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Meet Jason Isaac of Injustice League

Today we’d like to introduce you to Jason Isaac.

Thanks for sharing your story with us Jason. So, let’s start at the beginning and we can move on from there.
I began to love music at the age of 13. After being adopted into a family where education and musical literacy were a focus, I could only truly find peace in honing in on the craft of music. I spent some time and hard thought on 5-6 songs and they were hella trash so I quit. It wasn’t until I found myself in a California military prison cyphering with brothas that believed in the power of their voices/messages enough to be locked up for it that I discovered the passion myself. Once it became a Cycle: Eat, workout, write, read, workout, eat, rap (1 rec hour), shower, sleep.

It became a form of sanity. I was homeless for a period after prison, where I was just doing shows and house hopping. Moving during the day/preforming at night until the fast life caught up and the home was calling my name. I relocated back to my home town of Greensboro, North Carolina and ever since touching down on home soil, I’ve been fighting to flip the industry. I wish to force change in my environment and globally and I know that the role I play is to inspire, shift mentals, create an open dialogue for change, etc. I formed the injustice league and haven’t looked back. I listen to the ancestors closely and I understand that this life comes once. We all contain within ourselves the power to positively change the world? You won’t find me shying away from my responsibility.

We’d love to hear more about your work.
Injustice League is comprised oThe tribe: Growth Tribe. We empower people across the globe through spiritual, sexual, mental, physical, and educational growth. Our prime partners consist of a black woman-owned lingerie company and a recording studio sponsored by London hot radio producer and affiliates. I run marketing, networking, editing, promotion, branding, artist management, etc. I look after the miscellaneous backend. Lafamila: The CEO of “roots.” My team was given the hard job of forcing a shift on prison reform, marijuana education, sexual protection, women’s rights, black rights, etc. Team of peaceful extremist

Any shoutouts? Who else deserves credit in this story – who has played a meaningful role?
SHELTER: when I was in prison and afterwards they helped me focus on rap. SAR (South Atlantic records): Once I arrived in Greensboro, North Carolina. They opened up their studio and musical knowledge to me.

Jacobi South: mentor and fellow creative.

Contact Info:

Image Credit:
Chris Aguilar

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