paroles de chanson Homeland and Hiphop - Immortal Technique
To
think
about
the
origins
of
hip
hop
in
this
culture
and
also
about
homeland
security
is
to
see
that
there
are
at
the
very
least
two
worlds
in
America.
One
of
the
well-to-do
and
the
struggling.
For
if
ever
there
was
the
absence
of
homeland
security
it
is
seen
in
the
gritty
roots
of
hip
hop.
For
the
music
arises
from
a
generation
that
feels
with
some
justice
that
they
have
been
betrayed
by
those
who
came
before
them.
That
they
are
at
best
tolerated
in
schools,
feared
on
the
streets,
and
almost
inevitably
destined
for
the
hell
holes
of
prison.
They
grew
up
hungry,
hated
and
unloved.
And
this
is
the
psychic
fuel
that
seems
to
generate
the
anger
that
seems
endemic
in
much
of
the
music
and
poetry.
One
senses
very
little
hope
above
the
personal
goals
of
wealth
and
the
climb
above
the
pit
of
poverty.
In
the
broader
society
the
opposite
is
true,
for
here
more
than
any
place
on
earth
wealth
is
more
wide
spread
and
so
bountiful.
What
passes
for
the
middle
class
in
America
could
pass
for
the
upper
class
in
most
of
the
rest
of
the
world.
They're
very
opulent
and
relative
wealth
makes
the
insecure.
And
homeland
security
is
a
governmental
phrase
that
is
as
oxymoronic,
as
crazy
as
saying
military
intelligence,
or
the
U.
S
Department
of
Justice.
They're
just
words
that
have
very
little
relationship
to
reality.
And
do
you
feel
safer
now?
Do
you
think
you
will
anytime
soon?
Do
you
think
duck
tape
and
Kleenex
and
color
codes
will
make
you
safer?
From
Death
row
this
is
Mumia
Abu
Jamal
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