Baby, there's a white chalk outline in the street tonight for the boy down the road who didn't have a chance at life.
There's a lady working down at the truck stop on Third, and she's racing home tonight to confirm what she's heard.
That's her baby in a casket, not the usual sort, and his mother's screaming in the storm begging God to take this hurt.
There's a girl across town who lost the things she had, and the only thing she knows now is the fright that's in her head.
Her father's in the living room where he loads his shotgun, almost hoping that the **** from prom will show himself again.
There are children in the desert, in the city, in the streets and they are dying every day. All we do is argue over what is best to say.
The journalists and soldiers, those who worked a mile high. Honest folks are turned to martyrs and their names are used in vain. No one considers rationale, only how to profit gain.
We're political, tyrannical, existentially obsessed; we haven't got a thought for those who haven't even dressed.
"They aren't here; they're there; we haven't got the time." But if there's anything I know, it's that my time isn't even mine.
"Jimmy wouldn't take me out tonight." "Martha never called me back!" "I wish that Art had never talked to me." "I hope you have a heart attack!"
People dying every day and no one seems to give a ****.
We are vain and we are damaged and we will never be the same. It seems that all which matters is just how well you play the "game."