Nine and ten however seem to be much different then the rest of the commandments. The artist states that you should never keep anything on you when you're selling drugs. Eight seems to be more common sense than anything else. Seven stresses the point of avoiding mixing business with family and if you do then there could be some serious problems, maybe hinting at something that had happened to him in the past. If you ain't got the clientele say hell noĬause they gon want they money rain sleet hail snowĪs we see in number six, the artist suggests that you should never trust someone to pay you back, especially when you consider what you're selling. Number ten: a strong word called consignment They be sittin in your kitchen, waitin to start hittin If niggaz think you snitchin ain't tryin listen If you ain't gettin bags stay the fuck from police (uh-huh) Number nine shoulda been number one to me Them cats that squeeze your guns can hold jobs too Number eight: never keep no weight on you Money and blood don't mix like two dicks and no bitch Keep your family and business completely separated You think a crackhead payin you back, shit forget it Number six: that god damn credit, dead it Just as a reminder, my theory about these lyrics is that its purpose is to lay down some rules for selling drugs.įinishing up the commandments with the breakdown of six through ten, we see some more intricate rules.
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