When will peace come to me?
When will I have rights?
When will I not be a slave of fake expression?
When will I be able to be who I want to be?
When?
When is not the question, it's the enemy; It will stand high until this rancid government crumbles & boy am I ready. Controlling teenagers preventing them from gaining any kind of power, by putting the "youthnation" in school until they're 18 and have a voice in the voting society. Why can't they vote for their rights now? They're not mute to the news or mute to thinking.... the government is nothing but a lie. Lie as in dull facts thats basically feed to us until we have the power to vote....And so many teenagers have no say in changing the government, because of this limitation...is our government really valuable? is it worth it?the "youthnation" is supposed to pride their childhood & teenage hood before they get old, not sit in a classroom for half of their life learning the basic's of how to be programmed to fit society.
3 comments:
When is not the question
I really like that. It's something I have the hardest time accepting, but it is the most profoundly important way to live. When you live for a when you'll always be waiting, and what you're waiting for will never come...because it is never a real goal, just an escape from the now that we all live in.
If we're waiting to grow up, we never will, and we may realize we never do.
I'm not quite sure about that. Experience may increase your understanding of situations, may make it easier to cope with further frustrations, may make one more well adjusted to life, but I don't want to accept that something in the future will happen that will change my ideas about the world and make my current state invalid, or inferior.
Looking to that when, when you understand more, have seen more, believe more know more....it makes you self loathing, and then, of course, loathing of everything around you that seeks to change you in any way.
Ashley,
I especially like the bit where you wrote: "...not sit in a classroom for half of their life learning the basic's of how to be programmed to fit society." I've become frustrated with being a part of that programming lately.
Ian,
I frequently feel as you do, that: "...I don't want to accept that something in the future will happen that will change my ideas about the world and make my current state invalid, or inferior..." It's hard to anticipate a peaceful change, especially when those changes will transform the essence of who I will be, and definitive perspectives on who I am, and who I was.
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