I've mentioned before in this space my favorite entertainment venue on the internet, the site Radio Garden. From RG, you can click any location on a Google Map of the world and will be presented with a list streaming radio stations from that location.
It does take a bit of work finding something worth listening to, because SO many stations around the world play the same stuff, that is to say contemporary pop music usually sung in English.
But when you do find a gem, it's well worth marking it as a favorite and return to it again and again.
One of my favorites actually does play music mostly in English; it's one of the best sources of classic American Country music I've ever come across. The station is called Rattlesnake Radio and it originates in Munich. Even better, RR mixes up country with blues, Creole/Cajun and other genres of what could be called American roots music, with a little R&B and Rock and Roll influenced by all those genres thrown in for good measure. A work colleague from Belgium particularly likes RR and on occasion when we're the only ones in the office, she requests I put it on.
So yesterday while working at my desk and RR playing in the background, something strange caught my ear. No, it couldn't be I thought to myself, did the singer really say that? He sure 'nuff did. Then he said it again, and again. I wasn't really tuned in to the lyrics but what knocked me out of my senses was the "N" word repeated over and over again.
Still incredulous, I picked up my cellphone, held it up to the computer and asked Siri to name the song.
Even my Siri's sexy British accent could not lessen the foul stench of
that word, which is right there in the title.
I'm not going to mention the title nor the guy who wrote and sang the song, as I don't want to publicize them, but I will say that after mentioning the title, Siri told me that the song was performed by Johnny Horton. That is wrong. Horton was a country star until his untimely death in 1960. The song in question was recorded nearly a decade later and the singer doesn't sound remotely like Horton.
What the hell is going on I thought, and why on earth would they play this song? My first thought was that it was a parody of country music and the culture of the place where much of it comes from. I immediately thought of a National Lampoon send up of Joan Baez where in the refrain, the singer with her spot-on imitation of the activist folk singer warbles: "Pull the triggers N___s, we're with you all the way, across the bay."
John Lennon also got away with using the word, not without a kerfuffle, as the title to his 1972 feminist protest song, "Woman is the N___ of the World."
Obviously neither song would come close to being released today; times have changed.
But the song I heard on RR was nothing like either of those songs. No irony there, it was a bona fide no-holds-barred white supremacist, racist song.
One might say, how about giving the song a little benefit of the doubt? After all, it came out over fifty years ago in a much different time. Shouldn't we judge works from the past in the context of their time and not ours?
Since I already mentioned him, I'll use Johnny Horton as an example. Many of his songs are ballads about historic events. I'm sure they turn many people off today for their "political incorrectness." One of them is a song about the horse of the discredited Indian fighter, General George Armstrong Custer. Ironically, the horse's name was Comanche. In its time I'm sure the song, named after the horse, did not provoke much controversy if any. Today as most of us don't have much compassion for Custer, his fate, nor his cause, the song sounds at best, dated, and at worst, a paean to imperialism and the genocide of Native American people.
Yet Comanche is a song that might be given a pass (if you wish) for reflecting the values of a different time.
But not the song in question. Having lived through the time it was recorded, I can assure you it was as vile then as it is now. Since I refuse to print any of the lyrics, you'll just have to take my word. Or you could go by the fact that the song was so offensive it never received airtime on a radio station in the States, not even in the Deep South.
I know nothing about how the Rattlesnake playlist is generated in Munich. Perhaps the program director is a computer. My Belgian friend (without hearing it) speculated that whoever chose to play the song, assuming it wasn't a computer, probably didn't understand the nuances of American culture enough to realize how truly offensive it is. I assured her that there is absolutely nothing nuanced about the song. You would have to be completely ignorant of American culture, the English language, or both to let this one slide. I seriously doubt that anyone running a radio station devoted to American roots music, one that's heard around the world via the internet, could be that ignorant.
Maybe I'm wrong. Or perhaps it was a mean-spirited intern on his way out the door. One can only hope.
Anyway, it got me thinking this morning that when you take away all the things that got the song banned from the radio in the U.S., the racial invectives, the threats of brutal violence and the humiliating degradation of human beings, the theme of the song is no different from much of the rants we hear today from members of the far right.
That theme is this: white folks in America got it bad, and that ain't good. My apologies to Paul Francis Webster and Duke Ellington.
That theme is propagated throughout right wing media, most notably by the chief spokesman and poster child for white victimhood, Tucker "Putin Didn't Call Me a Racist" Carlson. Unlike the author of the racist song who grew up dirt poor in Louisiana, if you were writing a dictionary, you'd have to put Carlson, heir to the Swanson TV Dinner fortune, at the top of the list of candidates for the illustration accompanying the entry on white privilege.
"What's that guy got to complain about you might ask? You got me, but as the most watched talking head on Fox News, his message that white people are the real victims of racism in this country, is music to the ears of many white folks all over this land of ours who feel that life just hasn't been fair to them.
Playing the victim is never a good look, especially when you're the farthest thing from one AND you're living in a time where there is true suffering in the world, which is all the time.
Multiply that exponentially when you're living in a time of war, which we are now, and the lives of people as we speak, are being turned upside down by a megalomaniacal dictator without the slightest hint of a moral compass, bent on murder and mayhem.
Listening to the radio the other morning, a report on Chicago's Ukrainian community coming together to deal with and assist in the plight of their loved ones back home was followed by the story of an Illinois state legislator complaining that he still had to wear a mask inside the state capitol house chamber, despite mask mandates being lifted statewide. Life sure is unfair, isn't it?
Well in my book, children getting cancer is unfair. People in the richest country in the world having to choose between buying food and medicine is unfair. Unarmed people getting shot and killed by the police is unfair. Ukrainian people going about their daily lives just a week ago having to dodge Putin's missiles aimed at their homes today, is unfair.
Having to wear a mask is a minuscule inconvenience when you consider that it helps protect the health and wellbeing of other people. We should willingly and gladly participate in this effort, not whine incessantly about it like two year olds.
Have we really become a nation of spoiled little children?
Serious discourse on how unfair life is for white people in this country is not just found on right wing media outlets like FOX.
Iowa governor Kim Reynolds delivered the Republican rebuttal to President Biden's State of the Union Address the other night. Sprinkled in between rants blaming the current administration for all our nation's problems from the current inflation rate to Putin's invasion of Ukraine, normal stuff in hyper-partisan speeches like this one, Reynolds threw in some nuggets that with the exception of the abusive language, reflect the overall theme of white victimhood heard in the racist song:
Talk to Americans about what's on their mind. Ask them: What are your concerns? What keeps you up at night?
They'll tell you, and I can tell you what's not on that list.
They won't tell you that we should be paying people not to work.
A dog whistle as old as the hills, "paying people not to work" to the ultra-right, evokes images of black welfare queens and drug dealers getting rich by doing nothing, off the backs of hard working white people. But honestly, I've never met anyone of any color who balked at getting a free handout from the government, whether it was the monthly $250 COVID relief check from the IRS, (damn I miss that extra cash in the bank, thank you Joe Manchin), farmers getting paid NOT to grow crops, or rich people not having to pay their fair share of taxes.
Americans are tired of a political class trying to remake this country into a place where an elite few tell everyone else what they can and cannot say. What they can and cannot believe.
I for one believe there is no right in a democracy more sacred than the right to freedom of speech. The lack of tolerance for other people's opinions is not the exclusive domain of the left or the right, it exists on both sides of the political divide. But like all freedoms, freedom of speech is not absolute. What is often missed on both sides are a few things. First, freedom does not mean we have the freedom to say or do whatever we please, we cannot cause serious harm to others for example in the name of exercising our rights. Second, rights go hand in hand with responsibility which ties directly into number three: while freedom of speech means that the government cannot imprison you for what you say, it does not mean that you can say whatever you feel like with the expectation that there will be no consequences such as public derision, termination of a social media account, or even losing your job.
I'm not exactly sure who Governor Reynolds is referring to as the political elite class, I can only guess it is the party to which she does not belong, the Democratic Party. What is elite about the Democrats I don't know, perhaps it's simply because they are currently in power, and her party is not. The extreme right in this country does not hide its disdain for what they call the "mainstream media" which they claim is biased against them. While that may be true, there is certainly no lack of media outlets that are more than willing to espouse their ideology, FOX being a prime example. So I seriously question her assertion that anyone in this country is stifling her words or her beliefs.
Save perhaps for one exception.
Consider the "N word". I often come across commentaries from the extreme right that claim how unfair it is that it's acceptable for black people to use the degrading word, but not for whites.
You can't see it but I'm currently making that stupid, quizzical look on my face that Tucker Carlson is famous for. You know the look, the one someone once described as the look on the face of an eight year old who's just learned about sex.
In case you don't get it. let me explain in the simplest of terms. I have a family whom I love dearly. But like everyone else, once in a while, when someone in my family gets on my nerves. I reserve the right to use choice language to express my feelings of frustration. But don't think for a minute that you can talk the same way about my family unless you want a punch in the nose.
Is that unfair? If you think it is, then deal with it.
In other words, if you're white, you're perfectly free to use the "N" word, but understand that there can and will be consequences. That's not unfair, it's just the way it is, sorry.
They're tired of people pretending the way to end racism is by categorizing everybody by their race.
This is a new dog-whistle for the ultra-right, their claim to desire a "color blind" society.
I find that particularly ironic since on the one hand, Republicans preach that we should not take into account a person's race, while on the other hand they are gerrymandering congressional districts to gain political advantage based upon race and creating voting restrictions that pointedly target and disenfranchise people of color.
I guess they figure if we don't take race into account, no one will notice what they're doing.
Now for the piece de resistance, a doozy that combines dog whistles both old and new, with a healthy dose of bullshit thrown in for good measure:
The Department of Justice treats parents like domestic terrorists but looters and shoplifters roam free.The first part is referring to the Justice Department investigating in the words of Attorney General Merrick Garland, a "disturbing spike in harassment, intimidation, and threats of violence against school administrators" on the part of parents. The AG adds that: "While spirited debate about policy matters is protected under our Constitution, that protection does not extend to threats of violence or efforts to intimidate individuals based on their views."
Every time they import a new voter, I become disenfranchised as a current voter.
What could possibly be more unfair than that? Poor undeserving Tucks.
Beyond the utter nonsense of the idea of Democrats importing voters, the premise of that statement outlines the belief of the MAGA crowd that white people have a completely different agenda than nonwhite people, and that there is essentially nothing in common between us. How will we ever unite as a country with that attitude?
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Sadly, there is still a big audience for the racist song mentioned above. I just googled it and the site listed over one hundred thousand results pointing to pages that feature the song and others like it. Reading the comments on those pages is really taking a dive into the darkest recesses of the American psyche.
As we've seen, Carlson and Governor Reynolds to name just two, may not be card carrying white supremacists themselves, but they speak their language, and see no problem garnering their support.
These two and many others like them only worse, are the face of today's Republican Party.
If you are a Republican AND reject racism, this should deeply trouble you. There may come a time, and that time may be now, when you have to chose one or the other.
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