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This track is a hard blues song that fiercely depicts the personal corruption of those in power and the despair it causes the common people, all hidden behind the smokescreen of "systems," ideologies, and doctrines.
Against the backdrop of a heavy blues riff, the narrator penetrates the essence of the elite who use complex rhetoric, stating they merely "silence the weak with strong liquor." The song highlights the deep-seated disparity between those who drink wine on the throne and those who sip muddy water, asserting that turning left or right leads only to a bad awakening.
The core of the chorus is the angry shout: "It ain't the system! It's the problem with you sitting in that chair!" The song delivers a timeless warning to all in power: the deceit of the individual, not the political mechanism, is the issue, because "no matter what the name of the liquor is, it all tastes the same when you're drunk."
The track further exposes the presence of "invisible enemies" who smile while stabbing from behind, singing of the despairing resignation that "the hole at the bottom of this boat will never be plugged." Yet, even in the deepest despair, the narrator quietly shows an unyielding, rebellious will by "glaring at the moon reflected in the sewage canal."