Kerry Howley | June 24, 2005
Writing in Prospect, David Rieff argues that Bob Geldof's Live Aid may have done more harm than good in its response to Ethiopian famine in 1985:
The truth is that the Dergue's resettlement policy -- of moving 600,000 people from the north while enforcing the "villagisation" of 3m others -- was at least in part a military campaign, masquerading as a humanitarian effort. And it was assisted by western aid money.
Whole thing here.
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This is the second benefit concert that turns out to have a
skeleton in the closet (the Farm Aid/Mellencamp farms thingie being
the first)
Meanwhile the for-profit gigs haven't systematically killed
anyone.
(although I suspect that folks who follow Dave Matthews around die
a little with each show.)
(although I suspect that folks who follow Dave Matthews
around die a little with each show.)
No, they're just already dead on the inside.
Oh good, I see that the stupid aid concerts did serve some kind of purpose, even if it was an evil purpose. Good, becaus I thought it was a complete waste, it tuns out not so.
Marge Simpson: "... and when I heard that it was for awareness, that sealed the deal!
This is almost enough to make me want to stop giving money to causes promoted by fatuous lefty dickhead musicians.
Now I feel some sense of vidication for loathing that goddamn "We Are The World" song.
Took you long enough, Akira. P.J. O'Rourke did a pretty good job
of deconstructing that song in Give War a Chance
(1993):
We are the world (solipsism)
We are the children (average age near forty)
We are the ones who make a brighter day (unproven)
So let's start giving (logical inference supplied without
argument)
There's a choice we're making (true as far as it goes)
We're saving our own lives (absurd)
It's true we'll make a better day (see line 3 above)
Just you and me (statistically unlikely)
"That's three palpable untruths, two dubious assertions, nine uses
of a first person pronoun, not a single reference to trouble or
anybody in it and no facts. The verse contains, literally, neither
rhyme nor reason."
I've actually thought Bob Geldof was a dick since before "We Are
the World," and here's why.
Sometime between the first appearance on MTV of videos by the band
The Boomtown Rats (of which Geldof was a member) and "We Are the
World," I read an article on then-upcoming (now deceased) comedian
John Candy. I think it was in "TV Guide, but it might have
been Rolling Stone. Basically a big long interview of
Candy and his life and stuff.
One anecdote stuck with me, though some details are dim. At some
point way back, John Candy worked for an organization (don't recall
which one) that once provided The Boomtown Rats a place to stay
while they were on tour or something. And the band robbed the place
blind, stealing all kinds of stuff from it. And when they were
confronted, Candy said, they just blithely denied it. I distinctly
remember the article quotes Candy as doing an impression of the
band members where he mugs and says in a slurred English accent,
"Whot? Us? We dint steal nuffin!" The incident made Candy furious.
He really ripped on them.
A few years later, when I found out Bob Geldof was involved in Band
Aid, all I could think was, "That's the kleptomaniac that John
Candy hates!" And that's all I've been able to think ever since,
every time I read something about Geldof: "Humanitarian in public
life, thief in private life."
...Um...I'm with you Stevo...but...
...That a proto-Punk band on the road might steal stuff doesn't
surprise me. The only thing about that story that would
really surprise me is if John Candy got that upset about the band
stealing anything other than food.
; )
Stevo --
Would the incident you mention have been before, during, or after
the appearance of the Boomtown Rats on SCTV, in which Geldof played
the problem student, Denholm, in "Teacher's Pet?
http://sctvguide.ca/episodes/sctv_s42.htm#Show_8
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