B
As a proud black man, I know you feel like me Joe: a reverse Orio. Black on the inside, white on the outside. When did you first realize you were black inside Joe, and how did it effect your life.
J
I don't know when B, could have been about the time that shortie dropped the nay no. Or the time I rode my horse onto a ferry. I gots to say, a lot of my black brothers, black on the outside and in. Orios. Not talking about externally white like us, it's like they have to live in the inner city. What's going to happen if they get a boat and sail down the Mississippi, maybe buy a farm or go dirtbike racing? The KKKs going to raise a posse and tar and feather them? No, but maybe they grandparents felt that way legit. Then they pass that down some attitude one or two generations. We have to lose this inner city victim mindset: I can't live on a boat. I can't hang out with white kids like Michael Jackson after he went white coz of a skin disease?
B
Wait, what? What you talking about Michael Jackson there Willis?
J
Ok forget about him he was creepy, regardless the skin tone. What I'm saying, we is going to allocate a scheme to help our brothers and sisters in the inner city consider leaving that behind, but it's not going to be a handout. We need to change these endemic generational attitudes: I can't farm coz I'm black. I have to live in the ghetto, I'm black. A black guy will shoot me if I iron my shirt and wear cufflinks.
B
It's hard being black, a brother gets to feeling his days is numbered around his own brothers.
J
So people understand it's not reverse orios that is out to get them. It's not milk chocolate that's the problem 95 percent. Know what I'm sayin'?
B
Joe if you liberate black man from the inner city victim mentality you'll have rappers gunning to shoot you down my nay no
J
Ratta G ain't it so my nay no. What's a reverse orio to do? Do you like my socks? They glow in the dark, and sparkle.
No comments:
Post a Comment