From Calm Like a Bomb, I'm having trouble figuring out the context of a line within the stanza below:There's a mass without roofs, a prison to fill; there's a country's soul that reads, post, no bills; there's a strike and a line of cops outside of the mill; there's a right to obey and a right to kill.The emboldened part sounds correct, but I just can't make sense of it.Is it "soul that reads Post, no bills" or "soul that reads, post no bills"? Or are the words incorrect?I have no clue.
3/14/2011 2:53:15 PM
3/14/2011 2:54:28 PM
3/14/2011 2:55:09 PM
Awesome.Thanks.
3/14/2011 3:03:14 PM
I like RATM because it pretends to be intellectual, but in reality all of it is beneath anyone who has taken a 7th grade history class.
3/14/2011 3:09:50 PM
but de la Rocha is still the anti-myth rhythm-rock shocker
3/14/2011 3:18:59 PM
the part where he says
3/14/2011 3:20:33 PM
3/15/2011 12:25:49 AM
fuck youI won't do what you tell me
3/15/2011 4:14:26 AM
3/15/2011 7:35:21 AM
Knowing what "post no bills" means is more common sense than anything.
3/15/2011 9:56:08 AM
lol sick burn.I still can't say that I've ever heard that anywhere.I see the word "bills" and think it's referring to a payment of some sort.
3/15/2011 4:05:07 PM