Bryson opens the track calling out artists who rap about drugs, sex, and other degenerate things, thinking that they have to rap about those topics in order to score a music deal or become successful.
Bryson then takes aim at leftist culture telling him he has to stay vigilant over white supremacy as he raps, "If I get killed, it'll be someone of the same pigment as myself."
"I know we were oppressed / and we started behind / and we were told because of our skin it's harder to climb," Bryson raps. "Are you not tired of all of the crime? / Are you not sick of it?"
Bryson then takes aim at the music industry for pushing degeneracy on their artists, saying they wouldn't enter the same neighborhoods their artists influence.
"We can only change if we look within," he says. "I'm not saying you can't place blame anywhere else, but what about you? What about merit?"
Bryson has become one of my favorite artists out there. He's not afraid to tackle tough subjects with grace and honesty. The song appears on his latest album, Letters to the Church 3, which dropped on Jan. 17.