
Policeman Marian Godine reacted on Facebook to the topical song “Macarena” sung by Erica Issac, which in four days after its publication collected 1.6 million views on YouTube: “Now I sit and wonder to me, dear Girls, dear women, with whom , the hell are you meeting and especially where, so that you can send the location live?”, Godine asks. He says that the words seem childish to him, that they will be addressed to a “vulnerable category of women” and that, as he noticed, “Unfortunately, there are many of them in this position.”
Marian Godiné responded with a Facebook post that garnered more than 2,000 reactions and 570 comments within two hours of its publication.
“Then when you’re a grown woman drooling to a song like that, why would we be surprised if we hear a 15-year-old screaming at her colleague to kiss her p*s?”
- “The rhythm is cool, the chorus too, I liked it too. But the lyrics intrigued and made many people express their opinion, including me. The lyrics seem childish to me, and I also think they’re aimed at a vulnerable category of women, and from what I’ve seen, unfortunately, there are a lot of them in that position.
- I say this after seeing so many shares and comments on the song, some of them from women themselves,” he wrote on Facebook.
He also references another Erica Issac song called “Tupeista”.
- “However, another song by the same artist has lyrics that go, ‘Mother made a wig who don’t like to kiss me…'” Of course he’s referring to vagina, not track or some other word that rhymes with tupeista.
- Then when you, as a grown woman, sing along to a song like that and affirm it in a public space, oh my God, what a powerful message, why would we be surprised to hear a 15-year-old girl screaming on the bus to a radio station while she can keep her mouth shut, on a colleague, a boyfriend, to kiss her in the urine? Well, she’s a girl with wigs, she’s got strong messages, doesn’t she?” claims Godin.
“Dear girls, dear women, who the hell are you meeting and even more so where to send the location live?”
The policeman agrees that there is a lot of “Mirel from Turnu Magurele” (a reference to the lyrics of the song in which male abusers are called), but he wonders how listening to this song changes Mirel’s outlook on life: “I suspect that nothing at all “.
- “In some of the lyrics, I heard something like, ‘Girl, I’ll leave you a live location just in case.’ Of course, this is about a situation where a girl/woman meets a man and feels the need to send her location to a friend out of fear so that someone will know about her.
- Here I saw that, again, many women resonated with this, many even said they were victims. Now I sit and ask myself, dear girls, dear women, who the hell are you dating and even more so where to send you the location live?.
- I am a more old-fashioned person and consider it natural that the first meetings between a man and a woman take place in public places (restaurant, cafe, pastry shop), without even getting into a stranger’s car.
- If you meet guys on Tinder or acquaintances on Facebook after a brief exchange of messages and then agree to have them pick you up from the front of the block to go who knows where, then yes, it would be necessary to send someone the license plate number and live location and state of fear would be normal before the unexpected.
- But that would be abnormal and you should ask yourself why you are doing it. When you feel the need to send someone your location, it means you shouldn’t go anywhere with that person
- There should be a period of getting to know him, knowing exactly what the person is doing, maybe checking out, now there are many levers including Facebook, but above all, get to know him as best as possible in person, see what he is wearing, what he has family, why he is alone, etc. It is far from walking to the house, to the beach or to any other non-public place. That is if you respect yourself as a woman,” continues Godine, who is the father of a little girl.
The policeman concludes that the lyrics of the song “Macarena”, sung by Erica Isak, are rather “against the bombers and for the women who, unfortunately, took part in them.”
Rapper Erica Isaac rocked social media with a raunchy adaptation of the ’90s hit song ‘Macarena’.
23-year-old Erica has released a manifesto song in which she speaks frankly about the stereotypes of women in Romanian society, as well as the violence they are subjected to.
“If not men, then who would protect you? / Protect us from whom?”.
Read also:
- The song that tore the Internet in two. Who is Erika Isaac, a “dupeist” who is adored by women and cursed by men. “Fuck me to see what kind of lady I am!”
Source: Hot News

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