It's about collective responsibility for society's problems and about empty words and promises. And how it goes all the way from the top (Nixon) to the bottom (educated fools from uneducated schools). If we don't all do something to make a change, we're headed straight to hell (if it even exists).
@JoeRose11 I concur wholeheartedly. I was a teen when I first heard this, and immediately purchased the album. As with Marvin Gaye’s, “What’s Going On”, this song was before it’s time. It applies then as well as to now. Timeless insight into so-called societal norms. The more things change the more they stay the same…
@JoeRose11 I concur wholeheartedly. I was a teen when I first heard this, and immediately purchased the album. As with Marvin Gaye’s, “What’s Going On”, this song was before it’s time. It applies then as well as to now. Timeless insight into so-called societal norms. The more things change the more they stay the same…
It's about collective responsibility for society's problems and about empty words and promises. And how it goes all the way from the top (Nixon) to the bottom (educated fools from uneducated schools). If we don't all do something to make a change, we're headed straight to hell (if it even exists).
@JoeRose11 I concur wholeheartedly. I was a teen when I first heard this, and immediately purchased the album. As with Marvin Gaye’s, “What’s Going On”, this song was before it’s time. It applies then as well as to now. Timeless insight into so-called societal norms. The more things change the more they stay the same…
@JoeRose11 I concur wholeheartedly. I was a teen when I first heard this, and immediately purchased the album. As with Marvin Gaye’s, “What’s Going On”, this song was before it’s time. It applies then as well as to now. Timeless insight into so-called societal norms. The more things change the more they stay the same…