I'm not coming
at it as a politician, it's my own personal experience. And I just think that
that's just what people want to put out there, you know, 'You don't have the
right to talk about this'. And they use me as a puppet to explain that to you,
that only people who, you know, have a PhD in this shit are allowed to talk
about this. Or that only politicians are allowed to talk about politics, and
that's why we're fucked, because the cycle is constantly kept within that
fucking framework. There aren't more people standing up and telling their
personal experience... if a normal civilian comes up and says 'Hey, this
happened in my village and I'm not happy about it', we're not allowed to talk
about it. You have to follow this bureaucratic bullshit to get any sort of
action, and it's all part of this cycle. Like back in the day, we had ideals of
revolution and fighting back, and most of the time that shit starts with
individual people having personal relationships, these experiences. And now
it's so disconnected and the media can paint a picture for you...they make so
much bureaucracy and politics, and I think taking away the personal aspects,
the human aspects of these political issues is really wrong. Whether it's the
floods, or starving people in Africa, or whatever. It's all funnelled through
this channel, you really are not getting it from the horse's mouth, you
know?"
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