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“We the People” Is a Question — and a Call to Fight

  • Foto del escritor: Zeniott Music Team
    Zeniott Music Team
  • hace 46 minutos
  • 1 Min. de lectura

On February 15th, Presidents Day, Yung Triple3 releases “We the People,” the first single from the upcoming album International Terminal. Borrowing the opening words of the U.S. Constitution, the track doesn’t echo them as ceremony—it challenges them. “We the People” confronts the current condition of the United States, calling out the abuse of power by government officials and institutions that continue to operate without accountability. Released during Black History Month, the song stands firmly in fight mode, honoring Black history as a history of resistance, struggle, and achievement—where progress was never given, only won.

This track represents one voice within a larger project. While “We the People” is confrontational and urgent, International Terminal as an album is about connection, convergence, and shared experience. It brings together voices from the United States, Mexico, Costa Rica, Colombia, and Puerto Rico, reflecting how cultures, languages, and histories intersect beyond borders. The album documents movement—people, ideas, and sound traveling across regions—showing how Black and Hispanic voices meet, collaborate, and exist side by side in the same global space.


“We the People” opens that conversation by demanding attention. It reminds listeners that unity does not erase struggle, and that some moments require confrontation before understanding can follow. International Terminal expands outward from that point, offering a broader view of identity and culture shaped by migration, heritage, and collaboration. The fight begins with the single—but the album carries the voices that come after, together.

 
 
 

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