Authors: Gil Scott-Heron
Hey yeah, we're the same brothers from a long time ago
We was talkin' about television and doin' it on the radio
What we did was to help our generation realize
They got to get out there and get busy
'Coz it wasn't gonna be televised.
We got respect for young rappers and the way they free wayin'
But if you goin' to be teaching folks things, be sure you know what you sayin'
Older folks in our neighbourhood got plenty of âknow how'
Remember if it wasn't for them
You wouldn't be out there now.
And I ain't coming at you with no disrespect
All I'm sayin' is that you damn well got to be correct.
Because if you goin' to be speaking for a whole generation
Do you know enough to try and handle their education?
Be sure you know the real deal about past situations
And not just repeating what you heard on a local tv station.
Sometimes they tell lies and put 'em in a truthful disguise
But the truth is, that's why we said it wouldn't be
televised
.
They don't know what to say to our young folk
But they know that you do
If they really know the truth,
Why would they tell you?Â
First sign is peace
Tell all them gun-totin' young brothers
The Man
is glad to see us out there killin' one another
We raised too much hell when they were shootin' us down
So they started poisoning our minds and tryin' to jerk us all around
And then they tell us they've got to come in and control our situation
They want half of us on dope, and the other half in incarceration.
If the ones they want dead ain't killed by what they instigated
They can put some dope on the brother's body
And claim it was âdrug related'.
Tell 'em âdrug related' means there don't need to be no investigation
OK at least that's the way they goin' to play it on the local tv station
All you 9 mm brothers,
Give 'em something to think about
Tell 'em you heard, that this is the new word
They got to work that stuff out.
'Coz somehow they feelin' the wrong way with a gun in their hands
They feelin' real independent
But they just pullin' contracts for
The Man
.
Live at Five
will tell you it's hopeless out there on the avenue
But if they really knew the truth, why would they tell you?
And if they look at you like you're insane
An they start callin' you scarecrow and say you ain't got no brain
Or start tellin' folks that you suddenly gone lame
Or that white folks have finally co-opted your game
Or worse yet, implying that you don't really know
That's the same thing they said about us a long time ago.Â
Young rappers, one more suggestion before I get out of your way
But I appreciate the respect you give me and what you got to say.
I'm sayin' protect your community and spread that respect around
Tell brothers and sisters they got to calm that bullshit down
Coz we terrorizing our old folks and we bought fear into our homes
And they ain't got to hang out with the senior citizens
Just tell 'em damn it, leave the old folks alone.
And we know who's ripping off the neighborhood
Tell 'em, that bullshit has got to stop
Tell 'em, you sorry they can't handle it out there
But they got to take the crime off the block.
And if they look at you like they think you're insane
Or start calling you scarecrow thinkin' you ain't got no brain
Or start telling folks that you suddenly gone lame
Or that white folks have suddenly co-opted your game
Or worse yet saying that you really don't know
That's the same thing they said about me a long time ago.
And if they tell folks that you finally lost your nerve
That's the same thing they said about us
When we said âJohannesburg'.
But I think you young folks need to know things don't go both ways
You can't talk respect on every other song or just every other day.
What I'm speaking on now is the raps about the womenfolks
On one song she your African queen, and on the next one she's a joke.
And you ain't said no words that I haven't heard
But that ain't no compliment
It only insults eight people out of ten and questions your intelligence
Four letter words or four syllable words won't make you a poet
It will only magnify how shallow you are and let everybody know it.
If they look at you like they think you're insane
Or they call you scarecrow thinkin' you ain't got no brain
Or start tellin' folks that you suddenly gone lame
Or that the white folks have finally co-opted your game
Or you really don't know
They said that about me a long time ago.
If they finally start to tell people that you lost your nerve
Thats what they said about Johannesburg.
You
ain't
insane
You
have
got a brain
You
haven't
gone lame
You
have
got your game
Remember, keep the nerve
We're talkin' 'bout peace.
Speed on by. Don't seem to have the time.
What about this life, what about this life
Can I call mine?
Issues in the paper, but somehow I'm not concerned.
Seems I've been this way before, but I never learn.
Children slowly turn.Â
Time sped gone. We didn't see it go.
Now what do we have, now what do we have
That we can show?
Friends you swore you'd never lose melted from your style
Down the tunnels of your youth and now you never smile.
Children learn to smile.
I have believed in my convictions
and been convicted for my beliefs.
I have been conned by the Constitution
and harassed by the police.
I have been billed for the Bill of Rights
as though I'd done something wrong.
I have become a special amendment
for what included me all along.
Like: âAll men are created equal.'
(No amendment needed there)
I've contributed in every field including cotton
from Sunset Strip to Washington Square.
Back during the non-violent era
I was the only non-violent one.
Come to think of it there was no non-violence
'cause too many rednecks had guns.
There seems to have been this pattern
that took a long time to pick up on.
But all black leaders who dared stand up
wuz in jail, in the courtroom or gone.
Picked up indiscriminately
by the shocktroops of discrimination
to end up in jails or tied up in trials
while dirty tricks soured the nation.
I've been hoodwinked by professional hoods,
My ego had happened to me.
âJust keep things cool!' they kept repeating.
âAnd keep the people out of the streets.
We'll settle all this at the conference table.
You leave everything to me.'
Which brings me back to my convictions
and being convicted for my beliefs
'cause I believe these smiles
in three piece suits
with gracious, liberal demeanor
took our movement off the streets
and took us to the cleaners.
In other words, we let up the pressure
and that was all part of their plan
and every day we allow to slip through our fingers
is playing right into their hands.
Tuskeegee #626
Somebody done got slick
When deadly germs are taking turns
Seeing what makes us tickÂ
Tuskeegee #626
Scientists getting their kicks
When deadly disease can do what it please
Results ain't hard to predictÂ
Tuskeegee #626
Pushed aside mighty quick
When brothers, you dig
Are guinea pigs
For vicious experiments.
The King is alive and twenty millions strong
And long before he ever ascended to the throne
He was made fun of, a source of great humor
His domination over neighborhoods was nothing but a rumor
Back when the King's name was so rarely spoke
And the ten million disciples mentioned by some folks
Was called exaggerated and treated like a joke
They didn't understand that the monster had woke
But the King could instantly demonstrate
That he wasn't no laughing matter
Blow folks away so quickly it would demonstrate
Nobody and nothing does it better
Now we're talking about total finesse
That's when you know you're dealing with the best
There ain't even been one whisper of force
Over the entire kingdom of Henry IVÂ
The awful thing about it is there ain't nothing you can do
Guard all your doors and windows and the King can still rob you
Oh, No! ain't talking about the '60s, not that f'n far back
In the '80s with folks falling into and between the cracks
And talking about being right in the center of the news
But the King don't never give no interviews
And the reporters was lined up. The King was raising hell around here
And then information just dried up and the king seemed to disappear
Gone so quickly you might have just an impression
Moved along so slickly it was like an amnesia expression
Am I certain of my facts now of course.
I know almost all there is to know about King Henry IV
What it left on the ghetto streets was an incorrect understanding
About the ways he caught on and how rapidly he was expanding
The reason I felt black kids was headed for a fall
Was the day I read this poem painted in a bathroom stall:
Fuck a man in the butt and you could get it for sure
Pass a dope needle around and there wasn't no cure
The kids believed if you wasn't gay and didn't shoot dope
You was home free, take the day off and float
But what would always make the King seem so tough
Is that he could get in and then take five years to show back up
And you can go scream at them until you get hoarse
But they don't understand and about King Henry IVÂ
[There was only Public Enemy with really decent shit to say
And maybe Run DMC had it with âWalk This Way'
15 years ago? Hell it wasn't even ten
Which only goes to show how fast the King is moving in]Â
He was no more than a whisper at gay after-hours spots
If there are no bloodless revolutions why hadn't he fired a shot?
Sunday mornings from the pulpit he was blamed on promiscuity
More confusing newspaper bullshit only furthered the ambiguity
Preacher's became obsessed and called him a message from above
The creature's game progressed since nobody knew who the fuck he was
Completely taking over areas that had never seen royalty
But soon millions on five continents could all pledge their
   loyalty
The invisible monarch was steady doing his thing
He never heard folks once saying âHail to the King!'
But he's got powers you can't help but endorse
And the Africans call him King Henry IV
I had said I wasn't gonna' write no more poems
   like this.
I had confessed to myself all along, tracer of
   life/poetry trends,
that awareness/consciousness poems that screamed
   of pain
and the origins of pain and death had blanketed
   my tablets and therefore
my friends/brothers/sisters/outlaws/in-laws
and besides, they already knew.
But brother Torres,
common, ancient bloodline brother Torres,
is dead.
I had said I wasn't gonna write no more poems
   like this.
I had said I wasn't gonna write no more words
   down
about people kickin' us when we're down
about racist dogs that attack us and
drive us down, drag us down and beat us down.
But the dogs are in the street!
The dogs are alive and the terror in our hearts
   has scarcely diminished.
It has scarcely brought us the comfort we
   suspected:
the recognition of our terror,
and the screaming release of that recognition
has not removed the certainty of that knowledge.
How could it?
The dogs, rabid, foaming with the energy of their
   brutish ignorance,
stride the city streets like robot gunslingers, and
   spread death
as night lamps flash crude reflections from gun
   butts and police shields.
I had said I wasn't gonna' write no more poems
   like this.
But the battlefield has oozed away from the
   stilted debates of
semantics, beyond the questionable flexibility of
   primal screaming.
The reality of our city/jungle streets and their
   gestapos has
become an attack on home/life/family/
   philosophy/total.
It is beyond a question of the advantages of
   didactic niggerisms.
The MOTHERFUCKIN' DOGS are in the street!
In Houston maybe someone said Mexicans were
the new niggers.
In L.A. maybe someone decided Chicanos were
   the new niggers.
In Frisco maybe someone said Asians were the
   new niggers.
Maybe in Philadelphia and North Carolina they
   decided they
didn't need no new niggers.
I had said I wasn't gonna' write no more poems like this. But the dogs are in the street.
It's a turn around world where things all too
   quickly turn around.
It was turned around so that right looked wrong.
It was turned around so that up looked down.
It was turned around so that those who marched
   in the streets
with Bibles and signs of peace became enemies
   of the state
and risks to National Security;
So that those who questioned the operations of
   those in authority
on the principles of justice, liberty, and equality
   became the vanguard of a communist attack.
It became so you couldn't call a spade a
   motherfuckin' spade.
Brother Torres is dead.
The Wilmington Ten are still incarcerated.
Ed Davis, Ronald Reagan and James Hunt and
   Frank Rizzo are still alive.
And the dogs are in the MOTHERFUCKIN' street.
I had said I wasn't gonna' write no more poems
   like this.
I made a mistake.