Everybody uses black and white, try to draw the line between wrong and right, but if you use your eyes to really see, you know we don't see realistically. Because skin that's white is really pink, so either you can't see or I can't think. Skin that's black is really brown, but that don't make the world go round. To put a color on skin, to me, is a sin. That's why apartheid must never win. We must put an end to this, my friend, and it should never be allowed to happen again. It's time to wake up and do some good, to try to see each other the way we should, because looking at the people, I sometimes find that Sun City is in the mind. I was watching TV the other night, and who should appear, but you know, like Walter Concrete with the blues. It occurred to me how much of our vocabulary we seem to get on TV nowadays, calling things whatever they call them, even if it's collective. The first thing that occurred to me was, like, Third World. You know, like, you ask somebody from here, like, where's the Third World? They might say, oh yeah, man, I know, I know, it's a disco. You go about three blocks and take a left. Or they might tell you the Third World is a new health food restaurant. I know the first time I heard there was trouble in the Middle East, I thought they were talking about Pittsburgh. Let me see your ID. Let me see your ID. Let's get down to the real nitty-gritty. Talk about the crimes in Sun City. Let's get down to the real nitty-gritty. Talk about the crimes in Sun City. A city of diamonds, a city of gold. A city of sorrows with horrors untold. But even the fool should be able to tell. Sun City, a charade for hell. It's the death. It's called genocide. People dying to be free. It's called apartheid. South Africa. Starvation right here. Politicians and leaders living in fear. South Africa. From coast to coast. From coast to coast. Color people got the least. White people got the most. And the word casualties comes up a lot. And in South Africa, they seem to make it feel like there's a battle between isms going on. Between one good ism and one bad ism. But what they're talking about is nightly. South Africans died casualties. There were eight more casualties in South Africa. Nothing casual about dying. Nothing casual about standing for freedom. My grandmother used to say, if you don't stand for something, you'll go for anything. We stand against apartheid. Stand against apartheid. Let me see you. I did. Let me see you. I did. Well, we're sick and tired of what we heard. Sick of apartheid. It's quite absurd. Prejudice is the reason people have died. Yes, prejudice stands for apartheid. So we all get together. Glitter hands of red people. To peace all across the land. We've got to stop running like a rubber truck. And all this may have got to stop. I had never met anyone from Southern Africa until I started going to school. I was going to Lincoln University down in Pennsylvania. There were South African refugee students there who, many of them were athletes. And we started to compare experience and stuff. And they were telling me that when you walk around in South Africa, you've got to carry this little black book with you that tells everybody whether you're supposed to be in a given area or not. Damn, that's the proudest of my life. I got to do that when I go to Philly. Let me see you. I did. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. We are waiting for the day that I will pay for it. Some people say that's a Caucasian race. Some people say that's a Mongolian race. Some people say that's a Negro race. We are the people in a multiple race. All of you, stand united. We are saying, remember that today. There will be a time when apartheid's a crime. And the color factor won't bother the mind. The majority rules against the fools. And all those who oppose will become uncool. I'm talking about a place they call Sun City. Las Vegas in the desert. In a town without pity, South Africa. Yes, the motherland. There are no human rights for the Africans. Because the city's bright lights melt down their rights. And ain't nothing else to do but stand up and fight. If I ruled the world and was king on the throne. I'd stop this mess in my sweet home. You see, the thing about I ain't going to Sun City is that somehow by the South African government, Sun City is described as though it's somewhere else, not connected to South Africa or apartheid. It's like somebody in Manhattan trying to describe the Bronx to you as another country, as though it is no longer connected to New York. Let me see you acting. It's all in their conscience. It's all in their minds. It's all in their hand. To fight against apartheid, South Africa must be free. Equality and justice. A people's liberty. Because if I know my name, I will never play Sun City. USA! We will play! The other night I was watching TV again, and I seen this barbell that's been a representative of the American people over in South Africa, over there taking a ball for somebody. Somebody in here said, Hey, what about the separation between church and state? I said, especially this church and that state. We stand against apartheid. We stand against apartheid. Let me see you acting. Let me see you acting. Yeah! Politicians think they're smart by shaking your hand, and then they hold you back as much as they can. They try to keep you weak from getting strong, because they know if they're strong, you're going to change what's wrong. Bad my point. Bad it now. Like Stevie Wonder, I'm going to speak out loud. Because where you live is where you stand, and you shouldn't get checked by any man. Even if they got a stick in their hand, that still don't mean that they're in command. We're the three fat boys. And we're here to say. We're going to stop apartheid. In our own way. South Africa. South Africa. South Africa.