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The True Disturbing Meaning of “WAP” by Cardi B

9-9-2020 < SGT Report 28 1407 words
 

from Vigilant Citizen:



Cardi B’s “WAP” is considered to be a “cultural phenomenon” and is described by mass media as “empowering” and “sex-positive”. However, when one understands the meaning behind the symbolism of the video, “WAP” takes a dark meaning that is at the exact opposite of “empowerment”.



It doesn’t take a rap historian to know that WAP is not the first raunchy song in rap history. Over 30 years ago, 2 Live Crew released the highly explicit single Me So Horny which became a massive hit with teens across America. Soon after, major controversy ensued and, for the first time ever, a U.S. district court judge ruled this recording “obscene”.




The album was banned from sale in Florida and a lengthy legal battle ensued over the song’s lyrics. The decision to ban the album was later overturned on appeal. This final ruling – which was upheld by the US Supreme Court – was deemed as a victory for free speech. In the following years, the rap world saw a constant flow of raunchy songs, many of which were performed by female rappers. And nobody really batted an eye.


Fast-forward in 2020: WAP is unleashed onto the world. And everybody loses their minds. And, because it is 2020, people found a way to make this song about moist female genitals political and divisive. On one side, mass media gushed over the song (pun intended) with unlimited praise. Complex magazine called the song “the epitome of female empowerment” while the Los Angeles Times wrote that the song “carries a political weight that men rapping about sex doesn’t”. Not to be beaten in this golden shower of praise, the NY Times claimed that the song is “an event record that transcends the event itself”. Wow, that’s a lot of praise for a song called WAP.


On the other hand, some public figures frowned heavily on the song. James P. Bradley, a health industry executive who is running for a California congressional seat wrote that “Cardi B & Megan Thee Stallion are what happens when children are raised without God and without a strong father figure” adding that the song made him want to “pour holy water” in his ears.


Tucker Carlson criticized the song on his talk show Tucker Carlson Tonight saying that “it’s aimed at young American girls – maybe your girls, your granddaughters and what is it doing to them? Can you imagine what it’s doing to them? The people pushing it clearly are trying to hurt your children”.


Comedian Russell Brand posted a video to social media entitled “WAP: Feminist Masterpiece or P–n?”, in which he discussed whether or not the song and the video were truly empowering to women. He asked if feminism means to “achieve equality by aspiring to and replicating the values that have been established by males”. He called the song “a sort of capitalist objectification and commodification of, in this case, the female.”


In short, lots of big words were thrown around to analyze a song that is called, once again, WAP. However, it appears that nobody actually sat down, intently watched the video, and took the time to decipher what it truly means.


Visual arts are based on symbolism. And symbols have the power to convey profound meanings that go beyond the limitations of words. Because, beyond the butts and the breasts, there’s a lot of symbolism going on in the video. And that symbolism is telling a story so vivid that it renders all the debate described above useless. The video is about slavery. It is about mind control. It is about sexual exploitation for the elite. It’s all there – but conveyed through symbolism.


Despite the apparent similarities between 2 Live Crew’s Me So Horny and Cardi B’s WAP, there’s a major, all-important difference between the two: 2 Live Crew was a group of teenagers signed to an independent label with a small budget; Cardi B is a major, global artist signed with Atlantic Records with a near-unlimited budget. In other words, she is being pushed by the occult elite. And, as seen in countless articles on this site, the occult elite permeates the work of its pawns with a specific set of symbols that tell a specific story.


The video of WAP is glaring proof of this. It basically sums up in the most blatant matter possible one of the occult elite’s most horrific obsessions. Here’s a look at the video.



The video begins with ornate gates opening as the viewers enter the premises of a lavish mansion.



Those who own this house are rich and elite-connected. The “customers” are elite-connected as well because they get access to actual expensive celebrities. This actually happens in real life.



Then there’s this fountain.



Cardi B and Megan Thee Stallion mirroring each other with tongues sticking out and water coming out of their breasts.



There’s a lot going on here. First, that statue is lactating which appears to be a reference to the fact that Cardi B is a mother. Despite this fact, she’s being wh*red out. It is almost as if they’re ridiculing the sacredness of motherhood.


The physical features of the fountain, including the tongue sticking out, appears to be inspired by classic depictions of the Hindu goddess Kali.



Clay effigies of Kali at the Kalighat Temple in India.



As seen in previous VC articles, the occult elite loves to use Hindu deities in symbolic scenarios.



WHO director-general Tedros Ghebreyesus with Chinese officials. This meeting is “presided” by a massive statue of Shiva – “the destroyer of worlds”.



In the context of WAP, there is something extremely symbolic about a major music industry star being associated with Kali and the forces it represents. While the origins and the spiritual meaning of Kali are extremely complex, she is mostly known for her wrathful bloodlust and her unbridled sexuality.



“Kali is the quintessential embodiment of shakti, female power. She emerges as an independent goddess around 1000 BCE and evolves as a controversial character: she is a scary, bloodthirsty embodiment of destruction, and the ultimate protector against evil. She is spiritual and bodily, erotic and sexual and as such, courageous: in the Tantrik cults that revolve around her, eroticism is primarily a way of confronting one’s deepest fears.”
– Quartz, Kali is the 3,000-year-old feminist icon we need today




A classic depiction of Kali standing on her husband Shiva while holding the severed head of a demon.



While the worship of Kali was never really popular (people were terrified of her wrath), some tantric sects and secret societies pandered to Kali’s characteristics by engaging in sexual rituals and human sacrifices. Coincidentally enough, those are two of the occult elite favorite practices.


More recently, Kali has been celebrated as a feminist icon.



“In the 20th and 21st centuries, many western feminist scholars have adopted Kali as a mascot of female empowerment, or have politicised her as a symbol of the supposed former matriarchal golden age that came before our present state of patriarchal control and decline. New Age Tantric practitioners adapt her obvious sexual manifestations as a therapeutic tool, while Hollywood employs her as a convenient symbol of malevolence. But Kali, the true Kali, will continue to defy all attempts to tame and domesticate her, as she has since the beginning of time.”
– Kashgar, Kali – A Most Misunderstood Goddess



In short, Cardi B and Megan Thee Stallion are associated with the goddess Kali who is a lustful yet destructive goddess while also being an icon for modern feminists.


Read More @ VigilantCitizen.com



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