Friday, January 15, 2016

Oh Yes, There Are Trumpf Fans Even In Certain Parts Of California-- Hagar Country

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Indio, a small city of 85,000 in Riverside County's Coachella Valley, is 127 miles from L.A. and 98 miles from Mexicali. Somewhat over two-thirds of the population is Hispanic. Riverside County, along with San Bernardino County, part of the "Inland Empire," is a big meth-manufacturing and distribution center. We can smell it when you drive around some towns. I saw a lot of people missing a lot of teeth last time I was out there.

A friend of mine has a home in Palm Desert and she was out there a couple months ago and, for a hoot, went to see Sammy Hagar-- the Red Rocker-- when he played at the Fantasy Springs Resort Casino in Indio. Sold out crowd. George Lopez was the emcee and at one point he went down the road towards some Trump humor and tried to get the crowd into some anti-Trump give-and-take. Probably a big mistake at a Sammy Hagar concert anywhere. But my friend was shocked at the response at this one. The audience started booing Lopez and boo-ed until he got off the stage. They drove him off the stage. She told me the average age of the concert-goers was 50-something. Not kids in their 20's-- guys in their 50s!

Sammy's a Republican-- from Fontana originally-- who moved to Marin County, which is where he and I became friends. Fun guy. But a Republican. Recently Andy Greene did a piece on him in Rolling Stone, and asked him if he had any thoughts on Trump.
Oh, boy, that's the touchiest thing I've ever seen in my life because I like the fact that he's shaken up the political world, which needed to be shaken up. Everyone has been so dishonest. The politically correct thing is about to drive me out of this country. You can't do anything or someone's going to sue you. You can't say anything or an organization comes down and blackballs you. You can't talk about any race on the planet and call them by any name that's even close to sounding like you're a racist, even if you're not. You just get dogged and blackballed.

I love the fact that Trump is saying, "Fuck all you people" and just beating them up and talking shit and busting their balls. I like that part of it. But I'm not sure that's the man I want as my next president. But maybe we need somebody that radical.

Do you see a scenario where you'd vote for him over Hillary Clinton?

Oh, fuck, that's a tough one. I've got nothing against Hillary, to be honest with you. And what they're crucifying her for is just total bullshit. It's just like everything else. I mean, come on. She erased some emails or something. I know it's not good for security and all that, but I'm not a political kind of guy. So I'm going, "Hey, you all think the president of the United States-- Obama or Reagan or anybody-- never fucked up?" They all fucked up! Clinton, look what he did in there! They're human beings.

I just wish Trump wouldn't be so tough on Mexicans or the rest of the Hispanic population. From my judgement of living in Mexico and having businesses down there, they are family- and God-loving people. There's bad seeds in every single race on this planet, but the Hispanic population comes to this country because they want to work. They want to better their lives and feed their children.

And Trump says they're rapists.

That is insanity. That I have a real hard time with because I know different. But I'm sure there are people who have done everything. But if you want to take each race, and someone needs to do a survey and say, "How many did this? How many did this? How many did this?" I doubt if you'd find the Hispanics are the guilty ones on this planet or in this country. Every Hispanic I know that works for me, both in Mexico and in America, are my favorite employees, the hardest-working guys, the hardest-working ladies. They are just good people, and they carry their babies on their shoulder and go to work. They're just good people; they're not abandoning their kids and shit. That bothers me. If Trump would leave Hispanics alone, he could probably be president of the United States.

How can you tell who's a meth freak and who's a Trumpf fan?

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Thursday, March 15, 2012

And Another Deranged Republican Jihad-- They're Also Against The Youth Vote

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I was still a kid when Creem sent me to London to go on tour and hang out for a few weeks with The Clash, this new band whose record was deemed by CBS to be too wild and bizarre to release in the U.S. I already thought they were the best band in the world from their import records. But the records barely did their live shows justice. During the tour Joe Strummer got hepatitis and went to the hospital and the band was grounded so we mostly did a lot of hanging around. Mick Jones was good friends with Tony James, guitar player for Generation X and I became friends with those guys through him. A couple years later, Sammy Hagar-- between gigs with Montrose and Van Halen-- asked Chris Knab and I for a cool "punk" song for him to cover. One of us came up with Patti Smith's "Free Money", which he recorded and did real well with. He asked me to come up with another one. I sent him "Wild Youth" by Generation X (above) but he misheard the lyrics and started working on a song called "Wild Jews."

I have no idea how many Jews, let alone wild Jews, voted in either Alabama or Mississippi Tuesday night. But we do know how many young people voted. If Republicans are trying are trying to persuade young people not to vote-- and judging by the state ID laws they're passing, they certainly are-- they have succeeded in those two states.
Eight percent of eligible voters under the age of 30 in Alabama and five percent in Mississippi participated in yesterday’s primaries, according to exclusive preliminary analysis by the Center for Information & Research on Civic Learning & Engagement.

Former Sen. Rick Santorum was the overwhelming choice of young Republican voters in Alabama and Mississippi with 41% and 45% of the under-30 vote, respectively. In Alabama, Gingrich followed with 28%, while former Gov. Mitt Romney only gained 16% of youth support. In Mississippi, Romney snatched a close second-place finish with 24% of youth vote, while former Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich won 22%.  Rep. Ron Paul finished with 12% youth support in Alabama and 9% in Mississippi.


And it isn't just Republican-dominated Southern states that are trying to discourage young voters (and minorities and poor people) from voting. It's always been the goal of wealth white males that only wealthy white males be allowed to vote. And now that wealthy white males have seized control of lost of state governments, they are instituting laws to enshrine that agenda. Yesterday Pennsylvania's House approved a voter ID bill that, when signed by neo-fascist Governor Tom Corbett, will make Pennsylvania the 16th GOP-controlled state to force voters to show photo identification at the polls. It passed, 104-88, pretty much a party-line vote and Corbett said he'd sign it immediately.
Democrats, civil liberties groups, labor unions, the NAACP and others have complained that the bill will disproportionately hurt the elderly, the poor and the disabled, who make up the lion's share of voters who typically do not have photo IDs. Those groups also tend to vote Democratic.

Other states with voter ID laws have been facing legal challenges. In Texas, the U.S. Department of Justice's civil right division on Monday objected to a photo voter identification law because it found it would have a greater impact on Hispanic voters. As a state with a history of voter discrimination, Texas is required under the Voting Rights Act to get advance approval of voting changes from either the Justice Department or the U.S. District Court in Washington, D.C.

Also Monday, a second judge in Wisconsin struck down that state's voter identification law, calling it unconstitutional because it would restrict the right to vote. That came less than a week after another judge ordered a temporary injunction on it.

And in December, the Justice Department rejected South Carolina's voter ID law on grounds it makes it harder for minorities to cast ballots. It was the first voter ID law to be rejected by the department in nearly 20 year.

In Pennsylvania, the ACLU, as well as Democrats in the Senate, have said they will challenge the bill in court as soon as it becomes law.

So the Republican Party is now officially the party of disenfranchisement. A scandal? The UN is investigating! I hope it doesn't lead to a no-fly zone.
The United Nations Human Rights Council is investigating the issue of American election laws at its gathering on minority rights in Geneva, Switzerland.. This, despite the fact that some members of the council have only in the past several years allowed women to vote, and one member, Saudi Arabia, still bars women from the voting booth completely.

Officials from the NAACP are presenting their case against U.S. voter ID laws, arguing to the international diplomats that the requirements disenfranchise voters and suppress the minority vote.

Eight states have passed voter ID laws in the past year, voter ID proposals are pending in 32 states and the Obama administration has recently moved to block South Carolina and Texas from enacting their voter ID measures.

"This really is a tactic that undercuts the growth of your democracy," said Hillary Shelton, the NAACP's senior vice president for advocacy, about voter photo ID requirements.

In a Fox News interview prior to his trip, Shelton said the message from the NAACP delegation to the Human Rights Council is that the photo ID law "undercuts the integrity of our government, if you allow it to happen. It's trickery, it's a sleight-of-hand. We're seeing it happen here and we don't want it to happen to you, and we are utilizing the U.N. as a tool to make sure that we are able to share that with those countries all over the world."

The United Nations has no legal jurisdiction over the American electoral system, which Shelton acknowledges. Asked whether he thinks that the U.N. should be involved in domestic American laws, he answered, "No, not specifically. The U.N. should certainly be involved in sharing a best practice for the world."

"We're the greatest country on the face of the earth, but we can be better still," he said.

Progressives have a different attitude towards young people than conservatives. It's based on inclusion, not fear. The new issue of Out Magazine has a fascinating story about Alex Morse, a 22 year old gay mayor in a gritty working class town in Massachusetts. He's not a Republican.
“We were never supposed to win,” says Morse. “I mean-- 22, openly gay, in an old Irish Catholic community.” He has not wasted time, firing five staff and quietly persuading the city council to vote off the president who had held the position for 26 years. That was on his first day. “Unfortunately, a lot of folks in Holyoke City Hall assume they are going to be here for their entire lives, and my mindset is that if you want to be here, you have to live, eat, and breathe it—the job has to be your life.”

Dori Dean, Morse’s Scotch-drinking, Patriots-loving chief of staff, recalls that, before his inauguration, there was plenty of ribbing in City Hall about Morse’s age-- a running theme during the campaign. “The joke was that they were going to bring diapers and talcum powder, rattles, and all these baby accoutrements to City Hall to accommodate our arrival,” she says. “Then, when we showed up with the axe and started chopping folks’ heads off, the tenor changed. No one is talking any shit now.” To date, four lawsuits for wrongful termination have been filed by former city employees.

...Speak to almost anyone who has known or met Alex Morse, it seems, and you will get a version of this story. Lorie Banks, his algebra teacher in middle school, recalls running into Morse three years ago at the gym and asking what he was planning to do. “He said, ‘I’m going to run for mayor of Holyoke,’ ” she recalls, “and I said, ‘Sign me up, because I know you are going to do it.’ ” Alexandra Zapata met Morse in sixth grade, when they were selected for a summer program at Deerfield Academy, a Massachusetts prep school. She says, “I never believed it wasn’t going to happen. He was so serious about it from the age of 11.” Dorothy Albrecht, who taught Morse math in high school, says, “He had this in mind at 15. Myself, I think he wants to be president -- and for all the right reasons.” Each year Albrecht gives a lecture in which she tells her students that even the smartest kids she has taught had to do their homework. “And then they always ask who was one of the smartest kids, and I say, ‘Alex Morse, and he always did his homework.’ ”

Kids who always do their homework, who run for student councils, who are top of the class at everything, are not supposed to be popular. But Morse is that rare breed-- the popular nerd. For successful politicians, popularity is a certain kind of skill. It’s how they win elections. Morse campaigned for a week in fifth grade to win the Martin Luther King Jr. Award (in part by offering to redistribute the contents of his lunchbox). “I just wanted to win,” he says, simply. “I always push myself to do the best.”

...Morse’s first post-inauguration encounter with the old-boys’ network he deposed is at a meet-and-greet for a local congressman, Richard Neal, at the Elks Lodge, a bland, squat building on the outskirts of town. As Morse and the congressman stand with their hands clasped before them, we are subjected to an exhausting roll call of the great and the good who are present-- former mayors, city councilors, former city councilors, officials with the redevelopment authority, a former Speaker of the House, the director of the Chamber of Commerce, school superintendents, the President of the Firefighters Association, the Treasurer of the Firefighters Association, the Vice Chairman of the Fire Department, and other firefighters too numerous to mention.

Finally, Morse is introduced to a smattering of applause. There are some allies in the room, but many more who aren’t, and the mayor recycles a Kennedy-esque line from his inaugural address: “We don’t have to see eye-to-eye to walk hand-in-hand.” He also throws in some self-deprecating wit about his upcoming 23rd birthday-- “I’ll soon be over the hill”-- that earns a polite chuckle. (Morse is good at pulling this particular rug from under the feet of his detractors-- at his Inauguration Ball a week later, he welcomed guests to his bar mitzvah.) Sullivan told me that some of those present later complained to him that Alex delivered a “me, me” speech, but Sullivan dismissed them as old-guard critics who saw Morse as a threat. “It’s just whiny crap from politicians, doesn’t mean anything,” he said. At a recent conference of municipal leaders in Boston, Sullivan encountered similar resentments, mainly focused around Morse’s outsize profile, and believes one of Morse’s challenges is to avoid being cast as an arrogant upstart. “I know people who say they feel inspired by him the way they were by a young JFK or Martin Luther King Jr.,” he says. “But we should temper that a little because it could hurt Alex’s growth. His image may come to seem arrogant, and he’s not like that.”

By attacking Morse’s age, however, his opponents may have done him a service. For decades, old-school Irish-American Democrats dominated the political culture in Holyoke. “If they were white and they were Irish and their name was on the ballot, you were required to flip the switch,” says Sullivan. But demographic shifts in the last few decades have altered the political calculus. With 43% of the city’s population under 30, Dori Dean thinks an apt comparison is Egypt or Tunisia, where the old guard was overthrown by a newly mobilized youth. “You look at international politics, you look at national politics, you break it all the way down to local-- it’s all about the economy,” she says. “Everyone needs a goddamn job. You see who’s benefiting, who’s not. Everyone’s grown tired of it.”

Michael Kusek believes the focus on Morse’s age may have deflected attention from his sexuality. “We’ve played the parlor game of, ‘Well, if he was 32 and gay, would he have won?’ ” he says. “A lot of people never got around to the gay thing because they were so focused on the age thing.” At the same time, Morse’s absence of discomfort or delicacy around his sexuality feels radically liberating. By refusing to play it down, he challenges people to deal with it. He likes to tell a story of visiting a senior center and spending three hours there, kneeling down at each table, shaking hands, introducing himself. “There was one woman, about 80 years old, with a walker,” he recalls. “She came up and grabbed my hand, looked me in the eye, and said, ‘I just want to thank you for what you did at the age of 16, coming out. You saved a lot of other kids’ lives.’”

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Monday, September 22, 2008

Rock'n'Roll vs John W. McCain's Racist Campaign

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Red Rocker, 61, hearts McCranky

When the McCain campaign first decided to use the Heart classic, "Barracuda," to mythologize the toughness of their moose-shooting but otherwise inadequate vice presidential stunt, the Wilson sisters may have been horrified but they reacted in a measured way. Since politely asking McCain's lobbyist-driven campaign to stop using their song didn't have any effect, they have upped the ante a bit. Courtesy of TRex, who says he got it from Gawker (though I can't find it on either site):
Unfortunately, you continue to blast "Barracuda" in defiance of our wishes. God knows why we thought you’d listen to us, two strong, creative women-- I guess we’re all just “trollop-faced” cunts to you. Speaking of Cinday, who can blame her for hitting the pills? We’d need a Demoral epidural to live through five minutes of her conjugal duties-– you sloshing your saggy ass between her legs and chomping at her breasts with your little yellow teeth. We’d rather rim Meat Loaf. Seriously.)


Now that's an escalation from this kind of stuff. And it isn't only Heart who McCain is pissing off. He's stealing music right and left and, other than KKK-oriented country artists, like half of Big and Rich, and buck toothed rednecks, no one wants their songs sullied by being identified with McCain's racist campaign. Van Halen was understandably angry when longtime Republican and one-time Van Halen singer Sammy Hagar encouraged McCain's camp to use embarrassingly mediocre "Right Now," from an era when the band was having a severe creative lull. This story I was able to find at Gawker:
John McCain's first mistake was trying to seem "hip" and "with it" by blasting Van Halen's atrocious song "Right Now" at a stump stop in Ohio. His second mistake was not getting permission to play the treacly Sammy Hagar track from the band, the members of which are not so old that they actually support the grim candidate. The band's publicist says, "Permission was not sought or granted nor would it have been given." It's like the time when Reagan's campaigners totally misunderstood "Born in the USA" and tried to use it as their theme song until Bruce Springsteen told them to cut the crap.

I'm guessing McCain would rather see stories about disgruntled rockers in the press than stories about how his campaign manager was paid a couple million dollars by Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae for access to McCain's saggy ass so they could "persuade" him to keep the Senate from regulating the banking industry.

Don't forget our Blue America Pick A Senate Candidate Contest where all of them understand the dynamics between unbalanced power and the need for government to protect individual consumers and workers from the predatory excesses of unbridled capitalism and Bush-style fascism.

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Friday, August 15, 2008

Jackson Browne Suing McCain For Music Theft-- Sammy Hagar Plays GOP Bash And McCain Turns Out To Be An ABBA Fan

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The first time I met Jackson Browne was at a Velvet Underground show on St Marks Place. We were both teenagers. He and his two pals, Tim Buckley and Steve Noonan, came back to my college and stayed for a few months. Jackson even wound up singing a few times with a local band that became the Blue Oyster Cult. More recently I ran into him at a benefit for progressive New York Congressman John Hall. I don't know Hall, who was a musician (in the band Orleans) before becoming a congressman in 2006. I first met him when I heard that Joe Lieberman was pirating his song classic smash "Still the One," using it but not paying any licensing fees. I called Hall to encourage him to sue Lieberman. But Lieberman was still masquerading as a Democrat back then-- although music stealing for political campaigns is a GOP thing, not a Democratic thing; their whacky definition of "free markets" I guess-- and Hall demurred. Today Jackson needed no pushing. And I don't think it was because he wasn't invited to the Republican National Convention.

I was reading a Q&A with entertainer Murray Hill at breakfast today and I noticed that when asked to describe his vision of hell it was entertaining at a Republican convention. Something tells me he isn't likely to be asked. In fact, except for Sammy Hagar (the appropriately nicknamed Red Rocker) and the faux Beach Boys-- actual Beach Boy Brian Wilson wouldn't be caught dead anywhere near the St Paul Hate Fest-- the Republicans only invited (mostly second and third rate) glitzy Nashville country singers.

Sammy's an old friend. He's the first rocker I ever met who was a Republican. And from Marin County! Well, actually he grew up in Fontana which completely explains it. Once he asked me for a "hip" song he could cover. Taking his political disability into consideration, my friend Chris and I gave him a Patti Smith song, "Free Money," which did so well for him that he asked me for another. I gave him a tape of "Wild Youth" by Generation X and he thought Billy was singing "Wild Jews" and... well, thankfully he never covered it. Had he, he might not be gracing the same stage as Joe "Wild Jew" Lieberman in St. Paul next month. I know for a fact they didn't invite Billy Idol.

Anyway, the NY Times says the Democratic Convention looks like it will have the edge over the Repugs' bash. Denver's events cover 16 pages and include shows by Black Eyed Peas, Kanye West, Jennifer Lopez, Willie Nelson, Melissa Etheridge and Jerry Jeff Walker. The Republican entertainment covers 5 pages (double spaced... with wide margins) and features Gretchen Wilson, Cowboy Troy (is that the closet case Attorney General of Alabama?), John Rich and the Charlie Daniels Band.

I don't think McCain is actually a fan of any of the low-brown crap they booked for the convention. His list of his favorite 10 songs includes (in order): "Dancing Queen" ABBA, "Blue Bayou" Roy Orbison, "Take a Chance On Me" ABBA, "If We MakeIt Through December" Merle Haggard, "As Time Goes By" Dooley Wilson, "Good Vibrations" The Beach Boys, "What A Wonderful World" Louis Armstrong, "I've Got You Under My Skin" Frank Sinatra, "Sweet Caroline" Neil Diamond, and "Smoke Gets In Your Eyes" The Platters. Not a bad list-- and no Andrews Sisters!

Obama's is a little more up to date, as you might expect: "Ready or Not "Fugees, "What's Going On" Marvin Gaye, "I'm On Fire" Bruce Spingsteen, "Gimme Shelter" Rolling Stones, "Sinnerman" Nina Simone, "Touch the Sky" Kanye West, "You'd Be So Easy to Love" Frank Sinatra, "Think" Aretha Franklin, "City of Blinding Lights" U2, and "Yes We Can"  will.i.am. I guess he hasn't heard the new songs by Gary Lucas or Joss Stone yet. Randy Newman critiques their selections for Blender.

The best country music at either convention:

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