06 March 2012

Woman groped at The Game concert in Adelaide

Video has emerged of rapper The Game urging an unwilling female fan to show her breasts at a show in Adelaide before his friends grope her and eventually push her off stage.

The footage, which follows another clip of the US rapper spitting at a group of women on the Gold Coast, has led anti-violence groups to condemn his behaviour during his Australian tour in February.

In the new video The Game’s crew, including rapper Kid Red, can be seen gathering around a woman who they had invited on stage at the HQ Complex in Adelaide on February 19.

"Show us your t---ies," The Game yells several times, prompting cheers from the audience.

The woman appears visibly uncomfortable as Kid Red approaches her and tries to remove her top himself.

When she continues to refuse, Kid Red pushes the woman off the stage onto the crowd below.

A ninemsn reader who attended the concert said a fight broke out after the show when a member of The Game’s entourage made advances on a male fan’s girlfriend.

South Australian police confirmed officers were called to a "massive fight" at the venue at 10.40pm, but those involved refused to provide statements and refused an ambulance.

Yesterday ninemsn released video of a young woman who had apparently been spat on by The Game at the Bourbon Bar.

Dr Michael Flood, an ambassador for anti-violence group White Ribbon, said The Game and his crew's behaviour legitimised an attitude that violence against women was acceptable.

"In the scene where those guys pressure her to take her top off, they’re supported by the audience," he said.

"What these are symptoms of is a style of hip hop based on the objectification of women and hostility towards women. The Game is one of a number of rappers who portray women as sexual objects."

Dr Caroline Lambert, executive director of YWCA Australia, said it was "really disappointing" to see the footage.

"Violence is unacceptable. The Australian government and the Australian community have really stepped up to that message in recent years," she said.

The Game, real name Jayceon Terrell Taylor, grew up in the LA neighbourhood of Compton, where he allegedly was a drug dealer with ties to the Bloods street gang.

In 2001 he was shot five times and was in a coma for three days but recovered.

In 2008 he was sentenced to 60 days in jail, 150 hours of community service and three years’ probation after pleading no contest to a felony weapons charge.

Canadian immigration officials denied him entry to the country for a tour last year due to his alleged gang connections.

A spokesman for the Australian Department of Immigration would not comment on The Game’s touring visa specifically, but said criminals who had served less than 12 months in prison could still enter the country.

The Game apparently responded to the controversy this afternoon on Twitter with the message: "n----- be givin these hoes too much power".

news.com.au 6 Mar 2012

Another example of governments letting in criminals into the country.

Sexual predators degrading women looks like part of the globalist agenda.

No deportation? No criminal convictions? Is anyone surprised?

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