| The idea is to travel throughout the race riots
|
| From 1866 to the present time
|
| A (speedy?) decapitation by time
|
| (?) in thickness sacrificing love for hate
|
| Makin it to the frontline with ease
|
| Like how momma made biscuits outta nothing
|
| All while having a dope needle in her arm
|
| The blueprint provided by a black cemetery
|
| No hope for the dead battered in their coffins (?)
|
| A new type of happiness
|
| A black happiness that’s filled with grief
|
| Somehow ending up at a portal in time
|
| (?) nothing else no mind
|
| Just the innate wiring of your DNA
|
| The process of your chromosomes
|
| Systematically forming to prevent ones own annihilation
|
| I mean extermination
|
| The labour of existence
|
| The first time you heard the whisper of death
|
| That death that has always been lingering here
|
| With you since the day you were born
|
| Heard it telling you that you must be both dead and alive
|
| Want us to be dead when a man wants to beat us
|
| When they want to rape us
|
| Dead when the police kill me
|
| Alive when the police kill you
|
| Alive when it’s time to be in they kitchen
|
| When it’s time to push out they babies
|
| I’ve been bleeding since 1866
|
| Dragged my bloody self to 1919
|
| And bled through the summer being slaughtered by whites
|
| A flux of chaos came after
|
| Influx of terror from German and Irish immigrants
|
| American imperialists wasted no time joining mobs and riots
|
| Even the descendants of the (?)
|
| Still look at knives clean from the trail of tears
|
| Joined in the slaughter in (?)
|
| All because of a feeling, an emotion: fear
|
| And by the time I got to Watts
|
| I was missing most of my limbs
|
| Still had enough blood in my throat left to gargle up nine words
|
| I resist to being both the survivor and victim
|
| But I know the reality
|
| And some of us did just die under a boot
|
| Under pounding fists in the back of a car
|
| Others died (?) mangled guts
|
| Some of us did just die while giving birth
|
| While protesting for the freedom of our sons
|
| And only God knows how I made it to Ferguson
|
| Aisha didn’t make
|
| Rekia didn’t make it
|
| Ayanna Yvette didn’t make it
|
| Pearly didn’t make it
|
| Chantelle, Tarnika, Taisha didn’t make it
|
| Katherine, Gaberella, Miriam, Charise didn’t make it
|
| Charnel didn’t make it
|
| Sandra didn’t make it
|
| And I was sure I was dead in Oakland
|
| After being chained by a pickup truck
|
| And dragged miles in Jasper, Texas
|
| Where 81 pieces of me my body was scattered across a back road
|
| The men drop me off at a black cemetery
|
| See that’s how I got over
|
| How I got over here
|
| The same place I was in in 1866
|
| A bleeding black body blowing in the wind
|
| Tripping an ironic thickness of things never changing
|
| Time is a balancing act that encompasses all things
|
| Suspended in illusion |