citypaper: archives

Breaking the Code
“My set is changing into music. I have the power to do something different, a chance to let people know how it is—not to kill or beat people, but to do music. Fuck these streets.”

Cover Story

Last spring, Whitefolkz, a D.C.-based rapper, decided to add to his plentiful body art and get a fresh tattoo. It felt like a good day to have someone draw on his forearm in permanent ink.

He headed to the only place he trusted to do his work—Topp Dogg Art Studios, a tattoo shop in District Heights owned by his man Infa Redz, also a rapper. Upon pulling up to the tattoo parlor, Whitefolkz parked, walked to the storefront, and steeled himself for a couple of hours under the needle.

He opened the door and stepped inside, but before he could settle in, he noticed something strange hanging on a wall of the shop: a blue bandanna and a red bandanna intertwined—a symbol of unity and peace between long-warring Los Angelesnbased gangs the Crips and the Bloods.

Whitefolkz is a member of the Gangster Disciples, a gang with roots in the Midwest. Gangster Disciples don’t have much to do with the feud between Crips and Bloods—they’ve got their own battles to fight. But Whitefolkz has always been taught that Crips and Bloods were enemies, that blue and red don’t mix under any circumstances.

Even though his own gang’s symbol—a black bandanna, or “flag”—wasn’t a part of the display, seeing the fabrics of the Crips and the Bloods cuddled together made Whitefolkz cringe.

“They were wrapped up like snakes,” he says of the flags. “That’s a nasty image, right? My first thought was, Nasty. It was obscene to me—like pissin’ on a cross, like taking a shit on a cross.”

Whitefolkz says he felt sick to his stomach, as though he’d eaten some food with too much grease in it, and almost walked out of the shop.

... Continued

Issue of Jan. 12, 2007

News and Features

  • Breaking the Code
    “My set is changing into music. I have the power to do something different, a chance to let people know how it is—not to kill or beat people, but to do music. Fuck these streets.”
    Cover Story
  • Apartment for Vent
    Noisy HVAC system leads to regulatory Catch-22.
    The City
  • Conventional Wisdom
    Taking You Behind the Scenes of America's Industry Confabs
    The City
  • Pleading the Filth
    Ending Decades of One-sided Health Code Violation Reporting
    The City
  • Blogging to Differ
    The Mail

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  • Thickness Matters
    Not Bowled Over: Bubba’s Brunswick stew passes the spoon, but not the taste, test
    Young & Hungry

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