The pain, disorder
A cataclysmic dawn
We trusted but something has gone wrong
We bought it
But woke to find it gone
Impact in 5, 4, 3, 2

The place before
The radiation creeps
On cats' feet
We scatter in the streets
She asks me "do you think it's safe to breathe?"
It doesn't look that way to me

We storm the gates
Raise the flags
Just the same old story
We seize the throne, subjugate
We should have burned it to the ground
Whoa
Some might say we've lost our way
But I believe we've not gone far enough

Afraid, we cower
To interests not our own
The power to free or to control
We let it skip through
Our fingers to the bone
Watch as the bodies wash ashore
Whoa
Nobody lives here anymore

We storm the gates
Raise the flags
Just the same old story
We seize the throne, subjugate
We should have burned it to the ground
Whoa
Some might say we've lost our way
But I believe we've not gone far enough

And how long will we fall for this?
And how long will we fall for this?
How long will we fall for this?
And how long will we fall?

And how long will we fall for this?
And how long will we fall for this?
And how long will we fall for this?
How long, how?

We storm the gates
Raise the flags
Just the same old story
We seize the throne, subjugate
We should have burned it to the ground
Whoa
Some might say we've lost our way
But I believe we've not gone far enough


Lyrics submitted by WillCreary, edited by rougereader, Tserra, sevasweets

A Gentlemen's Coup Lyrics as written by Joseph Principe Brandon Barnes

Lyrics © Sony/ATV Music Publishing LLC

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A Gentlemen's Coup song meanings
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  • +4
    Song Meaning

    It's essentially about a political revolution that hasn't yet turned into a social revolution. The people have grievances, very possibly economic in nature (ie. they're shit poor), and '[seize] the throne', putting a new popular government into power, but it's still the 'same old story' - this government is incapable of transforming the basic social and economic relations that are behind the suffering.

    The lyrics then say that the revolution has 'not gone far enough', and that they should have 'burned [the throne] to the ground'. This is saying that they need to turn a minor political revolution into a social revolution, and instead of just capturing the state apparatus, the revolution must smash the state and replace it with a system designed from the ground up to serve the interests of the masses.

    The Egyptian Revolution is the perfect example of this. The people revolted due to a combination of severe state repression and horrific economic conditions, as Mubarak's neoliberal reforms gutted working class living standards. So far, however, all we've seen is the power changing hands to a theoretically progressive body, without the core economic grievances being addressed - hence the ongoing protests in Tahrir as I type, and a growing realisation that it's the very way the society is organised that is the ultimate problem.

    Orbsanon July 10, 2011   Link

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