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RedViking

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Why?

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I saw people wearing 6 7 costumes for halloween and actually had to stop them to ask what their costume was. They did the whole six seeevveeeennnn thing and I just stared at them blankly until they explained. I pity the fool (our youth)
 
I saw people wearing 6 7 costumes for halloween and actually had to stop them to ask what their costume was. They did the whole six seeevveeeennnn thing and I just stared at them blankly until they explained. I pity the fool (our youth)
Let's not forget these are the same people that think the 69-nice meme has origins shrouded in mystery
 
Occult worship.
Yeah can confirm, if you say it around a cat, it starts chanting in Latin. This is true because "I saw a video" (thats literally her source).

Its a stupid phrase used by kids, you really dont have to watch bs videos to panic yourself beyond that.
 
Yeah can confirm, if you say it around a cat, it starts chanting in Latin. This is true because "I saw a video" (thats literally her source).

Its a stupid phrase used by kids, you really dont have to watch bs videos to panic yourself beyond that.

Even sadder is my 7 year old coming home from school telling me his teacher demanded they stop saying it because it’s devil worship.

My fok Marelize.
 
From Grok: Musical Roots: The Song That Sparked It The phrase traces directly back to the drill rap track "Doot Doot (6 7)" by Philadelphia rapper Skrilla (real name: unknown, but he's part of the Philly drill scene). Release Details: The song was unofficially dropped in December 2024 and officially released on February 7, 2025.
Key Lyrics: The hook features Skrilla rapping lines like "6-7, I just bipped right on the highway (Bip, bip)" over a trap beat. The "6-7" repetition is catchy but ambiguous—speculation includes: A nod to 67th Street in Skrilla's hometown (Philadelphia) or Chicago's Englewood neighborhood, tied to gang culture and drill rap themes.
Police radio code "10-67", which signals a report of death or a deceased person (e.g., "10-4" for acknowledgment, so "10-67" for something fatal). Linguist Taylor Jones has suggested this fits drill's gritty storytelling.
No confirmed "official" meaning—it's more vibe than literal.
The song itself has explicit lyrics about street life, violence, and bravado, which has led some parents to raise eyebrows about kids mimicking it without context.
 
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