If you tolerate this your children will be next
The music video hit me hard when I first saw it at 12 years old - those faceless family images on MTV stayed with me. I didn't fully grasp the lyrics then, but now, 27 years later, the song's warning feels painfully relevant.
What strikes me most is how the band understood something crucial: when we stay silent about smaller injustices, we're paving the way for bigger ones. They were singing about political apathy and the creep of authoritarianism - how tolerating 'this' inevitably leads to 'your children will be next.'
Looking at today's world, that progression feels less like a warning and more like a prediction coming true. The song captured how fascism doesn't arrive overnight - it builds through our collective shrugs, our willingness to look the other way, our assumption that surely someone else will speak up.
It's confronting because it forces us to ask: what are we tolerating now that we'll regret staying silent about later? The Manics were right - if we don't stand up against oppression in its early stages, the consequences don't stop with us. They reach forward into the future, into the lives of those who come after us.
That's what makes it such a powerful piece of music - not just the sound, but the uncomfortable truth it tells about how quickly things can slide when good people choose to do nothing.
Manic Street Preachers - If You Tolerate This Your Children Will Be Next.