Depending on what channel you watch, it is either a peaceful inauguration or it is not.
True.
Side Score: 3
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Wait..., what? No!!!
Side Score: 0
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https://answers.yahoo.com/question/ The time this song was produced. Racial tensions were high and affirmative action was in full swing. You don t know me, but I m your brother. I was raised here in this living Hell. - This is clearly a reference to blacks raised in impoverished and crime ridden neighborhoods. You don t know my kind in your world. Fairly soon, time will tell. - A reference to the goal of AA. The black man was unknown in the white collar world, but soon that would change. You, telling me the things you re gonna do for me. I ain't blind and I don t like what I think I see. - Many, including blacks, were opposed to AA. They felt that it was a handout and would make blacks dependent on whites. Some thought this was actually the goal of AA and were looking at it as another form of slavery. Taking it to the streets. No more need for running. - A reference to the power of the people. The message needed to be spread to the black community - they weren't going to run. If this was intended as a helping hand, then fine, but if it was another attempt to enslave the black man, then it would fail. They would not be chased away from what was rightfully theirs. A full and equal partnership with whites. Side: True.
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You are speaking truth. It is laughble watching the Liberal media spin their scare tactics. They could not even give the Trump voters one day! These Liberal elites will never get it because they live in their extremist ideology and never bother istening to the hard working Americans who are sick of being punished for their hard work. Your analogy of celebration in the steets when Obama was elected, and burning cars and smashing windows in the streets when Trump was elected was spot on! They are such total intolerant hypocrites! Side: True.
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