B1, B.I, B.1 or B-1 may refer to:
The Akan people of Ghana and the Ivory Coast frequently name their children after the day of the week they were born and the order in which they were born. These "day names" have further meanings concerning the soul and character of the person. Middle names have considerably more variety and can refer to their birth order, twin status, or an ancestor's middle name. These names have spread throughout Ghana and Jamaica.
This tradition is shared throughout West Africa due to Akan Influence, from Benin/Dahomey (Fon) and Togo (Ewe), to the Ga, to other West Africans and throughout the African diaspora. For example, in Jamaica the following day names have been recorded: Monday, Cudjoe; Tuesday, Quabenah; Wednesday, Quaco; Thursday, Quao; Friday, Cuffee; Saturday, Quamin; Sunday, Quashee. English translations of these names were used in the United States during the nineteenth century; Robinson Crusoe's Friday may be conceptually related. During the 18th-19th Century, slaves from modern day Ghana in the Caribbean were referred to as Coromantees. Many of the leaders of slave rebellions had "day names" including Cuffy or Kofi, Cudjoe or Kojo, and Quamina or Kwame/Kwamina.
The government controls all our lives
When they pump us full of lies
Large corporations are all the same
What do they think - we have no brains?
Governments will try
To make sure we have no private lives
Governmens will try
To make us believe their goddamned lies
What they want is a war
Down in El Salvador
They try to make fools of us
But we won't fall for that again
[Chorus]
I just want the companies
To make a lot of big money
Since the companies don't really care
While we're getting killed down there
[Chorus]
What is with the president
And all the other congressmen
I hope that they can see the bodies fall
For no real cause at all
Governments will try to fuck you!!!
I tried to warn you
Governments will try to fuck you!!!
I tried telling you
Governments will try to fuck you!!!
I'm not kidding you