McWhorter eloquently weighs in on hip hop culture with lopsided moralizing in New York's City Journal.
Mr. MCWHORTER: I'd like to see a little more concentration on our own community, and then we'll get to Africa.
Shipp, professor in journalism, Hofstra University School of Communication, along with John McWhorter, Manhattan Institute senior fellow in public policy.
Shipp, professor in journalism at Hofstra University School of Communication, plus John McWhorter, Manhattan Institute senior fellow in public policy.
Mr. MCWHORTER: It's hard to (unintelligible) business to a country where one out of three people are sick or dying, for example.
Mr. MCWHORTER: Depends on how long you stay as a security guard.
The opinions expressed in this commentary are solely those of John McWhorter.
John McWhorter, a black conservative at the Manhattan Institute, bets that all three companies sued so far would rather settle out of court.
"From our visibility, it is massive and it is growing exponentially over the years, " said Dan McWhorter, Mandiant's managing director of threat intelligence.
Many critics, including McWhorter, don't account for the complex ways that some artists in hip hop play with stereotypes to either subvert or reverse them.
Mr. MCWHORTER: Well, you know the way I feel about it, although I know for many people this would raise hackles, is that those people aren't leaving.
USC's calculator is meant to provide only an estimate of what a family might get in need-based aid, says Thomas McWhorter, the school's dean of financial aid.
John McWhorter, a social critic and widely read black conservative author, has made a career of twisting perceived black misbehavior into a provocative, if flawed, analysis of contemporary race.
He later took classical lessons and was "discovered" at age 9 by the late New York City jazz aficionado Charles McWhorter, who saw him play at a festival in Siberia.
While there's a chance Mr. Boyd made a mistake when plugging numbers into the calculator, others with questions about their results should also contact the aid office, says Mr. McWhorter.
That's especially true for the black youth who make a cameo in the anecdote about eight unruly teens who had to be kicked out of a fast food restaurant that fronts McWhorter's essay.
McWhorter secured money for Eldar to attend a prestigious music camp in Michigan, and Eldar and his family subsequently moved to the U.S. in 1998, settling in Kansas City because of its reputation as a haven for jazz.
Unlike McWhorter, intellectuals who study hip hop don't shy away from probing the complex varieties of black identity, even those that skirt close to stereotype, as they undress its mauling effects in stunted visions of black female identity.
Mr. McWhorter said that unlike hacking attacks that seek credit card numbers and other personal information that can be easily sold, the Chinese attacks it followed often ignored sensitive financial data to instead focus on stealing intellectual property.
Revered intellectuals and writers like Crouch, Marsalis, McWhorter, and Martin Kilson, the first African American professor to receive tenure at Harvard, cringe when they think intellectuals who engage hip hop don't embrace the values and styles of earlier arts communities or the civil rights movement.
Mr. JOHN MCWHORTER (Senior Fellow, Manhattan Institute): Well, you know, there was a grand period from the '20s into the 1960s when it was possible for a black man, or sometimes a woman, with no education to have a good solid job in an auto plant.
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