Lyrics to North American Jackpot
Sixty six days on the Mayflower long before the beacon hand
Just lookin' for someplace where they could start over again
And then slowly moving westward planting flags on stolen land
Sometimes I sit and wonder what the dream looked like back then
Oh, times they keep on changin' different roads and different oceans
She tells me for how far we've come life still seems so damn hard
Feeln' broke down on the golden road to unlimited devotion
Watching satellites and airplane lights weave through these western stars
Seems we hit the jackpot, baby, you and me
We were born in North America in the twentieth century
Send your tired your huddled masses send the homeless and the poor
With open arms she offers all this new world can afford
Now a few hundred years later we still search for something more
As we watch the fading lamplight that once lit the golden door
And as I walk these city streets I feel a stranger in my town
I don't mind so much the people as the landmarks coming down
Yet still we sleep in comfort with our shelter bread and wine
Knowing that we're better off than any other place or time
Seems we hit the jackpot, baby, you and me
We were born in North America in the twentieth century
We hit the jackpot, baby, you and me
We were born in North America
We were born in North America
We were born in North America in the twentieth century
Just lookin' for someplace where they could start over again
And then slowly moving westward planting flags on stolen land
Sometimes I sit and wonder what the dream looked like back then
Oh, times they keep on changin' different roads and different oceans
She tells me for how far we've come life still seems so damn hard
Feeln' broke down on the golden road to unlimited devotion
Watching satellites and airplane lights weave through these western stars
Seems we hit the jackpot, baby, you and me
We were born in North America in the twentieth century
Send your tired your huddled masses send the homeless and the poor
With open arms she offers all this new world can afford
Now a few hundred years later we still search for something more
As we watch the fading lamplight that once lit the golden door
And as I walk these city streets I feel a stranger in my town
I don't mind so much the people as the landmarks coming down
Yet still we sleep in comfort with our shelter bread and wine
Knowing that we're better off than any other place or time
Seems we hit the jackpot, baby, you and me
We were born in North America in the twentieth century
We hit the jackpot, baby, you and me
We were born in North America
We were born in North America
We were born in North America in the twentieth century