Lost in a sea of combat boots
Flush the bouncers with wasted youth
When did punk rock become so safe?
When did the scene become a joke?
The kids who used to live for beer and speed
Now want their fries and coke
Cursing and birds are not allowed
In fact let's keep noise levels down

Must separate the church and skate

Why don't we put pads on the kids?
Helmets, head gear and mouth pieces
Then we could pad the floors and walls
Put cameras inside bathroom stalls
We make sure only nice bands play
Make every show a matinee
Teach kids to be all they can be
And we could sing, "My Country, 'Tis of Thee"
Sweet land of liberty

When did punk rock become so safe?
I know it wasn't Duane or Fletcher
Who put up the barricades
Like a stake in the heart
Somehow we got driven apart

I want conflict, I want dissent
I want the scene to represent
Our hatred of authority
Our fight against complacency
Stop singing songs 'bout girls and love
You killed the owl, you freed the dove
Confrontation and politics
Replaced with harmony and shticks
When did punk rock become so tame?
These fucking bands all sound the same
We want our fights, we want our thugs
We want our burns, we want our drugs
Where is the violent apathy?
These fucking records rated G

When did punk rock become so safe?


Lyrics submitted by rjbucs28

The Separation Of Church And Skate Lyrics as written by Michael John Burkett

Lyrics © Wixen Music Publishing

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The Separation of Church & Skate song meanings
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  • +1
    General Comment

    I think this song's pretty self explanitory. The 'church' represents what punk is becoming- Safe, unamusing, boring, and "politically correct" The 'skate' represents what punk started as, what it should be- Fast, fun, dirty, dangerous, and hardcore. He's saying we need to seperate the 'church' and the 'skate', keep punk what it always has been, and dont give in to this poppy bitch-punk scene thats been going around.

    ramones71808on May 30, 2009   Link

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