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In 1999, RD the Unknown Soldier convinced Lutha Mac (a.k.a. Mic Benson) to purchase a cheap little beat-making program called Acid Hip Hop 2.0--a moment that would change Hip Hop music, and in due course, the entire world. The two began playing around with the program, using samples it provided, and together they created a number of entertaining, but nevertheless substandard, compositions. It was going to take a great deal of time and effort if they were ever going to become a seriously dope production team. T-Dogg, however, was too hungry and anxious to wait. He couldn’t go a single night without sparking a freestyle session at the infamous Bushmen Complex—15 Benson St. in Upstate NY. Now, as far as he was concerned, the time had come for the Bushmen Soldiers to start pushing out their own, original music—the kind of compelling, and thought provoking productions that he knew they were capable of creating. Inspired by the Bushmen lifestyle and an ethics course that he was enrolled in as a freshman at Upstate University, and recorded live over a two-night span through a computer hooked to a cassette tape deck, Moral Choices is regarded by fans across the globe as a classic Hip Hop album. What—considering all factors—sounded like a ridiculous, maybe even an awful idea, in the end proved to be a monumental undertaking for Upstate’s finest. Moral Choices didn’t just get the proverbial ball rolling—though it did that—it also had a foundational, shaping influence—in content and technique—upon what would ultimately become the Bushmen rap style. You aren’t a real Bushmen devotee unless you’ve “done the T-Dogg”.