1968, the sight of black fists at the Olympics made the headlines.
The men were criticized for daring to color outside the lines,
Throwing Hitler’s mind into a twist.
I guess the American privilege paid off at that time
And at after-parties, the athletes entered from the other side
Because the red, white, and blue wasn’t deep enough to drown out their hue
On the home front, it was a completely different story
The conversation of whether or not the games were fit for protests began
And decades later, in Tokyo, protests are banned
Hoping to keep politics out of the sports they play
But when you are colored everything is political
From your skin to your hair to the way you dress
Told to shut up and dribble when they play at home
Cheered on when the privileged sees you as their best option
To prove their xenophobia true
Love you while you are on the field, but hate you when you get off of it
Your body was never yours, to begin with
so they keep it under a microscope
The brave souls who crossed their arms on the podium
Or kneeled before the start of their game are heroes to some
A nuisance to many
Representing a country that does not care for people like you
Puts you back in space of realizing that it’s never really about you
When you put on the uniform you’re putting the country on your back
Deciding to do whatever it takes to get top three
Once again shackled by the false concept of the American dream
Ordered to pledge allegiance to a flag and sing an anthem that doesn’t include you
To everyone this flag represents something different
The sight of red represents the blood my ancestors shed while building a country that buried them beneath it
The white represents the purity and innocence of the natives wanting to help those lost
only have to have their land taken, their people slaughtered and pipelines built on top of their reservations
Blue represents the royalty that is amongst the people
The royalty that no matter how hard they tried
They could not beat it out of our bloodline
And after all these years in red, white, and blue we can say we are still here
Still trying to comprise our definition of the American Dream