Barack Obama and Stephen Curry came together for a town hall
event on Tuesday and the former US president made some statements that
resounded with a great number of people.
The duo urged youngsters from minority backgrounds to
develop confidence without feeling compelled to build self-worth based on
chasing women and money.
The event took place in Oakland, and it also marked the
fifth anniversary of Obama's My Brother’s Keeper Alliance. Both Curry and the
former president talked about challenges they faced in their formative years,
while also speaking about other topics, such as hip-hop, policing in minority
communities, discipline in schools, male role models, and manhood.
While addressing the societal pressures that young people
face to act a certain way because of hip hop's frequent portrayal of what it
means to be successful, Obama said:
We live in a culture where our worth is measured by how much
money we have and how famous we are.
I will tell you, at the end of the day, the thing that will
give you confidence is not that. I know a lot of rich people that are all
messed up.
The 44th US president then took a shot at hip hop stars,
saying:
If you are really confident about your financial situation,
you’re probably not going to be wearing an 8-pound chain around your neck. If
you’re very confident about your sexuality, you don’t have to have eight women
around you twerking.
Praising his wife, Michelle Obama, he said:
Because I've got one woman that I'm very happy with, right?
So, and she's a strong woman
Obama also added that while growing up, that he was “all
kinds of screwed up” and it partly came from only meeting his dad once.