| So I’m at the barbershop
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| And we talking about this new generation of hip-hop
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| And how, how lost you all are, man
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| But y’all have no science
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| So here you go
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| The systematic knowledge of the physical world
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| Gained through observation and experimentation
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| Usually beginning with a hypothesis
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| Or what some may call an estimation
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| Record your results from a series of tests
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| And what you’re left with is a theory at best
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| Now let me give my hypothesis, an educated guess
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| On why my people on the whole seem to be such a mess
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| Genocide: the deliberate extermination
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| Of a race, culture, or an entire nation
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| Centuries ago they brought us here on a boat
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| Enslaved us, beat us, til our spirit was broke
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| Then they gave us freedom and a little bit of hope
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| Then they killed our leaders and they gave us dope (crack)
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| From the C.I.A. |
| by way of Nicaragua
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| Shipped to Rick Ross, he’s the black Godfather
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| Now Oscar Blandón was his known supplier
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| He snitched on Rick so that he could retire
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| Ratted on Ricky so he got out quickly
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| Now this is where the situation gets a little sticky
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| Not a citizen of the U.S.A
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| He got released and got hired by the D.E.A
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| Then he got his green card from the I.N.S
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| But that should’ve never happened due to previous arrests
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| See our government seems to think that there is a difference
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| Between powdered cocaine and crack, for instance
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| You get five years for five grams of crack
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| But in the powdered form you have a hundred times that
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| Now who has the rock, and who has the powder?
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| Who’s the oppressed and who has the power?
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| They want you to fail so you wind up in jail
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| You know how much they make while you sittin in that cell?
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| Billions of dollars for inmate facilities
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| You sell yourself back into slavery willingly
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| It’s not black and white, it’s so much more
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| It’s the rich stayin rich and the poor stayin poor
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| The poor white’s meth, the poor black’s crack
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| It’s not about race and once you realize that
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| We as a nation are free to move on
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| And become one people, a movement, strong
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| Droppin this science
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| Murs is a scientist
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| Droppin this science while they drop bombs
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| Now black people weren’t the first to be enslaved
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| We were just the first to be treated this way
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| No education, you were killed if you could read
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| So you hid your intellect if you wanted to succeed
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| And what happens to a lie when you livin' it
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| You lose sight of who you are and start forgettin' it
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| So many of us to this day act ignorant
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| A mere shadow of our form of magnificence
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| Welfare: no independence
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| We become victims dependin' on the system
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| Looking for a handout waiting on some help
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| Dwelling on the past feeling sorry for your self
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| But you do what you can to make it out the trap
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| And that right there is the origin of rap
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| It wasn’t always played on every radio station
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| It was us makin the best out of a bad situation
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| Inner city schools stopped teaching us instruments
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| We took turntables and started flippin' it
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| Stole electricity from the street lights
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| Plugged it into a system and made the beat hype
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| There was a mic but MC’s weren’t rulin'
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| It was more 'bout what the DJ was doin'
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| He say a few words (GO, GO) to keep the party movin'
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| The B-boys dancin' to the breaks and the grooves
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| And the break was the part where the record broke down
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| Where it was just a drum and a couple of sounds
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| You had two records you could go back and forth
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| To keep the groove goin' cause the break was so short
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| Now if that ain’t' science I don’t know what is
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| The ingenuity of these young black kids
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| The Bronx New York, Sedgwick & Cedar
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| Kool Herc earth hip-hop true believers
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| (Theory) Adversity produces opportunity
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| Anythings accomplished through strength and unity
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| The fate of the world is in the hip-hop community
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| The revolution’s here and now with you and me |