The first several lines establish the narrator's prejudicial frustration with his counterparts, presumably African-American males, and goes so far as to threaten them with acts of violence. Subsequent lines express misogynistic themes, although the narrator seems to spare the unnamed female subjects the violence afforded to aforementioned 'niggas'. The remainder of the song resonates with these two themes of violence and misogyny, in addition to motifs of drugs as well as fecal imagery and even occassional lines that border on having homosexual implications. The total disconnect between the gist of each line of the chorus reflects the narrator's inscrutable organizational genius.
The first several lines establish the narrator's prejudicial frustration with his counterparts, presumably African-American males, and goes so far as to threaten them with acts of violence. Subsequent lines express misogynistic themes, although the narrator seems to spare the unnamed female subjects the violence afforded to aforementioned 'niggas'. The remainder of the song resonates with these two themes of violence and misogyny, in addition to motifs of drugs as well as fecal imagery and even occassional lines that border on having homosexual implications. The total disconnect between the gist of each line of the chorus reflects the narrator's inscrutable organizational genius.
@Yugosusu so listen to talorswifts relationship problemsss
@Yugosusu so listen to talorswifts relationship problemsss