Released: January 22, 2016

Songwriter: Kiko Loureiro Dave Mustaine

Producer: Chris Rakestraw Dave Mustaine

[Verse 1]
We see each other through different eyes
Segregating ourselves by class and size
It's me against you in everything that they do
This planet's become one big spinning disaster

[Pre-Chorus]
If you don't like where we're going
Then you won't like what's coming next

[Chorus]
What will we look like?
In a post American world
Why cower to all those
Who oppose the American world?‌

[Verse 2]
When you walk away from that which makes you strong
You only fool yourself; you only weaken your cause
There's creeping hate if you resist the false narrative
Crushing all the dissenters who still think for themselves

[Pre-Chorus]
If you don't like where we're going
Then you won't like what's coming next‌

[Chorus]
What will we look like?
In a post American world
Why cower to all those
Who oppose the American world?

[Instrumental Break]

[Pre-Chorus]
If you don't like where we're going
Then you won't like what's coming next, no, no!

[Chorus]
What will we look like?
In a post American world
Why cower to all those
Who oppose the American world?

[Instrumental Outro]

Megadeth

After being kicked out of Metallica, Dave Mustaine decided to form a Thrash Metal band that not only rivaled his former band, but played faster, more technical Metal. Along with bassist David ‘Junior’ Ellefson and a revolving door of guitarists and drummers, Mustaine set the world afire as Megadeth became known as the world’s state-of-the-art Speed Metal band throughout the 80s and the early 90s. One of the Big Four of Thrash Metal, Megadeth remains one of Metal’s most popular acts today.

However, Dave Mustaine’s fledgling band got off to a shaky start. Initially unable to find like-minded individuals, it was not until an altercation with his (underage) downstairs neighbours Dave Ellefson and Greg Handevidt, that led to him buying them beer and forming the first incarnation of the band with drummer Dijon Carruthers in 1983.

The band was named after a political pamphlet that referred to a “megadeath” (one million deaths by nuclear explosion):