I might be the only one to defend him. A lot of young black dudes don't understand, there are a lot of older black people that never ever, ever, ever, ever thought they would live to see a black President, good or bad, a black man making it there, a black man making it there that doesn't act white and embraces so many parts of his own personal culture...is a gift. There are black people who were told "You can be President of the United States" but until Obama, that was just a dream. Him making that sacrifice, walking this line, taking the criticism, the stress, the reality of race in America, head on...every single time he is suppose to and does so in a way that every person can respect, is charity. He doesn't have to be President, yes, it's part ego; yes, it's part vanity, but it is also part heroic. To stand and let the world judge you, knowing that whatever you do is going to fall on millions of shoulders, that is heroism.
In so many ways, Jay represents that to dudes in the hood. There are a few on NT that really be in the streets, see what it's like. Jay tells the world what it's like, tells those kids running the streets, F it, do what you gotta do, and make it out of the projects I don't care what is, so long as you can "walk down the mirrors in Versilles and be so satisfied when [you] look yourself in the eyes. ....and when they tell you to be a certain way, tell "I did it my way." That's the secret most of you kids don't want to tell yourselves, you resent Jay because he did what you feel you can't. He made it to the top...billionaire status damn near, with a Du Rag, when you spend your time trying to find a button up, and he's not shy about telling you how great he is, something you don't feel about yourself, so you hate to hear others feel that way about themselves.
The idea of "Hope" is embodied in both Sean carter and Obama, the idea that one day black males will get respected for more than sports and entertainment, we will be more than Showhorses and Jim Crows, the hope that my little cousin can walk into a boardroom and command million dollar deals, like so many sons of other races, and the backroom conversation not be "He's a good businessman, for a black guy," but rather "He's a good businessman." The hope that one day my niece can hold public office and the headline doesn't read "Madea goes to Washington," is something that I actually see in Obama. Both are similar in what they do for the culture, it takes a envious person to not see that.
/rant.