And ten years from now when my daughter comes up to ask me I'll say Don't ask me about Hiroshima, or Nagasaki, or the ten thousand other wars Led more by human emotions running amuck than By mankinds infinite need to be superior.
And there were rivers of blood and tears Because mothers sitting in puddles of blood holding onto parts of their children Because they felt incomplete Because there weren't enough parts left behind By the wreckage of the explosion that was meant to **** all of them Yet ended up saving half of them and honey, don't get me wrong, But the ones who were killed were the ones who were saved.
All that was left behind was flesh strewn all over the place In an unidentifiable mess of who's -who And silhouettes of men, women and children in a radius that numbers could never account for Because honey, the affected weren't limited to the bounds of the city meant to be destroyed.
And generations later, You can still see the scars and the ghosts they will never forget And will hold onto like those carbon silhouettes So don't ask me about Hiroshima, or Nagasaki or that endless stream of wars Because honey, in a world where children are taught the word war before peace I don't want to you to know that when I say humanity has no bounds It goes both ways.