Also I actually came to say that this song keeps getting better and is the balm I need as I finish out the hardest year of teaching ever
I know it’s basically a forum.popjustice.com cliche to say this at this point, but this absolutely goes the fuck off in the car.
I would love to travel back in time to like 2019 and read this sentence out loud in some home of sexual leisure establishment.
Some of these arguments being made have some of y’all telling on yourselves. Same shit that’s been going on in the Lizzo thread.
I do think it's important to address class differences, privileges, and the implications of capitalism/wealth hoarding. However, it appears that some people can't wait to drag Black women, so they do it under the guise of being anti-capitalist, when—in reality—they're just being racist/misogynistic assholes. Hence why I think dismantling Black capitalism and the discussions pertaining to it should remain something done within the Black community only, since most of y'all don't know how to act. Anyways, back to this four-on-the-floor smasha!
Okay thankyou for this because I typed so much in my previous post and centered my own relationship to Beyoncé as a listener, but you get right to the point of the uneasiness I get reading some of these "critiques" (whether it's some of the posts I've read on here or on socials)
If it's any consolation, after the global uprising this single will make for fabulous cell block music as Bey and the other billionaires await their trial at The Hague.
I felt so many emotions reading this. Brilliant post. It really does feel like a spiritual reminder to find joy inside myself and dammit I need that.