People are always looking for someone or something to blame when it comes to the corruption of society. That is just human nature though; we need a scapegoat to be at fault for problems the world is facing today in order to make us feel like it's not all our own doing. For decades now, there has been a group of individuals who are constantly being accused for negatively influencing society. These people are the musicians we grow up listening to on the radio and watching on TV admiring their impeccable talent and their over the top stage performances. However, with all the focus put on artists and the lyrics to their music, we forget to take a step back and look at why these musicians say the things they do. During interviews, when asked where one gets their inspiration for their lyrics, common answers are, "my life" or "from the world." So it seems that instead of pointing fingers at musicians for corrupting our obviously perfect society without them, we might have to look at it a little differently than that. While this whole time we have been blaming musicians for the corruption, we should really be blaming ourselves, society, for corrupting the musicians.
With the constant changing of society through generations it is impossible to pin point a specific person or group that causes the change. We unfailingly look to and blame those who seem to have influential abilities. A very smart man by the name of Karl Marx points out the flaws with this thought processes. In one of his works, Theses on Feuerbach, he looks past the conclusions we initially come up with and into a deeper meaning of it all. Marx notes, "Changing of circumstances and upbringing forgets that circumstances are changed by men and that it is essential to educate the educator himself... The coincidence of the changing of circumstances and of human activity or self-changing can be conceived and rationally understood only as revolutionary p...