The explosion of prostitution among young people is proportional to the increase in cocaine consumption, and while it’s not uncommon today to see an MP buy his dose from the guy around the corner in Paris, it is certainly no less rare to see three bourgeois 20-year-olds in a dealer’s bed. The world of criminals—just like that of rap or of child predators—has always been linked to the upper echelons.
In a story like Booba’s versus the queen of the influencers, I’d bet there’s another story behind it: either some sexual encounters or cocaine or both, which will never be visible to the public.
How do you really think that rap figures, who sometimes have been incarcerated, could end up living in the 16th arrondissement, eating in the same restaurants, and appearing on the same TV shows as the richest French people?
For all this time there has been a sharing of fame that the public thinks is down to chance or merit, when in fact it is a sharing of the loot—meant to keep criminality under control and derive immediate benefits from it.
In a story like Booba’s versus the queen of the influencers, I’d bet there’s another story behind it: either some sexual encounters or cocaine or both, which will never be visible to the public.
How do you really think that rap figures, who sometimes have been incarcerated, could end up living in the 16th arrondissement, eating in the same restaurants, and appearing on the same TV shows as the richest French people?
For all this time there has been a sharing of fame that the public thinks is down to chance or merit, when in fact it is a sharing of the loot—meant to keep criminality under control and derive immediate benefits from it.