paroles de chanson Black Man in America - SoSoon feat. Mic El & Damien Tillman
This
is
the
part
where
I'm
supposed
to
say
something
poetic
Fuck
that
Imma
be
honest
War
was
declared
specifically
on
black
people
African
people
And
even
those
who
choose
to
ignore
their
blackness
Since
the
opportunity
presented
itself
to
oppress
us
Almost
every
social,
political,
economic,
educational,
medical,
legal,
business
And
cultural
decision,
trend
or
shift
Has
been
rooted
in
the
desire
to
erase
our
existence
This
isn't
art
This
isn't
creativity
This
isn't
me
showcasing
wit
or
wordplay
This
isn't
an
act
or
a
persona
on
a
song
This
is
life
or
death
How
do
you
compromise
with
killers
Who
know
that
they
can
only
survive
through
your
genocide
Strike
1
Strike
2
Strike
3
Strike
1,
the
color
of
your
skin
is
too
dark
Strike
2,
your
hair
is
too
nappy
and
too
harsh
Strike
3,
you
can
never
be
better
than
us
You
ain't
American,
you're
just
another
black
man
in
America
Alone
he
stands
this
man
from
a
foreign
land
Outsider
on
the
inside
of
other
sands
As
he
dips
his
hands
in
his
pants
he
feels
lesser
of
a
person
Like
his
native
people
his
pocket
lining
is
malnourished
In
a
place
where
social
status
is
determined
by
commerce
And
money
is
god
he's
thinking
of
turning
a
convert
All
he
has
is
his
nap
sack
and
his
Converse
And
his
dreams
of
rocking
a
big
concert
As
he
exits
the
ship
He's
having
visions
of
women
children
and
men
Who
not
long
ago
faced
the
same
shit
Built
in
rage
from
146,000
days
of
complacency
Pain
from
faceless
thieves
Basically,
his
place
on
this
little
planet
of
earth
Is
to
fulfill
a
basic
vacancy
And
as
he
stands
all
alone
for
the
first
time
on
this
earth
All
he
really
could
do
is
just
wait
and
see
Strike
1,
the
color
of
your
skin
is
too
dark
Strike
2,
your
hair
is
too
nappy
and
too
harsh
Strike
3 you
can
never
be
better
than
us
You
ain't
American,
you're
just
black
man
in
America
Alone
he
walks
but
nobody
will
talk
to
em
This
type
of
behavior
is
strange
and
off
to
him
On
a
search
for
bare
necessities,
food
clothing
and
shelter
But
everywhere
he
went,
nobody
would
help
him
Starring
up
at
the
bright
lights
and
tall
buildings
He's
feeling
out
of
place
tall
thoughts
but
small
ceilings
Are
keeping
him
concealed
in
his
own
mind
And
as
the
darkness
starts
to
seep
in
the
streets
are
his
home
for
the
night
He
goes
into
the
local
merchant,
to
purchase
A
pack
of
cigarettes
a
magazine
and
some
bourbon
Perches
on
the
stoop
like
the
pigeons
on
the
awning
Tryna
keep
cool
in
the
heat
of
this
steamy
August
The
heat
he's
used
to
but
the
people
will
shoot
you
Ron
and
Nicole
you,
stab
your
back
and
juice
you
like
O.J
OK
things
getting
crucial
As
the
tears
of
bewilderment
fall
down
from
his
pupils
Strike
1,
the
color
of
your
skin
is
too
dark
Strike
2,
your
hair
is
too
nappy
and
too
harsh
Strike
3 you
can
never
be
better
than
us
You
ain't
American,
you're
just
black
man
in
America
Alone
he
travels,
his
toes
and
his
shoes
in
the
gravel
Convinced
that
he's
fighting
in
a
losing
battle
He
heads
to
the
local
barbershop
on
the
avenue
Removes
the
hat
from
top
of
his
head
and
he
unravels
His
natural
locks,
slides
the
barber
a
10,
sits
in
the
chair
And
watches
10
years
carefully
drop
While
everybody
else
is
laughing
in
shock
And
its
too
late
to
ask
him
to
stop
Now
it's
back
to
the
block,
the
golden
paved
pavement
he
once
thought
laid
Was
playing
with
his
fate
laughing
in
his
face
trapped
up
in
the
place
huh
Such
a
hateful
existence
The
agents
kicking
him
keeping
him
in
the
matrix
This
makeshift,
land
of
the
free,
home
of
the
braves
That
got
paid
to
make
way
for
all
of
the
slavery
The
made
paper
from
the
faces
of
hatred
And
the
only
way
he's
ever
getting
any
is
complacency
Strike
1,
the
color
of
your
skin
is
too
dark
Strike
2,
your
hair
is
too
nappy
and
too
harsh
Strike
3 you
can
never
be
better
than
us
You
ain't
American,
you're
just
black
man
in
America
Strike
1,
the
color
of
your
skin
is
too
dark
Strike
2,
your
hair
is
too
nappy
and
too
harsh
Strike
3 you
can
never
be
better
than
us
You
ain't
American,
you're
just
black
man
in
America
And
I
watched
as
these
ridiculous
people,
umm
restrained
Eric
Garner
Brought
him
down
to
the
ground
and
killed
him
onsite
And
for
me
that
was
literally
the
first
time
in
my
life
where
I
realized
No
criminal
record
Not
even
a
moving,
violation
uh
ticket,
nothing
umm
Working
with
young
people
Academic
All
that
good
shit
My
chances
are
no
better
or
worse
than
somebody
who
has
a
record
And
I'm
not
even
necessarily
I'm
not
saying
that
to
say
I'm
on
a
hierarchy
over
Somebody
that
doesn't
have
a
record
or
something
like
that
But
it's
just
there's
no
different
chance
Just
because
of
the
skin
the
color
of
my
skin
And
that
struck
a
type
of
fear
in
me
that
I've
been
holding
till
this
day
So
everything
that
I've
done
up
to
the
point
of
this
album
has
been
A
lot
of
like
3rd
person
experiences
You
see
things
from
your
own
experiences
and
you
inference
the
rest
And
you
make
good
music
or
whatever
Artists
know
how
to
do
that
right
Umm
this
album
is
uh
for
the
most
part
Very
much
like
my
own
feelings
my
own
emotions
My
own
struggles
my
own
fears,
so
on
and
so
forth
and
so
that's
like
why
we're
here
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