Tuesday, August 28, 2007

Union Song


For the fired auto workers

Who were twisted, tricked and robbed



And she can't feed her family

On the pennies that she makes

Meanwhile the crime rate's rising

Up and down the Great Lake states

Like vegetables left in the field


On the contracts and the deeds

That push the race down to the bottom


As they fire another round


Dig in man, hold your ground


Who fought in their own time

For our brothers and our sisters

Up and down that picket line

For the unnamed and unnumbered

Who struggle brave and long

For the union men and women

Standing up and standing strong

Si nos quedemos

Juntos vamos a ganar? Si !

Hit em where it hurts

And bite the hand that feeds



But I know where I'm gonna be

I'm gonna be right on that front line

Now dirty scabs will cross the line

While others stand aside and look

But ain't nobody never got nothin'

That didn't raise their voice and push





From the sweatshops of L.A.

To the fields of Mission Flats

There's a thunder cloud exploding

Monday, August 20, 2007

They Don't Gotta Burn tha Books They Just Remove 'Em


When Pearl Jam played the Nightwatchman's home city of Chicago recently their fans who could not attend the final evening of the Lollapalooza festival experienced something very interesting during the AT&T webcast. Instead of hearing lead singer Eddie Vedder sing "George Bush leave this world alone" they heard silence. They experienced good old fashioned, almost Orwellian, censorship. But the corporation quickly learned that they'd messed with the wrong band. As more reports and supportive editorials sprang up; Pearl Jam themselves spoke up on their website and AT&T first called it an error and then later admitted it wasn't the first time it had happened...

Learn about net neutrality and then fight for it...

Elvis Was A Hero to Most....


As the thirteeth anniversary of Elvis's death arrived the media and the world celebrated the man's life with precious little criticism of any sort. Of course, there are some voices of dissent out there, like Helen Kolawole's 2002 piece from the Guardian which states in no uncertain terms:

Media arrogance and dishonesty means we are eternally bound to live in a skewed world where Elvis is king of rock'n'roll, Clapton is the guitar god, Sinatra is the voice and Astaire is the greatest dancer. Accustomed as we are to this parade of white heroes, the case of Elvis is particularly infuriating because for many black people he represents the most successful white appropriation of a black genre to date.

Sunday, August 12, 2007

Found a Noose in My Garage...

Stanley Fish discusses (subscription required) the new Caveman show and it's racial metaphor, interestingly raising this issue vis a vis Walter Benn Michaels and his ”The Trouble With Diversity: How We Learned to Love Identity and Ignore Inequality”:

Michaels argues that if we think “racism is the problem we need to solve,” all we have to do to solve it is “give up our prejudices.” But if we think our problem is that too many people are poor, hungry, homeless and uneducated, solving that problem “might require us to give up our money.”

Read it yourself and decide....