Текст песни HOV DID - JAY Z
Now
to
our
special
report
Around
the
world,
many
nations
face
corruption
In
the
U.S.,
police
often
tell
themselves
a
story
about
America
being
"exceptional"
or
superior
to
other
nations
When
the
facts
show
there
is
American
corruption
in
voting
rights,
criminal
justice,
housing
policy
A
political
system
that
faces
legal
corruption
with
some
of
the
most
expensive
campaigns
in
the
world
And
many
critiques
of
U.S.
foreign
policy,
which
brings
us
to
this
1996
exchange
Between
Lewis
Farrakhan
and
CBS'S
Mike
Wallace
(You
go
to
Nigeria)
(Which
is,
if
not
the
most
corrupt
nation
in
Africa,
and
it
is)
(It
could
be
the
most
corrupt
nation
in
the
world)
35
years
old,
that's
what
that
nation
is
Now,
here's
America,
226
years
old
30
years
ago,
black
folk
got
the
right
to
vote
You're
not
in
any
moral
position
to
tell
anybody
how
corrupt
they
are,
you
should
be
quiet
When
you
have
spilled
the
blood
of
human
beings—
Has—,
has
Nigeria
dropped
an
atomic
bomb
and
killed
people
in
Hiroshima
and
Nagasaki?
Have
they
killed
off
millions
of
native
Americans?
How
dare
you
put
yourself
in
that
position
as
a
moral
judge?
I
think
you
should
keep
quiet
(Can
you
think
of
one
more
corrupt?)
Yeah,
I'm
living
in
one,
I'm
living
in
one
I
didn't
mean
to
be
so
fired
up
(No,
no,
that's
good,
that's
good)
That's
my
passion
Farrakhan
was
not
correct
about
everything
in
his
career,
but
those
points
resonated
with
many
As
he
dispatched
the
contradiction
between
America's
reality,
and
perhaps
her
selective
vision
of
herself
Corruption
just
refers
to
fraudulent
conduct
by
the
powerful
Which
is
pervasive
across
American
history,
and
especially
in
the
long
war
on
drugs
So
remember
that
exchange,
we
will
come
back
to
it
tonight,
in
this
report
About
the
failed
and
the
often
racist
war
on
drugs,
which
started
so
long
ago,
that
we've
covered
this
story
many
ways
Tonight,
we're
going
to
look
at
it
through
the
life
and
poetry
of
an
American
who
lived
it
And
lived
to
tell
about
it,
and
he
sure
is
telling
It's
an
American
dream
story
and
you
may
know
some
of
it
But
you
don't
know
all
of
it,
especially
since
the
story's
not
over
And
a
new
installment
just
came
out
heading
into
this
weekend,
as
Jay-Z
uses
an
unusually
long
four
minutes
of
straight
poetry
to
tackle
the
drug
war,
business,
discrimination,
and
perseverance
The
poetry
is
spoken
over
a
beat
in
a
song
with
other
artists
And
I
think
you'll
see
why
it's
poetry
as
we
go
through
it
now
Jay,
also
known
at
Hov,
marvelling
how
he
went
from
poverty
to
a
billion
and
touting
How
those
others
basically
came
from
his
same
space
or
crib
Kanye,
who
worked
with
him
as
a
producer
and
collaborator
Rihanna,
who
Jay
signed
early
on,
and
LeBron,
who's
linked
to
Jay's
Roc
Nation
company
So
Jay's
reference
there
to,
"technically",
is
both
the
caveat,
LeBron's
done
plenty
on
his
own,
and
a
double
entendre
for
technical
fouls
in
basketball
Jay
opens
there
by
asking
forgiveness
for
making
his
first
dollars
off
drugs,
cooked
on
a
stove,
and
notes
he
left
that—
Drug
or
dope
game
with
his
record
clean,
turning
the
cocaine
into
champagne
And
that's
a
nod
to
his
ability
to
evade
charges,
a
clean
record
gave
him
the
lane
to
go
from
street
coke,
to
the
good
life
of
the
champagne
It's
also
a
play
on
how
he
makes
money
off
records,
his
albums
are
now
clean
records
since
he
left
the
street
life
While
the
alchemy
of
turning
illegal
coke
into
legal
bubbly
sounds
like
a
turn
on
Jesus
turning
water
to
wine
And,
it
is,
because
soon
after,
Jay
completes
the
parallel
Jesus
turned
water
to
wine,
for
Hov,
it
just
took
a
stove
But
think
about
it
There's
nothing
automatically
legitimate
about
wine
or
champagne,
it
was
criminally
punished
during
prohibition
A
policy
that
ultimately
fueled
gangs
and
violence
and
was
the
only
constitutional
amendment
ever
to
be
reversed,
because
both
parties
determined
that
prohibition
was
a
messy
failure
So
politicians
turned
the
alcohol
back
to
a
legitimate
business,
a
slippery
spectrum
which
Jay
notes
a
few
lines
later
in
this
poem
saying
"Breezy
what
the
business
is,
we
pushin'
Fenty
like
Fentanyl,
the
'ish
is
all
legitimate,
E
was
down
ten
for
this"
And
those
lines
quickly
go
from
prohibition
to
a
war
on
street
drugs,
associated
with
minorities,
as
mentioned
earlier
in
this
broadcast,
to
Fentanyl
A
huge
driver
of
drug
problems
and
deaths,
which
politicians
do
not
treat
criminally,
the
same
way
they
attacked
the
drugs
that
Jay
or
others
once
sold
I
can
tell
you
corporations
have
made
over
10
billion
dollars
selling
addictive
painkillers,
legally
So
that's
a
contrast
Jay
also
invokes
the
fellow
billionaire
Rihanna,
citing
her
Fenty
fashion
line,
noting
everything
they
produce
now,
that
they
"deal",
if
you
will,
is
legitimate
And
that
other
line
I
mentioned
refers
to
"E,"
Emory
Jones
He's
an
associate
who
served
roughly
ten
years
with
a
drug
sentence
and
now
works
at
Jay's
company
Now
look,
many
listeners
may
not
know
his
name,
but
the
story
is
something
so
many
communities
know
It
illustrates
how
hundreds
of
thousands
of
others
are
locked
up
for
nonviolent
drug
offences
The
data
shows
the
drug
war
is
discriminatory,
that
entire
categories
of
drugs
can
be
arbitrarily
banned,
or
allowed,
often
depending
on
who
is
really
using
them
That
ranges
from
prohibition
like
I
mentioned
to
the
opioid
abuse,
which
does
not
involve
the
same
sentences
dealt
to
Black
and
Brown
Americans
Or
marijuana,
long
classified
as
the
most
severe
federal
level,
schedule
one
But
now,
bet
you've
heard
about
this,
marijuana
has
been
shifted
by
politicians
and
voters,
to
legal,
in
19
states
and
counting
But
the
warehousing
of
so
many
people
for
drugs
that
are
now,
right
now
illegal
all
over
the
nation,
well,
as
a
policy
matter,
it's
absurd
Even
before
you
get
to
race,
it's
also
been
documented
as
racist
Now,
Jay
did
evade
indictment
for
dealing
illegal
drugs,
now
he
gets
paid
for
selling
legal
ones,
he
founded
the
upscale
'Monogram'
marijuana
company,
which
is
a
play
on
the
traditional
term,
'monogram',
a
reference
to
selling
a
gram,
and
this
poem
marvels
about
living
on
both
sides
of
the
law
in
one
lifetime,
as
this
law
around
the
country
has
been
changing
I
want
you
listen
here
as
Jay
conjures
the
image
of
a
monogram
joint
in
his
pocket,
while
actual
monograms
are
often
embroidered
on
the
breast
pocket
Jay
invokes
being
a
writer,
he's
careful
with
his
sentences,
or
bars
as
lyrics
are
called,
because
he
lives
now
the
legitimate
life
Writing
sentences,
not
jail
sentences
Rap
bars,
not
jail
bars
And
those
jail
bars
come
from
the
Draconian
Laws,
so
he
will
clash
with
those
who
make
the
laws
he
says,
he
calls
that
clash
with
the
plain
term
'smoke',
which
is
also
a
play
on
the
smoke
he
now
sells
legally,
it's
deep
This
is
the
kind
of
elevated
prism
for
these
issues
I
can
tell
you
we've
interviewed
many
lawmakers
who
don't
come
close
to
this
level
of
nuance
about
drug
policy
and
its
arbitrary
and
pernicious
results
The
same
song
then
briefly
explores
how
pain
fuels
growth
All
this
pain
from
the
outside,
inspired
all
this
growth
within
So
new
planes
gettin'
broken
in
Highest
elevation
of
the
self
They
done
— around
and
gave
the
right
— wealth
Now,
those
new
planes
could
be
just
private
jets
As
Jay
notes
you
would
need
to
right
people
to
buy
them,
the
right
brothers
with
enough
wealth,
or
a
double
entendre
there
apparently,
to
The
Wright
Brothers
who
invented
plane
travel
The
same
line
cites
another
Jay
business,
the
'Paper
Planes'
brand,
which
tees
off
a
sorta'
childhood
imagination
when
you
fold
a
paper
plane
Now,
am
I
reaching?
Well,
art
is
always
up
for
interpretation,
but
I
can
tell
Jay's
long
time
producer,
Young
Guru,
decodes
this
part
of
a
verse
in
a
new
video
that
was
just
posted
online
You
got
to
realize
that
everything
being
said
in
here
is
a
fact,
bruh,
it's
not
aspirational
no
more
New
planes
getting
broken
in.
So,
yeah,
so
it's
like,
it's
literally
paper
planes,
right?
The
brand,
so
new
clothes,
like
when
you
try
on
new
clothes
you're
breaking
in
new
clothes
This
man
just
ordered
a
new
plane,
but
then
it's
new
planes
getting
broken
in,
new
levels
of
existence
All
right,
so
if
you're
counting,
that's
airplanes,
the
planes
company,
'Paper
Planes',
and
planes
of
existence,
quadruple
entendre
This
poetry
like
other
great
art,
takes
more
time
to
fully
understand
than
it
takes
to
just
see
or
hear
on
a
first
glance
That
is
why
many
people
say
Jay
remains
the
greatest
of
all
time,
known
by
the
acronym,
G.O.A.T
And
by
at
the
end
of
this
dense
poetic
verse,
which
just
dropped
on
Friday,
Jay
admonishes
his
would-be
judges
or
competitors
as
"donkeys",
a
play
on
G.O.A.T.,
but
then
makes
a
reference
that
takes
us
all
the
way
back
to
where
we
began
Next
time
we
have
a
discussion
who
the
G.O.A.T.,
you
donkeys
know
this
Forgive
me,
that's
my
passion
talkin'
(Haha)
Sometimes
I
feel
like
Farrakhan
(Haha)
talkin'
to
Mike
Wallace
(Haha)
I
think
y'all
should
keep
quiet
That's
his
passion
talking
Jay
invoking
that
classic
moment
we
showed
you
to
offset
his
own
grandiose
talk
Asking
forgiveness
for
being
so
strident,
even
as
he
meant
every
word
But
notice
what
else
he's
doing,
ending
this
poem
just
as
he
began
it
when
he
asked
forgiveness
for
dealing
drugs
in
his
youth
And
notice
what
else
he's
doing,
a
Farrakhan
parallel
can
apply
just
to
proclaiming
himself
the
greatest,
that
would
like,
I
think,
a
literal
reading,
or
maybe
it
can
apply
all
the
way
back
to
this
entire
poem
about
America's
drug
war
and
Jay's
own
path
Think
about
it;
decades
in,
this
billionaire
entrepreneur
with
proven
success,
measurable
success
in
music,
media,
sports,
business,
law,
and
politics,
still
finds
he
must
explain
basic
facts
about
American
corruption
and
racism
to
elite
and
White
society,
and
many
leaders
and
people
still
don't
see
it,
or
refuse
to
face
it
That
kind
of
entitled
ignorance,
which
can
cause
real
damage
to
real
people's
lives
Well,
that
might
raise
your
ire,
might
get
your
passion
talking
And
if
the
facts
are
talking,
well,
it's
a
good
time
for
people
to
listen
And
then
listen
again,
and
make
sure
you
got
the
point
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