambaataa, KRS-One, and the Dangerous Myth of the Infallible Leaders #HipHop

"Quit Hip-Hop": How KRS-One's Defense of Afrika Bambaataa Reveals Everything Wrong With How We Protect Predators in Power https://theconsciouslee.substack.com/... The Dangerous Logic of the "Untouchable" Now let's talk about what KRS-One actually said, because the quote is worse in context than it is in isolation. During a Q&A session in Birmingham, England, KRS-One was asked about the allegations against Bambaataa. He dismissed them as "accusations and gossip." He said, "Show me the evidence, and I will definitely have justice done." And then he said the part that matters most — the part that reveals the entire architecture of how abuse gets protected inside institutions. He said: "Some of us are infallible. Some of us are going to have to be untouchable or our entire culture is going to fall. Our culture cannot fall on the accusations of four people. That's weak." Read that again. He said "infallible." He said "untouchable." These are not words of caution or nuance. These are words of doctrine. This is a theological claim dressed up in hip-hop language — the claim that certain leaders exist above the possibility of accountability because their contribution to the culture renders them immune from critique. This is not a defense of due process. This is a defense of impunity. And see, it's something about when KRS-One speaks in this particular way that shows you how we're able to protect people in leadership, especially when we love something they created. When you love what somebody built, it becomes almost impossible to hold them accountable for what they destroyed. That's the trap. The creation becomes the shield. And the victims become collateral damage to the narrative of greatness.