What first got me involved in politics was being 14, and a youth organizer comes to my house with a van full of 14 year old girls. “Hey, you want to go to the beach with us? But first we’re going to go support the cannery workers’ strike in Watsonville.”
BOOTS RILEYDeath to the pigs is my basic statement.
More Boots Riley Quotes
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Becoming a father made me a lot more sentimental than I ever was before. I never cried at movies before I became a parent. I feel music more intensely.
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People give out compliments because it’s polite.
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Death to the pigs is my basic statement.
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I wanted to be part of changing the world. I don’t want to just stand by and watch it be however it is.
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Sometimes it takes time to get into what ideas actually mean to you. Even when you’re not writing a song, it’s like that.
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A lot of us don’t get a sense of our personal power. I know the vast difference that one person can make in changing things.
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In reality, I know I’m not hurt directly by sexism; however, my life is made less because of it, so I started thinking about the fallout from relationships in which people feed off each other.
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I think there’s something your hormones do that makes a chemical change in the way you think.
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When my daughter was born, that was the first time I cried from happiness.
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I wanted to write a song about sexism, but I didn’t want to do it in a mechanical way and be like, “Don’t be sexist!” because that’s not how I talk in regular life.
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I am a person who always feels like I am not doing the right thing because there’s always so many things that need to get done.
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I just make music based on what I believe.
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What I’m trying to do is make music that people relate to, that talks about ideas that are personal but also make that connection to trying to make revolutionary change, and I don’t need to change my music to get to a certain audience.
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I was an avowed professional revolutionary by the time I was 15.
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In high school, everybody rapped. You just pounded on the table.
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