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Music

Fun, Silly Anti-Tax Ballad 'Rich Men North of Richmond' Goes Viral for Some Online Reasons

If you don't take Oliver Anthony's surprise hit song too seriously, it's a lot of fun. Regrettably, a lot of people are taking the song much too seriously indeed.

Christian Britschgi | 8.14.2023 4:55 PM

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Oliver Anthony performs 'Rich Men North of Richmond' at his Virginia home | Screenshot via Radiowv/Youtube
Oliver Anthony performs 'Rich Men North of Richmond' (Screenshot via Radiowv/Youtube)

The internet (or at least the most "online" right-wing corners of it) is abuzz about the hit new song "Rich Men North of Richmond" from heretofore unknown country/folk singer Oliver Anthony.

Released late last week, the song features a solo Anthony on his guitar as he belts out, with great sorrow and personal hurt, lyrics complaining about the falling value of the dollar, the heavy burden of taxation, welfare recipients' purchase of junk food, and the sex trafficking shenanigans of Jeffrey Epstein.

Rich Men North of Richmond has been uploaded to all major streaming platforms and will show up there in a few days.

Im still in a state of shock at the outpouring of love I've seen in the comments, messages and emails. I'm working to respond to everyone as quickly as possible. pic.twitter.com/iScaYp9AWQ

— Oliver Anthony Music (@AintGottaDollar) August 11, 2023

These ills and many others can be blamed, as the title suggests, on "those rich men north of Richmond" and their totalitarian aspirations.

Lord knows they all just wanna have total control

Wanna know what you think, wanna know what you do

And they don't think you know, but I know that you do

Anti-elitism is not the most novel sentiment for a folky country song.

Still, some genuinely funny lines ("I wish politicians would look out for miners, and not just minors on an island somewhere," and "if you're 5-foot-3 and you're 300 pounds, taxes ought not to pay for your bags of fudge rounds") made funnier still by Anthony's incongruously soulful performance add life and originality to the song's generic populism.

Sure, one might quibble with the idea that food stamps are primarily responsible for driving up taxes and inflation, even if they are spent on fudge rounds. But the song's not meant to be a white paper. If you don't take it too seriously, you can have a fun and light-hearted time jamming out to the surprise viral hit.

Regrettably, people have begun to take the song much too seriously indeed. Rolling Stone notes that the song has been a hit with much of the online right, which has treated the song as this generation's ballad for the forgotten man.

Conservative personality Matt Walsh praised it for supposedly injecting some flesh-and-blood beauty into this sterile world. "The main reason this song resonates with so many people isn't political. It's because the song is raw and authentic. We are suffocated by artificiality," he wrote on X, formerly Twitter.

The main reason this song resonates with so many people isn't political. It's because the song is raw and authentic. We are suffocated by artificiality. Everything around us is fake. A guy in the woods pouring his heart over his guitar is real.

pic.twitter.com/aj0p1n8fh0

— The Honorable Matt Walsh (@MattWalshBlog) August 11, 2023

Over at The Federalist, Samuel Mangold-Lenett describes the song as "a haunting, bittersweet lamentation for an America that existed not too long ago but may never exist again" and one that "depicts a deep yearning to return to a version of America in which people were not plagued by existential economic and cultural woes every moment of every day."

The love fest is not an exclusively right-wing affair either. Sen. Chris Murphy (D–Conn.) sees within the lyrics a "path to realignment." Now that rural voters' hearts have been laid bare by the song, they can be won back over to progressive politics.

a. I think progressives should listen to this. In part, bc it's just a good tune.

b. But also bc it shows the path of realignment. Anthony sings about the soullessness of work, shit wages and the power of the elites.

All problems the left has better solutions to than the right. https://t.co/pQ64yFeBBd

— Chris Murphy ???? (@ChrisMurphyCT) August 14, 2023

Perhaps this reaction is what one might expect for a song with lyrics that are themselves a little "too online." Nevertheless, people need to get a grip.

Contra Walsh, the right-wing meme politics running through the lyrics is exactly why the song resonates with people. If the song were instead an authentic recounting of getting drunk or being unemployed, the track probably would have gotten about as much attention as Anthony's earlier releases.

Sad country songs speaking to poverty and social anomie didn't start with food stamps and "Epstein didn't kill himself" memes. Something tells me that the people who kept coal country folk songs like "Which Side Are You On?" alive had some economic and cultural anxieties as well. And the fact that Anthony has the musical equipment and technology necessary to sound good and reach a mass audience from his backyard suggests the times we live in aren't so lean after all.

And while it gives me no pleasure to burst the bubble on Murphy's working-class realignment, not every song sung by a sad guy with a guitar is a window into the soul of blue-collar America. The Epstein lyrics probably should have made that clear.

Still, just because Matt Walsh and Chris Murphy like the "Rich Men North of Richmond" doesn't mean you shouldn't. Like other pieces of right-wing musical media (think MAGA rap), it's catchy and fun. It's even more fun when you don't take it that seriously.

Rent Free is a weekly newsletter from Christian Britschgi on urbanism and the fight for less regulation, more housing, more property rights, and more freedom in America's cities.

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NEXT: Cops Invented a Reason To Cite Man Who Flipped Them Off

Christian Britschgi is a reporter at Reason.

MusicInternetJeffrey EpsteinTaxesWelfareWelfare ReformEntertainmentSocial Media
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  1. Diane Reynolds (Paul.)   2 years ago

    Goes Viral for Some Online Reasons

    If those reasons are "too online", can we blame Ron DeSantis, and if so, should we?

    1. Minadin   2 years ago

      The question isn't whether we should or not, the question is how much?

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    2. SQRLSY One   2 years ago

      Ron DeSatan is to be blamed for sunspots, genocide, bad breath, global warming, whale lice, peak oil, obesity, women with too-tiny titties, cancer, death, bad hair, diseases, stupidity, and shortages of Barbie dolls. I may have missed a few...

      1. Mother's Lament   2 years ago

        Sqrlsy's got it down. Good job, Sqrls.

        1. Anarco   2 years ago

          Yeah, we shouldn't take inflation or taxes too seriously. Wtf, "Reason"? Why are you discounting economic reality for many in America?

      2. Gozer the Gozarian   2 years ago

        You forgot racism. Jesus, how could you forget racism?

        White male = racist

        He's probably a card-carrying closet Nazi too.

        1. Medulla Oblongata   2 years ago

          Looks like a ginger, so no.

      3. palorec8   2 years ago

        ok

    3. JesseAz   2 years ago

      Too hard to just say it us a good soulful song. Been enjoying it quite a bit. His other two songs are good too.

      The fact he started writing and singing just 3 months ago is amazing.

    4. A Cynical Asshole   2 years ago

      You can always blame Ron DeSantis.

    5. Gaear Grimsrud   2 years ago

      We can blame DeSantis only when we can't blame Trump.

      1. mulched   2 years ago

        Both sides!

        1. Operator Six   2 years ago

          Oliver Anthony pounced! “What does this say about the ongoing culture war where you have the right wing anger making it to #1 on all of the charts” -something like this will be said by Matt or the other Reasonoids.

    6. Anarco   2 years ago

      The singer is bitching about working hard, getting paid little (because of inflation) and being taxes and you think that's funny? Wtf, "Reason"? Face economic reality much?

  2. Inquisitive Squirrel   2 years ago

    This situation is a perfect example of the modern fad of revering or vilifying someone immediately based on superficial poltical grounds.

    The instant something becomes political, the religious political adherents on the left and right instantly take their required tribal positions and let go the floodwaters of hyperbole, hysteria, and lecturing.

    1. JesseAz   2 years ago

      Or it is a good country song.

      The target rap song i agree. But this song is in a long tradition of this kind of song.

      1. Inquisitive Squirrel   2 years ago (edited)

        The song is a common type country/bluegrass/folk protest song. It’s really nothing special. The fact that we’re all talking about, though, is because of the ridiculous political reaction to it and the instant tribal positioning that everyone took with it.

        1. JesseAz   2 years ago

          Isn't that true if all first time artists from independent labels (no label in thus case)? It takes word of mouth instead of being pushed by a label. He has 3 songs. All are pretty good. I'm glad he get propped up cause he seems like a good artist.

          Other artists have popped up due to a single political song. It isnt the first time. People like Topher went from unknown to having multiple albums due to one song that resonated.

          1. Inquisitive Squirrel   2 years ago

            No, hardly any first time artists see this kind of reaction. We've become hyper polarized which has created the reaction in this case.

            1. JesseAz   2 years ago (edited)

              Take a look at recent download charts. This isn’t true.

              Over the last few years people you’ve never heard of will get into the top 10. Even Tim Pools band does.

              Youre living in the old radio type world. Where corporations tell you who is good.

              Sadly losing local radio to major corps industrialized music. Local DJs started many careers in the 50s from elvis to Buddy Holly.

              1. Inquisitive Squirrel   2 years ago (edited)

                Living in the old radio type world? What are you talking about?

                I’m talking about the response to this song. I haven’t seen anything about Tim Pool’s band in WaPo, CNN, National Review, Reason, etc. I haven’t seen Tim Pool’s concerts going from dive bar to thousands of people literally overnight.

                The fact you are even debating this with me is almost ridiculous. Sorry, but this has been a partisan drive. You might like the song and many might like the song, but it’s making waves because of partisanship, not because it’s a musical masterpiece.

                1. JesseAz   2 years ago

                  And yet his band has 3 top downloaded songs per the charts.

                  So people get famous by word of mouth. You just seem upset this guy in particular being pushed by "conservative" mouths.

                  How do you think a Tim Pool or the Target Rap song get into top 10 on the download charts if not people talking about it? Hint: just because you haven't heard about a song doesn't mean it isnt popular.

                  1. Inquisitive Squirrel   2 years ago

                    Now I'm upset that this guy is being pushed by conservatives? And now I have angst? Wow. I love how bad you are at having discussions.

                    No, political songs are not new. There are actually thousands of them made on a daily basis. And almost all of them didn't garner the type of attention this fun, silly anti-tax ballad is receiving. My point is not that protest songs don't exist, my point is that the reaction to this particular protest song is bordering on the ridiculous.

                    And ironically, your fighting me on this (for whatever reason) is pretty good evidence of that.

                2. JesseAz   2 years ago

                  Maybe in not understanding your argument. Political songs are not new. They even have lists.

                  https://www.radiox.co.uk/features/x-lists/best-protest-songs/

                  One hit wonders like safety dance or covers like put up a parking lot have existed and continue to be played a lot.

                  Not sure why so much angst from this single song.

                  1. The Margrave of Azilia   2 years ago

                    Don't forget "Jenny."

                    Today her number would be 555-5555.

              2. Fetterman's Hump   2 years ago

                Tim Pool has a band? I guess that explains the watch cap...

          2. mad.casual   2 years ago

            Other artists have popped up due to a single political song.

            Remember Lena Dunham rapping about pantsuits in support of HRC?

            I'll take 10,000 overreactions to the Anthony's of the world, TYVM.

            1. Inquisitive Squirrel   2 years ago

              Um, okay.

        2. Trollificus   2 years ago

          I hope you're not presenting as some kind of "country/bluegrass/folk/Americana/roots" musical expert.
          Because it actually is a really good song, melodically and lyrically and those aspects fit together far better than most.

          1. JesseAz   2 years ago

            Another example is Sturgis Simpson putting put records for years before writing a pro drug song about LSD and DMT. Got way bigger from that one song despite his music being excellent.

            1. Uilleam   2 years ago

              I'm sure you meant Sturgill Simpson. Long White Line is great.

              https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I5PpIH4HZ_k

              1. JesseAz   2 years ago (edited)

                All his music is great including his Nirvana cover.

                And yes. Auto correct got me. Didn’t check.

                His anime Netflix film of his record was great too.

          2. Inquisitive Squirrel   2 years ago

            It's an okay tune. I'm not saying it's bad. It's also not so special as to garner the kind of attention (especially from political outlets) that it's getting.

            1. JesseAz   2 years ago

              Is it wrong to talk about Sound of Freedom by the same metric?

              1. Inquisitive Squirrel   2 years ago

                Both the Sound of Freedom and Barbie fell strangely into the poltical world much the same way this song and that "Try that in a Small Town" song did.

                1. mad.casual   2 years ago

                  WTF are you talking about? Barbie had a $300M production and advertising budget and a 50+ yr. built-in target demographic. Neither of the other two had even remotely the same budget and nobody knew who the fuck either one of them were before the movie/song were made and released. Even setting all that aside, nobody said anything like The Barbie movie was upsetting elitist or whatever apple carts.

                  You're grasping at straws and making yourself look retarded doing it.

                  1. Inquisitive Squirrel   2 years ago

                    Whatever you need to tell yourself.

                    1. mad.casual   2 years ago

                      Says the guy spinning fiction out loud to himself in real time:

                      Inquisitive Squirrel 12 mins ago

                      ...And back on mute you go.
                      ...
                      Inquisitive Squirrel 11 mins ago

                      Whatever you need to tell yourself.

                2. JesseAz   2 years ago

                  Try That In A Small Town was popular for a couple of months without contention until the left attacked it and CMT yanked it.

                  1. Inquisitive Squirrel   2 years ago (edited)

                    And then it became a national conversation and ardent attachment occured because of that politicization. Thus, my point.

                    1. JesseAz   2 years ago

                      Except it was already doing well prior to the media latching onto it. Going against your point.

              2. mad.casual   2 years ago

                Republicans are pouncing again for liking another song after they were told not to like the last one. If the Republicans would stop pouncing on music that appeals to them, Democrats would stop having to pounce on scolding them for liking the wrong music. And if they did that, then Retarded Squirrel would stop being forced to pounce on lecturing us about how both sides, the side that likes music and the side that lectures them for liking music, are equally bad.

                1. Inquisitive Squirrel   2 years ago

                  Dude, Dems pounced on the Sound of Freedom. But moronic jackasses like you aren't concerned about facts and reality, nope. Tribalism is your thing. And back on mute you go.

                  1. mad.casual   2 years ago

                    Dems pounced on the Sound of Freedom.

                    I know this is hard to follow but stick with me here:
                    Dems pounced on the Sound of Freedom
                    Dems pounced on Rich Men North Of Richmond

                    facts and reality, nope

                    You do realize you started the thread with 100% pure speculation and opinion, right?

                    And back on mute you go.

                    Mute me all you like, I'm not the problem and it doesn't stop you from making yourself look utterly retarded.

                    1. rbike   2 years ago

                      You can be inquisitive AND retarded. Just sayin'.

                  2. Inquisitive Squirrel   2 years ago

                    Man, the level of discourse you people engage in is just sad.

                    1. JesseAz   2 years ago

                      Youre the one slightly changing your argument post after post without admitting to any of the counter examples being given to you. That isn't discourse.

                    2. Inquisitive Squirrel   2 years ago (edited)

                      Yet I’m not, that’s basically just your normal go-to charge. My initial comment was about the immediate hero worship and vilification that happens with people simply based on politics.

                      Literally no one engaged me with that. Rather it was invective about how I don’t understand music or that I was calling the song bad or that I'm apparently retarded.

                      This is the problem here. Everyone is so charged to attack that even the simplest premise is immediately twisted to fit desired narratives.

                      So, Oliver was immediately cast as a hero or villain depending on political affiliation. Then, he blew up with support because of the politics behind the situation. It’s just a fact.

                      Does that mean the song is bad? No. Does that mean the song is good? No. Does that mean people can’t like him legitimately? No.

                      What it means is politics drives so much the pop culture show, and this situation is very much within that vein. Why that obviousness has garnered the bizarre challenges that I have received? I don’t know. But it does supper my initial assertion tremendously.

                    3. mad.casual   2 years ago

                      I thought I was on mute?

                      It's a sad song about a sad subject, one would expect some sad discourse.

                      The dishonesty, however, that's all you.

            2. Uilleam   2 years ago

              We get it. Its not your kind of music. Personally, I'm a connoisseur of classic country western and bluegrass, and this is an excellent song, especially for such a young artist. Not sure why you are so adamant and dismissive at the same time. Is it possible that this is both a well written song and powerful lyrics?

              1. Inquisitive Squirrel   2 years ago

                I actually love bluegrass and folk music. And I think this is a good tune.

                I'm not sure why all of you are getting so bent out of shape about a simple observation. However, the fact you all are getting so bent out of shape over a relatively innocuous statement, kind of proves my statement.

                1. Uilleam   2 years ago (edited)

                  I’m okay man. You just seemed really excited about all of this. I think its a good song and the lyrics are apt for this time period. I just wanted to point out that it is a good song on its own merits.

                  1. Inquisitive Squirrel   2 years ago (edited)

                    Now I’m really excited about all of this? I love how you all casually throw charged terms into your statements: angst, excited, upset.

                    Yet, you all are having some serious issues with my pointing out a simple fact. I’m not the one who’s so touchy about this song.

                    The song is a good song and has some apt lyrics, but it’s not remotely worth the attention it’s getting. The attention is mostly political, not artistic.

              2. mad.casual   2 years ago

                He doesn't give a shit about the music. He's here to tell you that if one person likes a song and another person is offended by the other person liking the song, they're both equally guilty and that he's above all the divisive tribal politics.

            3. Sarah Palin's Buttplug 2   2 years ago

              It’s an okay tune. I’m not saying it’s bad.

              It's good for a conservative.

              Face it, conservatives aren't exactly a creative bunch. Lee Greenwood and Ted Nugent aren't much to brag about.

              1. Inquisitive Squirrel   2 years ago

                Except that Stranglehold is probably one of the best rock songs ever written.

                1. Sarah Palin's Buttplug 2   2 years ago

                  It's not even good. I just listened to it for the first time ever.

                  The first two minutes/vocals were immediately forgettable. Terrible.

                  The guitar work did get interesting. It sounded a lot like Robin Trower. In fact, it might have originally been his riff. But no one cares because Nugent is ignored.

                  1. Anomalous   2 years ago

                    Nugent may be a jackass at times, but you can't deny his guitar prowess. Every time I hear Stranglehold, I have to crank it to 11.

                  2. Red Rocks White Privilege   2 years ago

                    It’s not even good. I just listened to it for the first time ever.

                    LOL, no one actually believes this, you hicklib pederast.

        3. A Cynical Asshole   2 years ago

          The fact that we’re all talking about, though, is because of the ridiculous political reaction to it and the instant tribal positioning that everyone took with it.

          The funny thing is, with the exception of a few lines that are definitely "current year" (like the references to Epstein's island), the song would have sounded perfectly natural coming from Bob Dylan 50 or so years ago, and back then the left would have been the ones going apeshit over what a great song it is, even though it would have sounded like every other protest folk song.

          They only hate it because 1) they're the establishment now and 2) people they've been told to hate ("MAGA deplorables") love it.

          1. Inquisitive Squirrel   2 years ago

            Oh, it's a complete grade reversal where the right is now taking up protest songs and the left is now against them. That's a huge part of the current hysterical responses.

            1. JesseAz   2 years ago

              And nobody complained when the left was doing it. Weird.

              1. Inquisitive Squirrel   2 years ago

                You don't think people complained about leftist protest songs in the past?

                Believing that is weird.

            2. GabaGool   2 years ago

              Which "left" would that be? Liberals aren't left.

              This is late stage capitalism. It's the inevitable conclusion of private property. Capitalism is a competition. Fewer winners, more losers. Wealth concentrates. An ever shrinking minority has disproportionate political power by way of ownership and uses it to tilt the board further in their favor.

              The "free market" ceases to exist once it no longer benefits them. That is why "limited government" beyond tax cuts/less regulation on them, which would only exacerbate the problems he's singing about, is a fantasy. It's their interests that materialize the war machine to expand into other countries, the trade agreements that ship jobs overseas/lower wages at home by forcing the working class to compete with the poorer countries' working class, and the police state that clubs the losers to keep them in line.

              Which is exactly why the long tradition of these songs has been left wing. It was started by communists and anarchists.

              Boy wrote an anti-capitalist banger. He just doesn't realize it.

              1. Zeb   2 years ago

                It's more the quasi-fascist corruption of capitalism. Which is pretty much where the left is at these days. I don't think the causality is as clear as you make it out to be.

                1. Old Engineer   2 years ago

                  The essence of the free market is the freedom part. It's the freedom to live by your brains which requires the rights to private property. All economic interventionists, from welfare statists to socialists and fascists, despise freedom and seek to eliminate it by eliminating private property. Anyone not under their thumb is a threat.

                  Interventionists cannot create so they steal whatever is useful, be it property or ideas. Stealing this song and proclaiming it to be anti-capitalist is just another instance of confiscation.

                  1. GabaGool   2 years ago

                    There is no freedom for someone who is born without property. They are forced to go hat in hand to someone who has property (often inherited, which causes a systemic issue) and sell them their labor at a fraction of what it produces. That person has the authority to tell them what to produce, how to produce, what they can wear, what they can say, when they can go to the bathroom, when they can eat, they can surveil them, track them with GPS. That's a level of authority that *pick your villainous dictator* ever dreamed of. The fact that you can choose between who has this authority over you is not "freedom" or "choice". A company is a private tyranny.

                    fascism doesn't eliminate private property. If the US government passed a law tomorrow making it super easy to get a warrant to seize property, that wouldn't negate the existence of private ownership.

                    Under fascism, this what would happen to Elon Musk. The government would go to him and say "instead of making electric cars, we want you making missiles. Here's X more DOD contracts." And he would become even richer.

                    Sure, if he said "no", they would take it. But he wouldn't. They never do. Because it's in their material interests. They become even richer from it.

                    1. Beezard   2 years ago

                      From The “I didn’t ask to be born” school of political analysis.

              2. Overt   2 years ago

                " Capitalism is a competition. Fewer winners, more losers."

                This is idiotic.

                I spend my money to buy a computer that I use to make you a website. Instead of spending time trying to learn how to build websites, you pay me to do it. Now I have won, by being paid to do what I do well. You have won by freeing your time up to work on what you do well. We have both won.

                1. Old Engineer   2 years ago

                  "We have both won". That's the problem, you won. Even if your trading partner won too, it doesn't matter because you won. The inevitable result of state control is the production of losers and the more losers there are, the more support for the state.

                  Unless you are completely stripped of agency, you are a threat, not merely because you might "win" but because others might see that and realize that they are enslaved. Your failure is necessary.

      2. GabaGool   2 years ago

        you mean like coal miners collectivizing and forcing their bosses to stop exploiting them as much?

        Boy wrote an anti-capitalist anthem, whether he realizes it or not.

        1. Overt   2 years ago

          Right, because those rich men north of Richmond are all businessmen, right?

  3. Nardz   2 years ago

    Well that's a semi-creative way to do your duty as leftists in hating on the song and it's popularity.

    1. Mother's Lament   2 years ago

      Like I said in the other thread, there's nothing in the lyrics or sentiment to distinguish it from a Guthrie or Dylan song. The reason they hate it now is because they're now the establishment man.

      1. Inquisitive Squirrel   2 years ago

        It has been interesting watching the left get upset at the song. Heck, I've seen a lot of commenters on the left mocking the guy and the people he's trying to represent with his song.

        It's been a fascinating thing to watch a political party go from the champion of the little man, fighting against and mocking rich elites, to the party that now embraces rich elites and openly mocks those who are not.

      2. Sarah Palin's Buttplug 2   2 years ago

        There was a big, high wall there that tried to stop me
        A sign was painted said "Private Property"
        But on the backside, it didn't say nothing
        This land was made for you and me

        Woodrow Wilson Guthrie

        You probably won't find country lyrics today that scornfully depict private property like Guthrie sang in his day.

        1. Mother's Lament   2 years ago

          By all your own definitions, Pluggo, you're a far-right conservative extremist.

          1. Sarah Palin's Buttplug 2   2 years ago

            Progs call me a "right winger" all the time.

            I defend Ayn Rand and greedy capitalists. That does it right there.

            1. sarcasmic   2 years ago (edited)

              People on the left think libertarians are hard-right for our support for economic liberty.

              People on the right think libertarians are hard-left for our support for personal liberty.

              So libertarians are simultaneously hard-right and hard-left. Depends on which tribe you ask.

              One thing the two tribes have in common is hostility to liberty.

              1. Mother's Lament   2 years ago

                That may be true of libertarians, but neither of you are libertarian.

                1. Chuck P. (The Artist formerly known as CTSP)   2 years ago

                  He and jeffy are also clueless to the notion that you can have liberty and still have community standards of behavior. If you want brothels and gambling, head to Nevada. If you want an abortion, head West or NE.

                  Surprise! Exercising freedom might require you to get off your ass.

        2. ChairmanOfTheBored   2 years ago

          You don't even have to go that far back. In 1990, TESLA sang:

          And the sign says "long hair freaky people need not apply"

          Today it would be: "Straight cis-gender white men need not apply"

          1. InsaneTrollLogic   2 years ago (edited)

            That line goes further back, to 1971 and the Five Man Electrical Band. Tesla did a cover of their song “Signs”.

            https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Signs_(Five_Man_Electrical_Band_song)

            1. TheReEncogitationer   2 years ago

              Both versions are anti-private property rights, not to mention anti-freedom of expression. Fuck 'em both.

      3. TheReEncogitationer   2 years ago

        Are you aware that Woody Guthrie was a Stalinist Commie sympathizer who sang praises to the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact (a.k.a. The Non-Aggression Pact) between Joseph Stalin and Adolf Hitler?

        Are you aware that his song "This Land Is Your Land" has a little-sung verse that is blatantly anti-private property rights?

        Woodie Guthrie--Wikipedia
        https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Woody_Guthrie

        This here Howling Atheist can't stand him and wouldn't use Woody Guthrie as a measuring stick for anything except how high they stack shit.

        Surely you do what believers do and occasionally turn on your emergency faculty of "discernment."
        🙂
        😉

  4. Nardz   2 years ago

    https://twitter.com/Cernovich/status/1691118848882376704?t=nA1dTA9JcRgkSrClSGZntQ&s=19

    Hawaii Senator Brian Schatz can’t even hide his smirk as Maui burned. He’s seeing dollar signs for huge Democrat donors (Oprah, Zuckerberg, other billionaires) who will scoop up the land and steal it from native born Hawaiians.

    Maui is being looted by billionaires. The fire (don’t ask who started it) will lead to one of the largest land grabs in history.

    [Videos]

    1. Homer Thompson   2 years ago

      jewish space lasers to blame?

      https://twitter.com/MattWallace888/status/1690698277576921088

    2. Minadin   2 years ago

      I believe that Oprah already owns several square miles of Maui, or about 0.5% of the entire island.

      1. InsaneTrollLogic   2 years ago

        https://www.hawaiinewsnow.com/2023/03/04/oprah-expands-her-upcountry-maui-property-by-870-acres-over-6m/

        Maui Now reports Winfrey has recently purchased 870 acres of land in Kula for just over $6.6 million, adding to hundreds of acres of real estate she already owns in Kula and Hana.

        Her early purchases include 1,000 acres of Haleakala Ranch land, which included an 11-room bed-and-breakfast on 17 acres in Kula, in 2004, according to The Maui News.

        She also bought more than 200 acres of coastal land in Hana between 2002 and 2005.

        https://www.msn.com/en-us/travel/news/map-shows-oprahs-maui-properties-as-hawaii-wildfire-spreads/ar-AA1f75sQ

        Winfrey, who's been living in Hawaii part-time for more than 15 years, owns more than 2,000 acres of land on the island. Her farm, located on the side of Haleakalā, a dormant volcano, sits at about 4,000 feet elevation, about halfway to the highest point on the island.

        1. M L   2 years ago

          That seems pretty cheap for 870 acres on Maui.

          And then 200 acres of coastal? Don't know what she paid for that, but I would have guessed a half acre lot on the ocean would be at least a million.

        2. markm23   2 years ago

          Land and ocean frontage is very expensive on Oahu near Honolulu, because that's where most of the people live or want to live. But Maui is where few people want to live. It's an island larger than Oahu, with a population of only about 164,000, most of whom are farmers. The largest towns are under 30,000. This is great for tourists wanting a vacation without crowds, but when you want want to shop or go for night out in a city, you have to take an airplane or boat to Honolulu.

          I have no idea what Maui land prices are, but I very much doubt that anyone pays a million for a half acre on the ocean.

    3. GabaGool   2 years ago

      No, people on the left think you're stupid because you're idealist philosophy is a fantasy completely divorced from material reality. You get called far right because that is where it leads.

      This is late stage capitalism. It is the inevitable conclusion of private property. An ever shrinking minority has disproportionate political power and use it to tilt the board further in their favor.

      Knock them down a peg or two, break up monopolies, a generation later the same problem.

      1. Medulla Oblongata   2 years ago

        Striking a blow against income inequality, Bidenomics is helping!

        America Lost a Whole Lot of Millionaires Last Year

        For the first time since 2008, global wealth declined, with Americans hit hardest as stocks and bonds fell in value, according to a report from UBS and Credit Suisse economists. The result: About 1.7 million U.S. adults are no longer millionaires.

  5. InsaneTrollLogic   2 years ago

    Blah, blah, blah... IOW, Christian completely misses the fact that it is a protest song. I think I'll go through some of this.

    Anti-elitism is not the most novel sentiment for a folky country song.

    Well, when you consider that the "elites" are in charge typically, and when you're creating a song counter to the "elites", of course it'll be anti-elitist, Christian. Go back to the 1930s, the 1960s, etc., and anti-elitism is a common theme.

    But the song's not meant to be a white paper. If you don't take it too seriously, you can have a fun and light-hearted time jamming out to the surprise viral hit.

    Nor was the protest song "I Can't Drive 55" by Sammy Hagar, but it was a protest song nonetheless (against the NMSL in that case). Maybe because it doesn't take itself too seriously, that's why it's popular.

    The love fest is not an exclusively right-wing affair either. Sen. Chris Murphy (D–Conn.) sees within the lyrics a "path to realignment." Now that rural voters' hearts have been laid bare by the song, they can be won back over to progressive politics.

    Chris Murphy demonstrates the tone-deafness of the elite and the establishment here that the song mocks rather well.

    1. Stuck in California   2 years ago

      While we're at it:

      Regrettably, people have begun to take the song much too seriously indeed. Rolling Stone notes that the song has been a hit with much of the online right, which has treated the song as this generation's ballad for the forgotten man.

      Is this dude REALLY listening to Rolling Stone about what the "right" thinks? About anything? More likely someone there got their jimmies rustled and want to associate it with "alt right" or "white nationalist" or whatever the fuck bogey man they are equating with non-progressive evil these days.

      This writer both pretends we're taking it too seriously and then takes it too seriously himself.

      1. InsaneTrollLogic   2 years ago

        Never looked too closely at Christian before.

        https://reason.com/people/christian-britschgi/

        Christian graduated from Portland State University with a degree in political science in 2016. He worked briefly in public relations before moving into journalism by way of an internship at Reason's D.C. office.

        So, college in Portland, Oregon, and then to the heart of the beast in DC. Not really a man who seems to have been around typical people or even conservative to moderate ones at that.

        1. Stuck in California   2 years ago

          Yeah, well, that's typical of the "libertarians" writing for Teen Reason these days.

        2. ThomasD   2 years ago (edited)

          But he knows the danger when the “wrong” sorts of people are creating the culture.

          Good little Marxist that he is.

      2. Trollificus   2 years ago

        He really exhibits a universal trait of the least coast elites in media:
        THEY assign the labels and THEY tell their audience what those labelled flyover country losers are saying.

        Note that they never actually talk to the people they're talking *about*, never actually engage with the content of what they say, or feel or believe. Then they're astonished at the low trust levels for media and the ever-expanding support for Trump.

        1. Diane Reynolds (Paul.)   2 years ago

          But if we're not told what someone is, then we might come to our own conclusions. Like reading info about COVID. Don't do it. Let the experts handle the expertise.

          1. Nardz   2 years ago

            https://twitter.com/jasonjamesbnn/status/1691097919150247937?t=WQR3xuSwyK3EHG2b9t-eEg&s=19

            I actually read The Great Reset.

            Aside from it being so painfully dry and horribly written it took me 3 months to read it when I would normally read a book that length in an afternoon, it lays out exactly what their plan is. Here's it is in a nutshell:

            The WEF want to bring in a global government with sprawling technological tracking and surveillance systems, and their plan is to do it through the UN and WHO.

            They call this new system "stakeholder capitalism", which is really just a redressed term for fascism. They literally tell us stakeholder capitalism is a merger of corporations and government, which is fascism by definition.

            They're doing this through a grading system called ESG, which they're forcing all companies to comply with via firms like Vanguard and BlackRock. Through ESG companies will either be granted or denied funding depending on their score. Vanguard and BlackRock control the money and can therefore dictate which companies thrive and which die off.

            It's not a conspiracy. They told us themselves. It just so happens we're not as stupid as they think we are so they have to gaslight us in order to make us believe we're crazy.

            [Link]

            1. Red Rocks White Privilege   2 years ago

              Or, in chemtard's case, pretend it doesn't matter.

    2. JesseAz   2 years ago

      As Obama said. Bibles and guns.

      1. Sarah Palin's Buttplug 2   2 years ago

        Yeah.

        Not as eloquent as "opiate of the masses".

  6. Mother's Lament   2 years ago

    "just because Matt Walsh and Chris Murphy like the "Rich Men North of Richmond" doesn't mean you shouldn't."

    This tells you exactly who the Reasonistas are writing for. Urban elites who think that this song is a shot at them (it is).

    1. ThomasD   2 years ago

      No, this song is shooting past them towards the real targets. Urban "elites" arent important, they just think they are.

  7. Brophy   2 years ago

    Oliver is right, the government shouldn't buy junk food for fat people. In fact, they shouldn't buy food, junk food or nutritious food, for anyone, and it would be less evil if they only bought food for emaciated people in danger of starving.

  8. JeremyR   2 years ago

    It's pretty depressing working at Walmart and seeing people buy with EBT what you couldn't afford on your salary.

  9. Gozer the Gozarian   2 years ago

    This guy needs to partner with Remy and bang out some more tunes. Could be the biggest duo since Simon and Garfunkel, Wham, and of course Millie Vanilli.

    Great talents in times of need are required to join forces against the evils of the world!

    1. Gaear Grimsrud   2 years ago

      Millie Vanilli. I bought their greatest hits album. 2 hours of silence.

      1. Its_Not_Inevitable   2 years ago

        You couldn't see, but they were mouthing the words.

  10. JesseAz   2 years ago

    Sarc should listen to his other song I've Got To Get Sober.

    1. InsaneTrollLogic   2 years ago

      LOL! As if he would. He's probably holed up inside a bottle of Boone's Farm at this point.

      1. Anarco   2 years ago

        The singer is bitching about working hard, getting paid little (because of inflation) and being taxes and you think that's funny? Wtf, "Reason"? Face economic reality much?

  11. Diane Reynolds (Paul.)   2 years ago (edited)

    As long as Reason makes sure to distance itself from “right wing working class yobbos”, all is well in the world.

    1. Trollificus   2 years ago

      I know, right? The whiff of Beltway/easturban/Ivy elite scumbaggery coming of this is hard to miss.

      1. Diane Reynolds (Paul.)   2 years ago

        Hard to miss? It ran over us like a runaway train.

    2. Kungpowderfinger   2 years ago

      And while it gives me no pleasure to burst the bubble on Murphy's working-class realignment, not every song sung by a sad guy with a guitar is a window into the soul of blue-collar America. The Epstein lyrics probably should have made that clear.

      Does Reason think blue collar America buys the official narrative on what happened to Epstein?

  12. Trollificus   2 years ago

    You know what else is best enjoyed by taking it lightly, and not considering it of much consequence? Christian Britschgi.

    1. ThomasD   2 years ago (edited)

      More like a weathervane for what they truly fear.

      And the rapid response to something "best taken lightly and of not much consequence" speaks volumes.

  13. Sarah Palin's Buttplug 2   2 years ago

    "a haunting, bittersweet lamentation for an America that existed not too long ago but may never exist again"

    So the song is MAGA? Are there lyrics about the Boogaloo and Tiki Torches?

    I may have to listen to this song after the Mahler I am listening to at the moment.

    1. chemjeff radical individualist   2 years ago

      This is just virtue signalling for the Maga right, so they can pretend like they're oppressed.

      1. JesseAz   2 years ago (edited)

        700 people being held in a D.C. jail despite not committing any violence isnt happening screams SRG.

      2. Mother's Lament   2 years ago

        No need to pretend while you and your ilk run things, Jeffy.

      3. InsaneTrollLogic   2 years ago

        Look at this, Shrike responding to Shrike.

  14. Get To Da Chippah   2 years ago

    Taxes ought not to pay for anyone's fudge rounds.

  15. Honest Economics   2 years ago

    This artist does not need to have a deep knowledge of economic and political theory to give voice to real pain and angst that is occurring because of poor economic policies that have squeezed the middle and have seen them treading water since the turn of this century.

    https://honesteconomics.substack.com/

  16. Fats of Fury   2 years ago (edited)

    First they ignore you. Then they mock you. Then they attack you. Then they build monuments to you.

    This guy is at number 2 but I suspect he never gets to 4.

    1. JesseAz   2 years ago

      So much quicker to have black skin and OD resisting arrest if monuments are what you're after.

    2. Kungpowderfinger   2 years ago

      Someone once said that if you tell a lie about someone, they may come after you, but tell the truth? Look the fuck out.

      No wonder the elites and their wanna-be friends in the media hate this guy.

      It’s a great song, the guy’s an awesome vocalist, and most importantly, the song has an undeniable authenticity.

      Truth hurts, bitches.

  17. Bill Falcon   2 years ago

    Why does Reason seem to only employee lefties who live in DC or NYC or LA and claim to be libertarian? The Fed can print trillions out of thin air destroying our savings and our industrial base (while enriching the "banker class" and MIC) and not a peep from Reason. But gosh sakes...a local community decides they don't want public housing..OMG...a hill to die on right? A parent who disagrees with govt taking their mentally ill kid away to sterilize them (so called trans kids) and not a peep. This is a good song...the problem is DC...end the Fed and it would be like a hard kick to the door of a dilapidated house.

  18. Rev. Arthur L. Kirkland   2 years ago

    Disaffected, drawling, economically inadequate, half-educated, intolerant, obsolete culture war casualties have rights, too . . . but they don't seem to be able to produce any good entertainments.

    1. Diarrheality   2 years ago

      Luckily, we have the repetitive gibberish you faithfully ejaculate to keep us entertained, Reverend. Hell, just the thought of a bigoted clown like you trying to navigate an Obama Phone while poisoning himself with homemade fruit wine is hysterical.

      1. Quo Usque Tandem   2 years ago

        The Rev…ejaculating.

        You seriously put those two in one phrase.

        Can’t even.

      2. Sarah Palin's Buttplug 2   2 years ago

        Obama Phone

        If you were old enough you would remember the Reagan phone. Yes, the free phone bullshit started with St Ronnie.

        1. Diarrheality   2 years ago

          Of course I remember the Lifeline program...

          ...but Reagan phone doesn't have the same ring to it.

  19. Spiritus Mundi   2 years ago

    Rich men north of Richmond have the best cocktail parties.

  20. Gaear Grimsrud   2 years ago

    Stossel interviews Judith Curry
    https://www.lifesitenews.com/news/renowned-climate-scientist-blasts-anti-capitalist-climate-agenda-manufactured-consensus/

  21. ElvisIsReal   2 years ago

    Why does this article exist?

    1. Sarah Palin's Buttplug 2   2 years ago

      Are you kidding? Culture war is more than just Trannie Dancing arguments.

      1. ElvisIsReal   2 years ago

        And what is the article contributing toward solving this?

    2. ThomasD   2 years ago

      Copium, pure copium.

  22. Sarah Palin's Buttplug 2   2 years ago

    DONNIE DOWN! #4.

    Fox News is having conniption fits. Some bitch is calling the indictment "election interference". Unbelievable. Crime is okay if you're an elite politician master-of-the-universe.

    But I am drinking another White Russian for Donnie tonight.

    1. ElvisIsReal   2 years ago

      The fact they uploaded the indictments to the server like 9 hours ago gave the game away far too early. But I thought it was hilarious watching the left pretend like this wasn't a show trial..........

    2. Mother's Lament   2 years ago

      I imagine there was a Russian Buttplug celebrating when opposition leader Alexei Navalny was arrested, by drinking a Georgia Peach.

  23. ThomasD   2 years ago

    Remember folks Britches is a "libertarian" who values the autonomy of the individual.

    Howecer, respect apparently is lacking.

  24. I, Woodchipper   2 years ago

    If you don't take it too seriously,

    Elitists got to elite.

  25. I, Woodchipper   2 years ago

    Sure, one might quibble with the idea that food stamps are primarily responsible for driving up taxes and inflation

    whooosh. right over your head. That was in fact NOT the point of the line.

  26. Vesicant   2 years ago

    So, the peasants are revolting and should stick to libertarian-approved country western (the mind boggles as to what exactly THAT would be)? Is that your point? Or did the ghost of Lester Bangs descend and anoint you music critic?

    1. JeremyR   2 years ago

      I think the Dixie Chicks (or their rebrand) are Reason's approved "libertarian" country music, along with Garth Brooks because he called out Bud Light drinkers for not supporting pretend women

      1. InsaneTrollLogic   2 years ago

        Ever since they managed to piss off their audience back in the Bush days, I've thought of them more as the Ditzy Chicks.

  27. Stuck in California   2 years ago

    And the fact that Anthony has the musical equipment and technology necessary to sound good and reach a mass audience from his backyard suggests the times we live in aren't so lean after all.

    You know, I was thinking about this. THis and the barbie thing, and some other recent articles.

    Is it me, or are a lot more of this assholes sitting here trying to tell me I'm all wrong about what I see with my own lying eyes? Like, so what if it costs you three times what it used to to cook yourself a meal at home, this is the best economy, ever! So what if you can' afford gas, your electric bill has tripled, and housing is so expensive you'll never be able to buy, times are good because you can record music in your living room!

    I'm going to look for this. It has to be gaslighting to promote the "Biden economy is great" narrative. And it's right up there with "Republicans not letting us spend a trillion dollars is the cause of inflation" crap they shat out last month on the issue.

    1. JeremyR   2 years ago

      That the equipment exists is basically a combination of cheap and dubiously ethical Chinese labor and completely unethical mining in Africa (often by children).

      So I guess there is a point, Americans aren't the ones working in horrible conditions or ridiculously long hours for incredibly low pay to provide modern gadgets

      1. Stuck in California   2 years ago

        This rather simplistic take pretty much misses the entire point I was making.
        Purposeful non-sequitur? Or do you just not get the point that I'm talking about the media pissing on our heads then telling us it's raining?

  28. Nardz   2 years ago

    https://twitter.com/docMJP/status/1691291999620792321?t=MCT1pUXsxnjTsV5XmcPQaw&s=19

    We are crossing a new Rubicon a day. Unconscionable. What you think about Trump doesn’t matter. What’s happening now has little to do with him. RICO used in this way is simply a means to criminalize political dissent and opposition. All responsible Americans need to wake up.

    [Link]

  29. 6ac2e40   2 years ago

    Recall that 5 of the 10 wealthiest counties in the USA are within commuting distance of DC, 8 of the top 20, which is pretty close to all of the counties within commuting distance. They don’t actually produce anything there. It’s all coercive transfers if our paychecks to there, and the lobbying to get a piece of our psychecks,

  30. Fist of Etiquette   2 years ago

    Rolling Stone notes...

    Rolling Stone writing about music? Now I've heard everything.

    1. 2wheelexplorer   2 years ago

      Right? It doesn't seem to happen much anymore...I accidentally picked up a Rolling Stone mag a while back and thought I'd somehow found the print version of MSNBC or something

  31. Fist of Etiquette   2 years ago

    Conservative personality Matt Walsh...

    You become Reason's editor-at-large and suddenly you turn into a conservative.

    1. MasterThief   2 years ago

      I mix up Matt Walsh and Matt Welch all the time. One is a smarmy asshole and the other is a bit of a dry and blunt asshole. That said, I like Walsh from time to time and appreciate some of the work he does but can't stand a moment of Welch. The moment I hear his voiceon Reason Roundtable I instantly want to turn it off

  32. MasterThief   2 years ago

    Are Reason writers aware of how their language clearly communicates their partisanship? So they care? Conservatives and Republicans are always labeled. They are labeled as extreme. There is always a tone that such people are the bad others. When discussing Republicans, a hostile left-wing personality or outlet is used rather than directly citing the individuals.
    Contrast that with discussion of the left. I don't know that I've seen Reason use the "far left" designation. In criticisms of the left their party affiliation is often dropped and kid gloves used in a way that shows the author mostly agrees with them.

    Back to the main point... this article does nothing more than say that Christian hates anything Conservatives like gaining traction. I'm no fan of country music and found this song simplistic, repetitive, and less than inspired lyrically. Despite that, the few points it hits line up with things I think and feel as a conservative/libertarian. You would think a libertarian establishment would at least credit that much. Just because I don't like the song doesn't mean I have any desire to shit on it and the people who enjoy it. Christian's motivation to just shit on the people he hates for liking something is clear. It also shows he has no interest in pushing libertarian ideas unless they are in the form of libertine vices.

    1. ThomasD   2 years ago

      Anti tax, anti big government, anti welfare.

      "Silly"

  33. BraydenBoxall   2 years ago (edited)

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  34. Jerry B.   2 years ago

    "Rich Men North of Richmond" is actually sort of ambiguous.

    It could be the Pols in D.C., or it could just as well mean the rich Democrats in Northern Virginia, who often control state government, and spend most of the money on projects that benefit them, and not the rural South and West of the state.

    1. mad.casual   2 years ago (edited)

      I see no reason to exclude billionaire presidential candidates from New York ‘who could’ve given everyone in America $1M dollars for the cost of their failed campaign’ or the multi-millionaire talking heads from New York who breathlessly repeated the same, obviously false, claim.

  35. Alan Vanneman   2 years ago

    If you think "if you're 5-foot-3 and you're 300 pounds, taxes ought not to pay for your bags of fudge rounds" is "genuinely funny", you must spend a great deal of time laughing.

  36. DaveM   2 years ago

    This review is as tone deaf as it's possible to be. Christian, dude, sorry, but you have no soul if after listening to this song your first thought is, "Geez, why don't people just have some fun with this thing?"

  37. Anomalous   2 years ago

    Of course this song is going to resonate. Just look at the guitar he's using.

    1. 2wheelexplorer   2 years ago (edited)

      Nice one 🙂

  38. Geezer   2 years ago

    That ain't no "guitar"; it's a Dobro:
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dobro

    1. ThomasD   2 years ago

      Next youll be telling us Ricoh makes Xeroxes.

    2. Anomalous   2 years ago

      The headstock says Gretsch. It's a resonator guitar.

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Resonator_guitar

  39. MWAocdoc   2 years ago

    "Which Side Are You On?"

    Sorry but I doubt that you posted this story so we would stop taking it too seriously. If you hadn't posted it on Reason today I probably would never have even heard of it or listened to it. I think the singer meant it seriously and it should be taken seriously. The problem, of course, is that lots of partisan people insist that everything implies a taking of sides. You can be against organized coal miners AND against coal mine owners AND against the rich men north of Richmond and still be in favor of safe working conditions and productive free enterprise and reasonable government with limitations.

  40. Zipcreature   2 years ago

    “Rich Men North of Richmond” should have been “College educated Karen’s” given Progressivism is driven primarily by upper-educated WHITE FEMALES.

  41. Brian   2 years ago

    He’s adorable.

  42. STMitchell   2 years ago

    Reason has offices in DC, correct? That's a little north of Richmond. Hitting too close to home?

  43. Widhalm19   2 years ago

    How bizarre. Liberals / Progressives used to support the working class and their struggles against the monied Establishment but now the corporatized, lobotomized political Left HATES the working class yet fetishizes man-hating Feminists, angry Blacks, outrageous Homosexuals and mentally-ill Trannies.

  44. tlapp   2 years ago

    A song about inflation and taxation harming working people. What a dumb article. He tapped into things being felt by many. That is what the song it about.

  45. Fkthepostoffice   2 years ago

    "And the fact that Anthony has the musical equipment and technology necessary to sound good and reach a mass audience from his backyard suggests the times we live in aren't so lean after all."

    The fact that microphones, quality audio software and the internet predate the skyrocketing inflation of the last 3 years is not a quality refutation of the song's message.

    The libertarian take should be that inflation, taxation and government welfare are harmful to the economy, and that we'd be better off without those things. It should not be that minor free-market successes are a sufficient reason to ignore major and worsening government-caused problems.

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