Die Warzau - Permission (Convenience, 2004)
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Die Warzau - Permission (Convenience, 2004)
Diversity isn't just a talking point. It's a "book" of human experiences we can read and grow from.
Jim Marcus
(via https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mcZxHFl4YgE)
I don’t want to get beat tonight By anybody but you I don’t want to be lied to and cried on By anybody but you What we can do tonight Is stay home and fight Wait for our song on the radio You change your mind But not this time Today you’re gone Tomorrow you’re gone Don’t play cool - don’t fight fair It’s just another fucking love song Top or bottom, I don’t much care It’s just another fucking love song Wanna fuck me on the floor, now baby baby It’s just another fucking love song Just whore to whore now, baby baby It’s just another fucking love song I don’t want to by hypnotized By anybody but you I don’t want to be crazy and fucked up By anybody but you I don’t want to bang my head on the wall For anybody but you Curl up in a fetal ball With anybody but you What we can do tonight pretend we’re alive Watch how we were on the video I can sit by the screen Sigh while you leave And wonder where you go
Go Fight - Another Fucking Love Song available here
If you find yourself objecting to the FORM of a peaceful protest, look inside. You don't really object to people sitting or standing to help forge this country into something better. You object to what they have to say. And it's time to admit it.
by Jim Marcus There is a proud tradition of sitting- or kneeling- as a form of peaceful protest.
Rosa Parks did nothing but sit peacefully, when she was told to stand and move to make way for white passengers. She sat to protest a system that made second class citizens out of so many.
The Freedom Riders sat, peacefully, when they were told to leave, to go where black people were welcome, as they protested a system that told them where and with whom they could eat.
On-Campus protesters would frequently peacefully sit as they showed their objections to an inhumane war. And they were right, too.
And in every one of those situations, people objected to the FORM of those protests, long after they found they had no moral authority to object to the CONTENT. "Why can't they just shut up. Why?"
It's our job as Americans, to protest what is wrong, to fight to fix it. So much of that job now can be done in the rarefied field of public opinion, waking people up to injustices that they might otherwise have overlooked. Why? Because human beings have reached the point in their history where we can be swayed by reason. Peaceful protests work. They call attention to huge and crucial injustices. They help us police a country whose ideals are huge, viable, noble, powerful, and often hard to reach.
It's not just soldiers and statesmen that have built this country. Harriet Tubman, Elizabeth Cady stanton, Frederick Douglass, and, yes, Alicia Garza- they built this country, too.
If you find yourself objecting to the FORM of a peaceful protest, look inside. You don't really object to people sitting or standing to help forge this country into something better. You object to what they have to say. And it's time to admit it.
If you object to Colin Kaepernick's protest in its form, it's time to admit that you really don't care that Black people are killed by the police in disproportionate numbers. It's long past time, actually.
Die Warzau - Land of the Free
I'd like to tell the children Why they starve and why they die Why the man in the mansion Gives them the dirt and him the sky
Free in the land of the free Free in the land of the free
Where go the people When the hand that kills is the hand that guides? Why are we the chosen When the one who speaks is the one who dies?
If you're on the internet trying to equate liberal congresswomen wearing white with klansmen wearing white or abortion laws with eugenics or democratic socialists with nazism, you are just demonstrating that you have no idea why the Klan, eugenics or nazism were bad. And that is literally terrifying.
GoFundMe has raised more than $5 billion from 50 million donations since the website launched eight years ago—and one in every three of the site's campaigns are intended to pay medical bills, according to CEO Rob Solomon.
The CEO of GoFundMe has confirmed that 1 out of every 3 GoFundMe campaigns running right now is to pay medical bills, which makes GoFundMe one of the biggest insurers in the country.
New GoFight from Jim Marcus (Die Warzau), his son, Vince McAley, and Dan Evans
Jim assures me it’s pronounced “Sek-wah-ley.”
From his FB page: The 31st entry in my list of people who broke the law to do good is Tokyo Sexwale. (pronounced Sek-wah-ley)
Mosima Gabriel Sexwale got the nickname “Tokyo” from his fanatical pursuit of excellence in Karate when he was younger. It was that drive and passion that led him, later, to a cell in the same Robben Island prison as Nelson Mandela for working to free South Africa from its horrific Apartheid government model.
He was a member of the Steve Biko's Black Consciousness Movement in the late 1960s and later became a local leader of the radical South African Students' Movement. In the early 1970s, he joined the military wing of the African National Congress’s, the Umkhonto we Sizwe ("spear of the nation”) to fight any way he could For South African freedom.
in 1976, he was captured after fighting with the South African security forces and, along with 11 others, was charged and convicted of terrorism and conspiracy to overthrow the government. During the two year Trial, he became a popular voice and ideological leader of the freedom underground and converted many people to the cause of South Africa’s release from Apartheid.
He was released after serving 13 years in prison and served as head of the public liaison department of the African National Congress Headquarters. He was later elected as the first premier of the new PWV Province where he worked successfully to bring peace to many opposing factions.
As of October 2013, he remained on a US terrorist watchlist