![]() ![]() These men have enough money to literally assemble a team of radical knowledgable black ppl solely to educate them. Some on social media took issue with Cole because they viewed the song as a “mansplaining” moment where the rapper displayed a sense of neediness. “She mad at the celebrities/low key I be thinking she talking bout me/Now I ain’t no dummy to think I’m above criticism so when I see something that’s valid I listen/But s-, its something about the queen tone that’s bothering me/She strike me as somebody blessed enough to grow up in conscious environment/With parents that know bout the struggle for liberation and in turn they provided with/A perspective and awareness of the system and unfairness that afflicts em/And the clearest understanding of what we gotta do to get free/And the frustration that fills her words seems to come from the fact that most people don’t see/Just cuz you woke and I’m not, that shit ain’t no reason to talk like you better than me,” Cole raps. ![]() In “Snow on Tha Bluff,” which lifts its title from the Atlanta-based independent movie Snow on Tha Bluff, Cole seeks to find understanding from an unidentified woman who fights for equal rights.
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