absolutely unimaginable to them that he could have the gall to think of his own children's fear for their lives (in front of the barrel of the state's guns) being more important than the embarrassment of the children of the state thugs holding the guns.
this is how supremacy works, and Afroman is cutting straight through it, just short of explicitly asking, "Why are their feelings more important than my life? Why are their kids' feelings more important than my kids' safety? What gives you, sir, the right to talk to me as if I'm the morally reprehensible one because I won't treat them as superiors when they inflict pointless violence on me and my family?"