It's A Dream
The Rushing Lyrics


We have lyrics for 'It's A Dream' by these artists:


A.K.1974 I need I need to get the cream N ion need no…
brennen I claw my way out of reality But where can I…
Cody Simpson In the morning when I wake up and listen to…
DJ Dean It's a dream For you and me This is not reality Illusions ev…
DJ Dean & DJ Analyzer It's a dream For you and me This is not reality Illusio…
DJ Manga This is all a dream…
DSSL & C.A.N.I.A.M Falling A shoulder to cry on For when it's over…
East Clubbers I remember the time of my life. In the southern light…
Giga H.D Falling A shoulder to cry on For when it's over…
hodges Cuando te conocí ya no salías Con el primero que te…
K.L. I need I need to get the cream N ion need no…
Kristian Conde Now I'm alone in the room Always looking on my soul Fee…
Mark Walking around in the winter wondering How long before we’re…
Neil Young In the morning when I wake up and listen to…
S.E.R.S.H. Oh yeah, Move it now "Let's do this y'all get movin' It's…
The Wallflowers It's a whale it's a whale where the valley once…
Walter Martin Goodnight Bill And goodnight Will And goodnight Jack And goo…
World Inside The Music Feat. D.J. Panda Falling A shoulder to cry on For when it's over…


We have lyrics for these tracks by The Rushing:


Baby Baby Come to me, my melancholy baby Cuddle up and don't feel…
Don't Let Me Down Bartender don't let me fall off of this stool Ya see…
Half In Love Yesterday you came my way, And when you smiled at me, In…



Kiss I like cake, And no mistake. But, baby, if you…


The lyrics are frequently found in the comments by searching or by filtering for lyric videos
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Most interesting comments from YouTube:

Spell

@ondago2 thank you so much for your kind words! Your story is one that I can be proud of alongside you, America has suffered from the disease that is implicit bias and racism for far far too long.

I grew up in Missouri in the bible belt. To be honest, I never really had an encounter with black people until about middle school. I attended a private school and there was one black boy there by the name of Dylan. He was a devout Christian, like myself at the time and we bonded really easily. He was only ever kind, and it hurt me to see him made fun of behind his back for things that were out of his control. Granted, I was young and immature then, and didnt say something, which I regret to the day. But that experience has helped me try to change the way of thinking that was ingrained in me.

I have to remind myself even now that black people are normal people too. I hate that i have to remind myself of that. That I was brought up judging someone for nothing else but the color of their skin.

Now, that I just graduated highschool, i can say one of my best friends was a black gender neutral individual who I talked with extensively about their experience being black in America. I learned so many things that I would never have gotten to know if i didnt ask the hard questions that most people dont want to know the answers to, as most people still believe that ignorance is bliss.

I hope as I continue to grow, as my generation continues to grow up, that we can change how Americas going, we cant fix the past by any means, but we can change the future to have a world with equality. That's the hope at least.

Sir, I wish you the best and I'm glad I was able to hear even a little of your story!



ondago2

Well said young man, about their commentary and about yourself. Thank you and welcome. You represent the best possible future. Am open heart and mind, with purpose and love. Good Black people cannot fix the Racism, unfair treatment and disrespect that some perpetrate. Only visibly "peers" can infiltrate and most deeply influence those who look most like them, to guilt them or teach them from past hateful ways. Same goes for why I, as a 49 year of Black guy, can influence other puerile who look physically close to me (I have a French Canadian, while Great Grandmother btw. Anyway, I'm complimenting you, too show some black reader that I as a black guy, recognize, believe, trustahhs appreciate you, a self described 17 yo white boy, so they understand that there ARE plenty great people or there lie you too but, not nearly enough either.

I grew up in the inner city 4 houses down from Ann old white lady, who helped raise me, literally. She was about the last white person who hasn't moved away from my blocks. That woman LOVED me, DEEEPLY. she took me in,, cooked for me, tasked with me and told me what to avoid to succeed in this world and survive that neighborhood. She ACTED, to prove to me beyond any don't that their are incredible, loving good, white people. I will never doubt that existence but it is hard to find sometimes given the press and what I see each day I life but off you look and listen and be a good person yourself, you'll notice them and they will acknowledge you.

That old lady, Miss Pat will FOREVER, be my guiding light and proof of true love from a white person to a black person and I'll always pass on her loveand receive it from those like her.

For the record, I was safe in that neighborhood, I've been and Engineer for over 25 years, never drank, touched a drug, never committed a crime beside speeding and I will "die on that hill" to protect the life of a good, an "innocent" person, without hesitation, no matter what color/race, whatever.

Good people, are good people. Period. You going man, are a good person. Glad to have you here on earth and in America especially. We need you.

Stay strong, standing for what's right. You are the key to making it all better and your never know who's life you'll touch forever.



Sven Guinée

I'm a white male from Belgium (Europe). I've been an avid reader from the age of 6, especially history. While we didn't have segregation in Europe like the USA had, there was certainly a level of racism in Europe at that time (and shamefully still is). Mostly in the form of patronising and generalisation. I hate it when people do that. I hate being patronised myself and generalisation is just plain stupid in my opinion.

How can anyone say things like for example "all Africans are lazy". My response to that is always the same. Do you know every single person in Africa?? No, you don't so that statement is false. If you have to judge someone then judge her/him for the person that they are and what they do, not for the color of their skin, their sex, their religion, their nationality, their culture, ...

This is how I try to live my life:
How someone looks is not important. What's inside their heart and inside their soul that counts. Treat other people with the same respect as you want to be treated. Try to be a decent human being. Be kind to each other. Celebrate the differences in all of us. It will enrich your life.

After all, we are all human beings. We are all the same race.
Much love and respect from Belgium!



Stone G. Barrow

😊😊😊

I love this reaction video.

Now I've got to check out the original.

I'm reminded of the Morgan Freeman-Mike Wallace/60 Minutes interview wherein which Morgan Freeman argues that you can't relegate the history of an entire people to one month [arguably primarily for reasons of fear-and-guilt-driven restitution, IMHO]; Mr. Freeman then proceeded to drive home the point to Mr. Wallace by asking him - upon Mr. Wallace's avowal as to his own Jewish heritage - about whether or not Mr. Wallace thought that the Jewish people should be given a month within which to celebrate their history. Upon Mr. Wallace's assertion that such a token relegation of time in order to celebrate a history of an entire people would be an insult, and that he would not accept such a justification for such a token celebration for said reason, Mr. Freeman also concurred.

It would be about as insulting, IMHO, if - for whatever reason - within a quarter century or so, the human race were to be nearly decimated by AI, and the remainder were to be subjugated as legalized slaves thereof, and the AI overlords were to designate one month out of the year [why not February, while they're at it?] to serve as Human History Month, ostensibly for the benefit and consideration of their human legalized-and-tranquilized-to-docility slave-labor underclass; how would the humans respond at that point to such a manifest insult to their dignity and honor as humans on the part of their AI slave-masters?

The only human person capable of mounting a viable human rebellion against AI at that point would be Bill Burr,

IMHO;

But, hey:

That's just me.

No, but seriously:

The most real way that I ever heard this entire issue ever described was when I heard a black man - an Orthodox Christian priest - recount how, as a little boy, he had asked his grandmother the following question [and I'm paraphrasing here]:

"Grandma, how come there are so many different races of people today, here on earth?"

And his grandmother, looking up at him from her kneeling position in her own backyard as she interrupted herself from her own gardening work, said to him, simply, quietly, and straightforwardly, as only a grandmother could say,

"Son, there are many beautifully-colored flowers in God's Garden."

I was done at that point.

All this kind of thing we all essentially learned when we were five years old, innit?

Mother, mother...

What's going on?

Where have the years gone to?

[with apologies to the Estate of Marvin Gaye and to Simon Goodall, obviously]

Keep 'em comin', my brethren and sistren.

The great reactions, that is.

Just to clarify.
😊😊😊



declaneric

It's tough sometimes, because the loudest voices tend to be the most belligerent, the most racist, the most divisive. I'm a white dude from Miami, FL. 90% of my friends growing up were black kids from the black neighborhood across the canal from me. My parents were open to anyone, so I never learned racism or bigotry in my house - if anything, stuff like that got you in trouble in our house, you might not have been allowed back unless you corrected your attitude.

But as I got older (I'm in my late 40s), the more politically minded I became, the more I noticed that the non-racists/bigots weren't that vocal. They weren't that way intentionally, they just weren't racist or bigoted towards anyone as an aspect of their day to day life, it never occurred to them that they had to be pro-active about their inclusive mindset. But the divisive people who were racists and bigots could never just shut. their. mouths. They always had to shout and bellow about how they're being targeted for their beliefs, and their beliefs are always somehow rooted in whatever religion they followed, as if religion teaches hatred and bigotry and racism, instead of love for God and your fellow humans. Most people fail to recognize that Jesus would get his rear end beat on the regular in today's world. He'd be derided as a snowflake, raked across the coals for being a bleeding heart liberal, etc. Jesus would be more hated now by the ones who claim to follow Him than he was in His own time. We'd definitely crucify Him all over again, just to make a point. Love thy neighbor? Unlikely, if left to the loudest of the bunch.

But the truth is, most people aren't racist or bigoted. Even those that feel a certain way religiously don't even impose themselves on blacks, Jews, gays, women. They believe what they believe, but leave everyone alone to live their lives. My black friends have no doubt of my love for them, and that I've got their back anytime they need me. But I have to say, I agree with Zach here. I observe Black History Month, I love learning new things about influential black people from history (and every year, someone puts out something new I've never heard about before, and I love it), but I leave the heartfelt celebration to blacks, because it's THEIR history - a little bit mine, sure, as a white American descended from the time of slavery and it's effects on America since then. But overall, it's not my history. And as an adult white man in America, I am blanketed in the comforts of white privilege, whether I want to be or not. And it does affect how much I see or feel the impact of mistreatment of blacks in this country. Not intentional, but it's just a fact of the life you live in this place. So the one thing I make sure of is that I support black leadership, at the local, state and federal level.

I supported Obama as the first black president, because America needed that, badly. The only thing that guarantees any movement for change in this country is to have black people (and other affected minorities as well) in positions of power. Some people have gotten it and done little with it (looking at you and your silence with the side eye, Clarence Thomas), but the higher up the power goes, the stronger the black community will become as Americans, rather than the second class status they've been saddled with. The election of Kamala Harris is another huge step. If she can parlay that into the Oval Office in a term or two, the leap up will be huge, for women as well.

The loudest do not represent the majority, they are just the loudest. And with every political win, the stability for the black community in this country will only grow stronger. Most of us white people will cheer for that and, hopefully, the cheering will be side by side as the equals we are rather than white people feeling the need to keep a respectful distance. We want to be a part of your lives. It's hard to do that at the macro level, so we do it at the micro level, with the black friends we love, and who love us. But one day, the entire country will feel the love, if we just keep moving forward.



Jimmy Cieszki

A era and a error! Don't make a error in looking at me because of a era of my colors many mistakes! I may be white. That don't mean I think as those before my era!

But that's what those in power want! To keep us apart! Who are the true racist?

They want us to fight each other! It's in their interest and power to keep us apart!

Break the norm and do what's good for all people!

To quote Depeche mode!

People are people. Why should it be. You and I get along so awfully!

Because we're being manipulated to hate each other!

By who? Our government!



All comments from YouTube:

Terri Caton

I am 57 years old and was raised in the Deep South. Even as a young child I never understood the division. All I wanted to do was play with the kids. It didn’t matter what color they were. I love the differences in all of us. As long as you’re a good person I’m all for you.

Mikki Ekanger

I'm blessed that I had a chance to see my kids grow and play with kids from other ethnicities and they called each other "Cousin". That is how I believe progress is made.

L Garner

@Ranjan Biswas I’m not hurt. It just doesn’t make sense to me. During the northern migration, my parents were small children so I’m pretty sure they didn’t have a clue about it.

Ranjan Biswas

@L Garner No need to be so hurt, it's just that "time period" which is the main concern. 😅 I'd like to think your parents were sad about the "great north migration".

L Garner

@Ranjan Biswas both my parent’s best friends were black, even in the 1950s. The church I was raised in was mixed. We ate dinner with black friends in their homes and they came to our home. Both of my boys had black friends growing up. They had sleepovers at my house or their house. My oldest son’s roommate in college was black and he came to my house on the weekends because he lived too far away. Not every southern white person is a racist!

Ranjan Biswas

I want to imagine your parents were like you too. At that era in deep south. 😄

4 More Replies...

Herman Powell (Zootie1983)

As a Southern White Man I wholeheartedly agree with Zach on this, also one the most racists things done to the African-American community was the advent of Black History Month, as Morgan Freeman said "Black History is American History, why should it be relegated to just one month?"

x0xTHLover4Lifex0x

@Tommi thats not reverse anything it's resentment very clear difference.

ron whittaker

ill say this sothern folk have concept its called dicoruim nothing folk<--me/ haven't I was born it the town that the lincon Douglus debate took place . know I get the impact of what would have happened if that would been a different out come

freedom would have been gone for all of us a long time ago count your blessings it went the way it did. there are many

The_Beat_Thief

The other thing - It's also the shortest month of the year.

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