How Anti-Smut Activists Made 'Louie, Louie' Famous
Censors wore out their welcome during the 20th century's indecency wars.
In the mid-1950s, rock 'n' roll music was widely condemned as a public nuisance and threat to public safety, and the junk science of the day claimed that teens were "addicted" to the music. Police officials across the country—in Connecticut, New Jersey, Maryland, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island and other states—blamed juvenile delinquency and general unrest on rock 'n' roll. Minneapolis in 1959 banned a show hosted by Dick Clark "for the peace and well-being of the city" because the police chief was convinced that it would spark violence. It was not an isolated overreaction. Other cities that banned rock 'n' roll shows based on public safety concerns included Boston, Massachusetts; Bridgeport and New Haven, Connecticut; Asbury Park, New Jersey; Santa Cruz, California; and Birmingham, Alabama.
A 1955 Los Angeles Times article described rock 'n' roll as "a violent, harsh type of music that, parents feel, incites teenagers to do all sorts of crazy things," and it quoted a psychiatrist who opined that rock 'n' roll was a "contagious disease." Others in the psychiatric field concurred. Dr. Francis J. Braceland, an internationally known psychiatrist who testified at the Nuremberg trials and would serve as president of both the American Psychiatric Association and the World Psychiatric Association, called rock 'n' roll "cannibalistic and tribalistic," comparing it to a "communicable disease." The Washington Post in 1956 quoted Dr. Jules Masserman, another former president of the American Psychiatric Association, as saying that rock 'n' roll was "primitive quasi-music that can be traced back to prehistoric cultures." The notion that this music was dangerous and could exert some mysterious power over young minds was not out of the mainstream.
Such pronouncements may help explain the bizarre overreaction by authorities to a 1963 song with almost unintelligible lyrics recorded by a Portland, Oregon, garage band called the Kingsmen. The song, "Louie, Louie," was written in 1956 by rhythm and blues artist Richard Berry, but it came to prominence in the early 1960s after being recorded by several bands, including Paul Revere and the Raiders and, more notably, the Kingsmen. It was nothing more than a lovesick sailor's lament to a bartender about wanting to get back home to his girl. But because Jack Ely, the Kingsmen's lead singer, slurred the words beyond recognition, it became something of a Rorschach test for dirty minds. Schoolyard rumors about filthy lyrics in "Louie, Louie" stoked parental fears, prompted fevered complaints, and ultimately triggered a prolonged nationwide investigation. The controversy made "Louie, Louie," in the words of rock critic Dave Marsh, the world's most famous rock 'n' roll song.
A letter from one panicked mom to then–Attorney General Robert Kennedy captured the general tone:
My daughter brought home a record of 'LOUIE LOUIE' and I…proceeded to try and decipher the jumble of words. The lyrics are so filthy that I can-not enclose them in this letter….I would like to see these people, The 'artists,' the Record company and the promoters prosecuted to the full extent of the law.
We all know there is obscene materials available for those who seek it, but when they start sneaking in this material in the guise of the latest teen rock & roll hit record these morons have gone too far.
This land of ours is headed for an extreme state or moral degradation what with this record, the biggest hit movies and the sex and violence exploited on T.V. How can we stamp out this menace? ? ? ?
She was not alone. Indiana's Democratic governor, Matthew E. Welsh, claimed that the record was so obscene it made his "ears tingle," and he announced a statewide ban on both radio play and live performances of the song. (It was not an "official" ban. The governor merely reached out to his contacts at the Indiana Broadcasters Association to make sure that the record was not played in his state.)
Official or not, the controversy triggered a two-and-a-half-year investigation that involved efforts by six FBI field offices, several U.S. attorneys, and the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) into the supposedly corrupting lyrics of "Louie, Louie." FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover corresponded with an anti-pornography activist about the song, and he was kept apprised of the inquiry. Record label personnel were questioned, and even the song's composer was interviewed (although not, apparently, Jack Ely, the supposedly obscene performer). Some who were interviewed were read their rights, according to the FBI's notes to the file. Recordings were shipped off to FBI laboratories where the records would be played back at various speeds, with FBI agents straining to pick up a dirty word somewhere in the mix.
United Press International (UPI) reported (prematurely) that the FBI, the Post Office, and the FCC had dropped their investigations in February 1964 "because they were unable to determine what the lyrics of the song were, even after listening to the records at speeds ranging from 16 rpm to 78 rpm." That report was wrong in a couple of important respects: The investigation was far from over—it was just getting underway, really—and it was never clear that the Post Office was involved (although this may have been a subconscious nod to Anthony Comstock, the Victorian-era anti-vice crusader and "special agent" for the Post Office who famously used his power over the mails to oppose obscene literature, among other vices).
The UPI report that FBI investigators could not understand the words was accurate, however, as reflected in correspondence from the FBI laboratory returning materials submitted for review by the Tampa field office: "The Department advised that they were unable to interpret any of the wording in the record and therefore could not make any decision concerning the matter." Yet the investigation would drag on for almost two more years.
A June 1965 Justice Department memorandum summarizing the Detroit office inquiry, which included input from the record company, the National Association of Broadcasters, and the FCC (each of which found the complaints to be baseless), may have come closest to the truth. The FCC official, after approximately two years of receiving "unfounded complaints concerning the recording 'Louie Louie,'" concluded that, to the best of her knowledge, "the trouble was started by an unidentified college student, who made up a series of obscene verses for 'Louie Louie' and then sold them to fellow students." But the fact is that no one knows for sure how it all started.
The rumor of "dirty lyrics" persisted, passed on by word of mouth, fueled by Ely's inarticulate vocals and Gov. Welsh's tingling ears. Perhaps the rumormongers can be forgiven their mistake. As FBI investigators put it, "with this type of rock and roll music, a listener might think he heard anything being said that he imagined."
The FBI was a year and a half into the investigation before someone thought to check out the lyrics on file with the U.S. Copyright Office. Here is what they found:
Louie, Louie, me gotta go.
Louie, Louie, me gotta go.
A fine little girl, she wait for me;
me catch a ship across the sea.
I sailed the ship all alone;
I never think I'll make it home
Louie, Louie, me gotta go.
Louie, Louie, me gotta go.Three nights and days we sailed the sea;
me think of girl constantly.
On the ship, I dream she there;
I smell the rose in her hair.
Louie, Louie, me gotta go.
Louie, Louie, me gotta go.Me see Jamaica moon above;
It won't be long me see me love.
Me take her in my arms and then
I tell her I never leave again.
According to one source interviewed for the FBI's file (whose identity was redacted), "it is obvious [that] the lyrics to this record are not pornographic or objectionable in any way."
Nevertheless, reports in various other FBI files contained different variants of the "schoolyard" version of "Louie, Louie," such as:
Oh, Louie, Louie, Oh, No,
Get her way down low,Oh, Louie, Louie, Oh, Baby,
Get her way down low,A fine little girl awaiting for me
she's just a girl across the way
Well I'll take her and park all alone
She's never a girl I'd lay at home(Chorus repeat)
At night at 10 I lay her again
Fuck you girl, Oh, all the way
Oh, my bed and I lay her there
I meet a rose in her hair.(Chorus repeat)
Ok Let's give it to them right now!
She's got a rag on and I'll move above
It won't be long she'll slip it off
I'll take her in my arms again
I'll tell her I'll never leave again.(Chorus repeat)
Get that Broad out of here!
Needless to say, the imagined words of "Louie, Louie" bore little resemblance to the actual lyrics. Time and again, FBI investigators scrutinized the song and each time reached the same conclusion: They couldn't make out the words.
None of this mattered to those demanding FBI action. One anti-porn activist from Flint, Michigan, wrote to Hoover in June 1965 out of concern over "the alarming rise in venereal disease, perversion, promiscuity and illegitimate births in the teen groups." She said that her organization knew about the "dual set of lyrics" associated with "Louie, Louie," and she claimed that the Kingsmen had masterminded an "auditory illusion." So it was irrelevant whether you could prove which set of lyrics was being used to perform the song, "since they were capitalizing on its obscenity" and "every teenager in the county 'heard' the obscene[,] not the copyrighted lyric." In other words, the song must be obscene if enough people became convinced that they had heard something "bad," no matter what words had been sung. Hoover wrote back to assure the correspondent that the FBI was actively investigating the matter and kindly enclosed copies of two Bureau publications—Poison for Our Youth and Combatting Merchants of Filth: The Role of the FBI.
The activist responded the following month to say that her group had conducted its own investigation of "Louie, Louie" and had played back the original recording at various speeds. She reported that when the record was played "somewhere between 45 and 33-1/2 RPM…the obscene articulation is clearer." Her group compared the record with a recording of the song taken from a televised performance by the Kingsmen and reported that when "the copywritten lyric" was performed "intelligibly," then "by no stretch of the imagination is the obscene lyric audible." It is hard to tell what the zealous informant was trying to say. Was it that the Kingsmen performed a "clean" version of "Louie, Louie" for television but that the record was a subliminal "dirty" version? It is impossible to know what Hoover thought of this "field report." He wrote a cordial letter back (enclosing more FBI anti-smut pamphlets), but also had the Detroit office investigate the woman and her group. Agents reported back that the Bureau had "nothing derogatory concerning [the] correspondent."
The FBI finally closed its investigation on October 10, 1966, with a brief, nondescript memo from the FBI labs to the New York office returning the recording and the lyrics sheet. But here's the oddest part. For all the scrutiny devoted to this song and its lyrics, the countless hours that FBI agents and lab technicians spent listening to the record at different speeds, and the many fans (and critics) obsessively searching for something dirty, no one seemed to notice that Lynn Easton, the Kingsmen's drummer, fleetingly uttered the word "fuck" just under a minute into the song. He had fumbled with his drumsticks and spontaneously vocalized his frustration at the mistake. But because the song was recorded in one take, the accidentally improvised expletive stayed in, indistinct and in the background. There is a lesson about human nature in this: People rarely find what they do not seek, but, quite often, they can clearly see what they are looking for—even when it isn't there.
The whole "Louie, Louie" episode bore the hallmarks of a classic Comstockian debacle—it originated in a moral panic about nothing and was driven by apocalyptic rhetoric about the mortal dangers threatening youth; the would-be censors ultimately were embarrassed by their actions; and, in the end, the controversy only magnified public attention and interest in the work. The FBI files documented this effect: One September 1965 memorandum said that when first released on the West Coast, record sales were poor, but after Indiana's governor issued his "ban" and the obscenity rumor spread, sales soared and hit the 2 million mark. Whether to quell the rumors or to capitalize on them, the record label offered a $1,000 reward to anyone who could substantiate the reported obscenity. No one ever did.
Welsh came to regret that "Louie, Louie" would be the only thing for which he would be remembered. He tried to downplay the incident in a 1991 interview, calling it "a tempest in a teapot," and he emphatically denied being a censor. He never banned the record, Welsh told Marsh for his definitive book on the subject. He had merely suggested to Reid Chapman, president of the Indiana Broadcasters Association, "that it might be simpler all around if it wasn't played." But "it doesn't take a First Amendment scholar to see the contradiction," Marsh concluded, for "if a record isn't played at the suggestion of the state's chief executive, it has been banned."
After all this, Anthony Comstock's ghost still lingers, and Welsh would not be the last public official to be burned by wading into the "Louie, Louie" controversy. In May 2005, school superintendent Paula Dawning of Benton Harbor, Michigan, decreed that the middle school marching band could not perform "Louie, Louie" in the town's Grand Floral Parade. She explained that her decision was because of the song's "degrading" and "vulgar" lyrics even though the band was to perform an instrumental version. Her decision was reported nationwide—and roundly mocked—and Dawning ultimately relented. She stood by her decision, though (both of them), telling reporters that her real concern was "parental influence." She initially issued her ban, she explained, "because one parent questioned the appropriateness for that particular song," but rescinded the decision after "listening to a majority of the McCord Renaissance Middle School band parents." Dawning said that she was merely guarding "the right of parents to set standards for their children." She did not mention whether the coast to-coast ridicule she had received or a public official's constitutional obligation not to succumb to a heckler's veto were factors.
In the end, defenders of "Louie, Louie" got the last laugh. April 11 is listed in the National Special Events Registry as International "Louie, Louie" Day, and the states of Washington and Oregon have proclaimed their own observances of "Louie, Louie" Day. The city of Seattle has done the same, and Tacoma, Washington, sponsored an annual "LouieFest" from 2003 to 2012. Peoria, Illinois, hosts an annual "Louie, Louie" parade and festival (answering the age-old question: Will it play in Peoria?), and Philadelphia had "Louie, Louie" parades from 1985 to 1989 (until the annual event was canceled due to rowdiness). In 1985, Washington considered making "Louie, Louie" the state song, but the effort fizzled. Still, the song is played during the seventh-inning stretch at all Seattle Mariners home games. Politicians (for the most part) now embrace the once-taboo song, and Washington Gov. Christine Gregoire even danced to the tune at her inaugural ball in 2005. She did not say whether it made her ears tingle.
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it is a good topic
شركة كشف تسربات المياه بجازان
Is that "Louie, Louie" in Arabic? If so, your secret is safe with me. I won't tell you Imam if you won't. 🙂
Where would the Marvel Universe be if comic books were only published in Arabic?
In the Muslim portion of the Arab world, only Ms. Marvel would remain intact, with all the others converted to Islam or murdered.
In the Christian Phalangist portion, all non-Christian Marvel characters would be dead as they were in Lebanon during the Civil War.
There wouldn't be a Marvel Comic among the Druze portion because, well, they're kinda secretive.
In the Secularist portion of the Arab world, however, the MCU would prolly be pretty much the same, but include Salman Rusdie, Wafa Sultan, and Ibn Warraq with superpowers.
Quite the contrary, a secularist MCU would've meant the Marvel superpower characters become agents for the U.S.S.R. (if Afghanistan is of any indication), with Captain America changing his name to Captain Soviet Union. All religious people probably would've lost their lives, making your scenario the deadliest one of them all.
Judging from the acts of God-like Marvel characters like Thanos, Galactus, The Watcher, and The Immortals, none of them would have done a damn thing against the Communists.
It took humans with hiding spaces for black-market goods, rubber stamps made from tire rubber, fax machines, networked computers, seized weapons, improvised 'zip' weapons, and a whole lot of guts to take down Communism. That may be what it takes now against the current batch of Left and Right Authoritarians.
But one thing's for sure: No Supernatural Cavalry is coming to the rescue.
This land of ours is headed for an extreme state or moral degradation
Turns out she was right
I can’t wait.
The blue-haired-harpy-cutting-off-her-tits-and-demanding-pronouns kind of moral degradation. Not the good stuff.
Dammit.
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Yeah, Euphoria would have given them a heart attack.
Wapo yesterday.
The primarily White supporters of the Freedom Convoy argue that pandemic mandates infringe upon their constitutional rights to freedom. The notion of “freedom” was historically and remains intertwined with Whiteness [Slavery in America and around the world begged to differ], as historian Tyler Stovall has argued.
No wonder Jeff is pro CRT.
The belief that one’s entitlement to freedom is a key component of White supremacy. [Awkward as hell sentence] This explains why the Freedom Convoy members see themselves as entitled to freedom, no matter the public health consequences to those around them.
So slave owners were right when they claimed that blacks were safer on the plantation?
Democrats seemed to believe so.
Liberals and progressives want to keep everybody on the plantation.
The funny thing is that the protesters were far more multi-ethnic than the WaPo or the Liberal party.
That little old lady that they ran over in their horse charge was Native Canadian.
First Nation is a White Supremst dog whistle
Nowadays, the BLM/CRT/Wokester crowd would condemn The Kingsmen and "Louis, Louis" for racist "appropriation" of Jamaican dialect.
I thought the same thing while reading the lyrics.
"A 1955 Los Angeles Times article described rock 'n' roll as "a violent, harsh type of music that, parents feel, incites teenagers to do all sorts of crazy things"
Looking back, this was absolutely true over the following decades. Here's a great example of violent and harsh rock and roll inciting teenagers to do all sorts of crazy things:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L6BuoXNGbMg
Rock and roll was incredibly subversive. It undermined segregation when white kids were listening to what they used to call "race music". It helped create the generation gap and undermined parental authority. Girls screaming over Elvis and the Beatles in public was a formerly verboten expression of female sexuality. In the 1960s and early 1970s, rock and roll made the use of psychedelics acceptable and encouraged kids to protest against the government and the Vietnam War.
Going to a large concert and taking a puff on whatever was passed down the aisle became a subversive right of passage in the 1970s. The real sexual revolution happened on the dance floor at a disco. David Bowie, Freddie Mercury, and Boy George made gay people acceptable in the eyes of the youth. Metal in the 1980s helped undermine kids' faith in the church and generally fomented youthful rebellion. Rock and roll really was subversive, and it made kids do all kinds of crazy things.
You should see what rock and roll does to Pentecostals during a revival. The clave rhythm in voodoo drumming induces a trance state and makes dancers behave as if they were possessed by ancestral spirits. Our libertarianism makes us subversive towards authority, and we like some of the subversive aspects of rock and roll. That doesn't mean we should dismiss the claims of its critics. The idea that we shouldn't be allowed to do things unless they're good for society is an authoritarian and socialist idea. It's a progressive idea--not libertarian.
Interesting. What about jazz and beatniks from the fifties?
Can we get into the drug aspect of songs like 'green green grass of home', 'tea for two', 'smoke gets in you eyes' and the like?
Let's not forget "My Blue Heaven." "Blue heaven" was slang for getting high. Of course, that song was written in 1927, so it sorta, like, you know, predates rock and roll. "Cocaine Blues" dates back to the forties. But yeah, it was all about the Rock and Roll.
Because the critics often went too far with their moral panics, and examples of that are easy to find, doesn't mean rock and roll wasn't subversive or that there wasn't plenty of music that openly encouraged the use of psychedelics. We can be honest about the subversive nature of these things.
The use of alcohol among teens leads to more fist fights, STDs, and unwanted pregnancies, and because we oppose making alcohol illegal is not a good reason to pretend otherwise. On the one hand, there are downsides to banning alcohol, too, but on the other hand, neither I nor my rights exist for the benefit of society.
I don't know that Scientology, UFC, payday loan centers, consensual S&M pr0n, sugary soft drinks, Twitter, street motorcycles, tattoo shops, furry conventions, gangster rap, belly shirts, pit bulls, tobacco products, or a thousand other things are a net benefit to society either, but so what?
When we reflexively defend ourselves against the progressive claims that such things are bad for society, we're conceding the most important point, which is that our rights are not circumscribed by what is best for society. I'm not here for your benefit, and a free society requires us to tolerate these things--even if they're a net negative for society.
A society in which people are only free to do things if they're a net benefit to society is an authoritarian society with a socialist mindset--regardless of whether John Lennon is lying about Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds being about a child's painting and regardless of whether Tommy James is lying about Crimson and Clover being about his two favorite colors.
They may have needed to lie to keep their songs on the radio, but libertarians shouldn't be denying the truth about the foundations of a free society, and a society in which people are only allowed to do things if they're a net benefit to society is not a free society. It's a progressive society, and that's the kind of society we'll get if we keep arguing under progressive assumptions.
"'What is happening to our young people? They disrespect their elders, they disobey their parents. They ignore the law. They riot in the streets inflamed with wild notions. Their morals are decaying. What is to become of them?'''
Some journalist in 1956? Reagan in 1980? Nope. Plato.
Youth rebel. It's as old as humanity. And their music reflects it.
Yeah, Socrates really was fomenting rebellion among the youth--against their parents and democracy in Athens. And Socrates should have been free to do that without fear of being exiled or forced to drink hemlock. And libertarians are better off being honest about both of those things rather than pretending otherwise.
And libertarians are better off being honest about both of those things rather than pretending otherwise.
Ah yes. If you disagree with Ken then you're not only dishonest, but you're not a true libertarian. It's the only possible explanation.
You don't actually know what he's talking about, do you?
You just wanted to troll.
Ideas!
Ideas!
Oh look, the Three Stooges appear right on cue.
Sarcasmic calling other people "stooges" is pretty lulzy.
SHOW US THE MUTED ENEMIES LIST!
Yeppers.
Plato didn't even support music, seeing it as a distraction from contemplating his ideal "Forms" which underlie all existence. His ideal Utopia eould have banned music and all art.
Exactly. Beethoven was considered subversive in his day.
Especially after he introduced the evil, dreaded TROMBONE into orchestral music!!!!
But now the youth are demanding ideological conformity and a censored society. Has that ever happened before?
The cultural revolution in China and Hitler Youth come to mind.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hitler_Youth#/media/File:Bundesarchiv_Bild_147-0510,_Berlin,_Lustgarten,_Kundgebung_der_HJ.jpg
Wanna see what kids in China were dancing to in the late 60s?
https://youtube.com/watch?v=YRNRHzUoBuQ&feature=share
So, a Chow-Mein, Chop-Suey version of German Goosestepping, huh? With the accordian the common denominator. Hmm...No wonder people called Al Yankovic "Weird".
Were they rebels without a cause?
James Dean wants to know.
Actually, kinship was very important among many cultures of the world. Respect towards the elderly and the ancestors was a big part in many societies.
If anything, Socrates' society was an outlier until recently.
Libertarians believe what is "good for society" is the sum of all the individual free choices people make about their own lives, since they are in the best position to make those choices. Certainly some people have different preferences for long term prosperity vs. short term enjoyment, but we shoudn't force our time preferences on them because we think it is "better" for them.
One can compare it to evolution vs intelligent design. Authoritarians, especially the left, prefer the latter in government.
And some people's time-line is Zero. That's a number too and that's part of "Life's Rich Tapestry" in a free society as well.
So Tipper Gore was right.
She was right about rock and roll being subversive. She was flat dead wrong about censorship.
Much better said than my rant on video games the other day.
Admitting that their right about one thing doesn't mean you agree with their remedy.
Humans are going to human.
And some things need subverting. Cancel/call-out /Woke culture could use some serious subverting.
The payday loan centers and the CoinStar Machines are a consequence of Gummint Skoolz not teaching financial literacy and of a overall social ethos that doesn't value patience and thrift.
Anyone who could calculate compound interest and who had just a little ability to bite the bullet would never use payday loan centers or use CoinStar Machines to wrap their coins (though CoinStar gift cards and charitable donations are good, since they involve no fee.)
White Lines anyone?
"Twices as sweet as sugar.
Twice as bitter as salt.
And if you get hooked, baby,
It's nobody else's fault! So don't do it!"
--Grandmaster Flash & The Furious Five.
"Woman with the sweet lovin' better than a white line"
-Head East: "Never Been Any Reason"
"Some get a kick from cocaine
I'm sure that if I took even one sniff
That would bore me terrifically, too
Yet, I get a kick out of you."--Cole Porter.
That ol' "Devil Music" can have constructive, positive thoughts too. You don't need censorship or a "War On (Some) Drugs" to promote clean living.
One fine night, they leave the pool hall
Heading for the dance at the Armory
Libertine men and scarlet women,
and ragtime,
shameless music
That'll grab your son, your daughter with the arms of a jungle, animal instinct
Mass hysteria
I sang that onstage. Robert Preston was right—once you memorize that you never forget it!
The WaPo actually said that?
Someone has been taking bong hits from an exhaust pipe.
Just another so called newspaper that needs to go into the trash bin.
As reason claimed trump was attacking reporters they continued to ignore the ongoing persecution of reporter Daedelin.
For those who don't remember, he was the undercover prolife journalist who exposed Planned Parenthoods selling of aborted fetus parts through public recording of public conversations and filing at a PP conference. Some of the wrongs exposed were pre trial shutting down of his speech by disallowing his videos to be published, emails between PP and kamala Harris on how to convict him, pre dawn raids, etc.
In the latest Salvo against his rights prosecutors, yes thus trial has been going on 5 years, asked to exclude exculpatory evidence from his trial.
https://thefederalist.com/2022/02/18/california-prosecutors-attempt-to-ban-exculpatory-evidence-from-pro-life-journalists-criminal-trial/
The AG’s office seeks to exclude one piece of evidence in particular from the trial: testimony from the former Orange County district attorney, Tony Rackauckas. The former DA has testified that without Daleiden’s undercover videos, he would have never been able to sue and effectively shut down illegal fetal tissue harvesting businesses operating in California, also known as Planned Parenthood’s “middle-man” procurement companies.
Why is this important? California allows recording of illegal activity.
California state law already establishes, and is the crux of Daleiden’s defense: Journalists recording undercover videos are protected by law if they are making reasonable, good faith efforts to investigate violent crimes.
RCMP wattsapp chain shows them laughing at injuring peaceful protestors.
https://www.rebelnews.com/leaked_rcmp_messages_time_for_the_protesters_to_hear_our_jackboots_on_the_ground
“Time for the protesters to hear our jackboots on the ground”
Everything you need to know about Trudeau and those who support his Enabling Act.
Trudy about to have a Ceausescu moment.
Coming soon to a city near you.
Don't worry, the USA Today fact checker has their back:
https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/factcheck/2022/02/16/fact-check-canada-freedom-convoy-protesters-dont-number-100-000/6787141001/
Our rating: Partly false
Based on our research, we rate PARTLY FALSE the claim that there have been no buildings burned or injuries at the “100,000 truck convoy” in Canada.
The exact size of the "Freedom Convoy" is unclear, but estimates from officials and news reports are in the thousands. There is no evidence the crowd size is anywhere near 100,000, as the post claims.
It's true that there have been no reports of major injuries or burned buildings resulting from the demonstrations. But officials are investigating potential crimes associated with the convoy, and there have been reports of property damage.
Does anyone still believe fact-checkers are anything other than outright propaganda outlets anymore?
Who’s checking the Fact Checkers? (Seriously is ANYONE?)
DHS finally admits to the actual cost of illegal immigrants destroying border property. Sadly their solution is not to try to stem the flow, but merely to pay off ranchers effected. Most likely at rates lower than the actual damages.
https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/policy/immigration/biden-to-pay-texas-ranchers-and-farmers-for-property-damage-by-illegal-migrants
57% of democrats in competitive districts think democrats have gone way too far in their covid responses.
https://archive.fo/6NWDG#selection-939.11-948.1
Only the deep blue zealots seem to still be keeping the fauci led religion alive.
It's "faucism".
BROTHERS! SISTERS! WE DON’T NEED THIS FAUCIST COOF THING!!
Can we at least get some of his remaining supporters to turn on Fauci for authorizing and funding puppy torture?
I suspect they are both cat lovers - - - - - - - -
If anybody was under the impression AP is non biased...
They claimed California as the first state to begin treating covid as endemic.
https://apnews.com/article/coronavirus-pandemic-health-california-pandemics-7fe43acafdedeeb334fe1448e87fb74a
The Chron really doesn't have 'reporters' anymore; it's an AP/NYT/Bloomberg reseller.
You have to look at the bottom of the article listing 30* to port to figure out which one it is.
Holy shit
School board members freaks out when parent shows pictures of her maskless on crowds while demanding kids be masked.
https://mobile.twitter.com/newsbusters/status/1495220410052333568
8t's about damn time the good guys use Saul Allinsky's Ruoes For Radicals and make assholes livs by the rules they set down for everyone else.
Correction: Rules
"...Others in the psychiatric field concurred. Dr. Francis J. Braceland, an internationally known psychiatrist who testified at the Nuremberg trials and would serve as president of both the American Psychiatric Association and the World Psychiatric Association, called rock 'n' roll "cannibalistic and tribalistic," comparing it to a "communicable disease."..."
Keep this in mind the next time you run into an article regarding kids and 'phones.
He wasn't entirely wrong...
Yes, the situations are identical.
So once upon a time, young people said and did crazy things that caused affront to the older establishment, who demanded broad censorship.
Now, young people get upset when others, including old people, say and do crazy things, and demand broad censorship.
How the hell did this happen?
Note: in both eras, plenty of officials were eager to assist with censorship. I wonder how many modern wokesters think of J. Edgar Hoover as a hero?
These are more caricatures created by pundits.
I grew up in the Sixties. Yes, there were hippies but there were also tons of conformist teenagers, Young Republicans, etc.
And just because someone is trying to paint today’s youth as uniformly conformist by giving anecdotal examples doesn’t mean that this generation isn’t a mix of all types of people just like every generation before.
You being part of the selfish generation makes total sense.
Plus, he lying.
"I grew up in the Sixties. Yes, there were hippies but there were also tons of conformist teenagers, Young Republicans, etc."
I grew up in the Sixties as well. Most people were conformists, regardless of political affiliation. Rock-n-roll was certainly viewed negatively, as was hair on boys' foreheads or touching their ears. Making a big deal of it served to amplify the behavior. But what gave the counter-culture movement legs, and resulted in the ridiculous excessive-ness and the subsequent march through the institutions that we live with today, was the Vietnam war. Without it, the rest would have simply been a fad, like Zoot Suits of the 40's and Flappers and Jazz music of the 20s. (BTW, the word Jazz in the 20's was slang for sex).
In 1988, "Bloom County" had a strip where the presidential candidates tried to decipher the lyrics. Most amusingly, Bill D. Cat's interpretation is *exactly* what you hear when you listen to the song!
*Meow! Ffft!-Fffft!" More profound words from a candidate were never spoken.
Growing up back in the 70s in Ann Arbor a rumour floated around that Paul McCartney was dead and, for reasons that were never quite clear, dark powers were determined to keep it a secret. The local student paper, the Michigan Daily, had a couple of writers that were hot on the story. The clues it seems were obvious. Paul wasn't wearing shoes on the cover of Abbey Road, he declared himself the walrus, a death reference in some ancient culture, and a bunch of other shit I've long since forgotten. The real evidence however could only be found by playing the records backwards. The only way to do that in those days was to disable the turntable somehow and rotate it backwards by hand. Odds were good you'd destroy your needle in the process. I wasn't a Beatles fan and didn't have any of their albums and I sure wasn't gonna fuck up my turntable but somebody did and the results got played on hippie radio and even local TV. The news cycle back then was a lot longer than it is now but in a couple months the story had completely disappeared. I was a little too young to be aware of the Louie Louie controversy but of course I've heard it a thousand times. Until I read this article I thought the chorus was we gotta go not me gotta go. Really enjoyed the article. Thanks Robert.
Turn me on, dead man.
Not just in Ann Arbor, MI. The rumors about Paul were also in the South, where mobs burned Beatles' records when John Lennon stated the simple fact that The Beatles were "more popular than Jesus Christ."
Was it actually a fact? Do you consider Jesus unpopular?
At the time, Lennon's statement probably was true.
Of course, in order really gauge someone's popularity, the person has to actually exist.
The story still has a dedicated following on the internet
Seriously? I'll have to duck duck that. Nah not really.
I find it highly ironic the FBI, led by a cross dressing faggot who attended wild sex parties dressed as a woman and also had his male lover as an assistant, would investigate a song for pornographic content.
Highly ironic.
But that's the FBI for you.
Don't ever allow your children anywhere near an FBI agent.
Every time this last year when I drove my truck past the sign on I-80 in Iowa declaring it the "Herbert Hoover Memorial Highway" I was struck with an urge to found and open the "J. Edgar Hoover Memorial Dragstrip".
Highly ironic?
If true, then Hoover was only living out the Christian morality of his time, which demanded that Gays stay in the closet, suffer in silence, and inflict their suffering on orhers, which Hoover did.
On the contrary, the tenets of Christianity encourage all to come unto Christ and repent of incompatible lifestyles. There wasn't anything from stopping gays from changing their ways.
Well if you can "do all things through Christ which strengtheneth me," why doesn't that mean being an open practicing Homosexual Christian too?
Now, I don't know the words to that song Louie, Louie and I'm pretty sure the singer for the Kingsmen didn't know 'em either.
Ballad of the Kingsmen, by Todd Snider
The Kingsmen were covering The Wailers version which added the line Ok Let's give it to them right now! and the guitar solo which followed.
I remember a radio contest for the best amateur version of Louie Louie circa 1987. I also remember it from the same era from the album “Frat Rock.” Anyone remember that one?
*Reluctantly raises hand.*
But that was a great decade to be young! In many ways I pity the kids these days (more gadgets=so what?)
I'm only reluctant out of showing age, not enthusiasm. Frat Rock, Hair Rock, Art Rock, AOR, Heavy Metal, New Wave, Reggae, Punk, R&B, Jazz, even Classical Rap certainly beat the Hell out of the Pop/Trap crap of today!
Next time you see the young whippersnappers with their iPhones and Blueteeth earpieces, refer them to some real music links and downloads.
Some of their songs have medleys and lyrics from the past like Elton John's "No Sacrifice" and "Rocket Man" on Duo Lipa's latest, or Rod Stewart's "Young Hearts, Be Free Tonight", even Simon & Garfunkel's "My Little Town." Use those as an "in" to pry open their brains' music centers.
I’ve often wondered if those ragtime flappers from the 1920s thought that the Big Band sound of twenty years later was degenerate? Or if not quite degenerate then one of those “That’s NOT music, that’s just NOISE “ things?
Probably, I can easily imagine criticisms that it becomes difficult to discern the individual instruments, and that big band jazz is composed rather than improvised
Flappers strike me as "here for the party" types who could have fun mosr anywhere, though they might think of Big Band as "square."
“it doesn't take a First Amendment scholar to see the contradiction," Marsh concluded, for "if a record isn't played at the suggestion of the state's chief executive, it has been banned."
OOOO-OH!!!! REALLY now? By any chance does this invocation of the First Amendment extend beyond the music recording/audio-visual media industries of the last century to certain modern day equivalents?
The song "Louie Louie" was a must do for every garage band that ever existed.So were others such as "Gloria"and" Hang On Sloopy". Oh, I almost forgot..."House Of the Rising Sun."
Because those were the first songs we learned to play.
Some of the first guitar riffs I learned were from George Harrison and The Ventures.
Don’t forget Wipeout for drummers. My step son is very good at it, as was his late uncle.
It doesn't matter their reasons, their political party, their alleged ideology - censors are simply crybully totalitarians pretending to be "protecting us from (bad messages)."
It's time for humanity to reject all forms of totalitarianism.
This is probably urban legend, but the singer was supposedly sick in the studio, had braces, and everything came out slurred.
I'll have to duck duck that.
Oh, fond memories, for me as a fairly early Boomer. We all listened to the song obsessively, to try to hear those dirty lyrics, that the authorities assured us were there. By the time I was in college, and everyone was playing the Beatles backwards, I had realized that it was all idiotic.
Altamont. 1400 tons of trash at Woodstock, half of which is still there. Et cetera, et cetera, et cetera.
50 years after Michaelangelo painted the back wall of the Vatican diapers were painted onto the angels in his frescoes to protect...the children.
From The Vatican's standpoint, "protecting the children" sounds more like a personnel problem than a painting problem.
I loved this story because it brought back great memories. Back in the 60s in college, I was a singer for the fraternity house band. I think they were called The Jockstraps. I only sang a few songs and my favorite was Louie, Louie performed at maximum volume. My words may have been a little different from those in the article; maybe a few were printable here. Everybody seemed to love my version even though my voice was not what many would think good. I remember I did actually find the actual words back then but they are so boring. One of the other songs I performed was The House of the Rising Sun. Once again my words were not those of the original but actually did make sense; our house did have some things in common with the house of the song. Later, my sister became the owner of the real house in New Orleans but that's a different story.
They say Jamaica
You moon a dove
I think music is the most beautiful thing that can be and I'm constantly listening to music trying to find something really worthwhile. And recently I found a great site https://mp3juice.link on which music can be downloaded for free and also quickly. And I think you just have to try it, especially if you don't have money for a subscription