Music and Politics

Just for amusement sake, after reading an article about the upcoming Vote for Change concert tour (which doesn’t seem to be coming to Washington — aren’t we supposed to be a “swing state” too?), here’s a short and probably very incomplete list of musical artists who have supported one presidential candidate or the other. Most of this list is culled from the article, I may update it as days go by as I run across more names. Submissions will be welcome, of course.

It’s a rather silly way to look at things, sure, but if for some reason you’re having problems making up your mind which way you want to vote, maybe your musical tastes can make a difference. ;)

Supporting Kerry
(or at least vocally anti-Bush)
Supporting Bush
Alkaline Trio
Anti-Flag
The Ataris
Authority Zero
Bad Religion
Jello Biafra
Billy Bragg
Bright Eyes
Jackson Browne
The Dave Matthews Band
Death Cab for Cutie
Denali
The Dixie Chicks
Kenneth “Babyface” Edmonds
The Epoxies
John Fogerty
Jurassic 5
Less Than Jake
John Mellencamp
Ministry
Keb’ Mo’
My Morning Jacket
N.O.F.X.
None More Black
The Offspring
Pearl Jam
Bonnie Raitt
R.E.M.
Linda Rondstadt
Social Distortion
The Soviettes
Bruce Springsteen
James Taylor
World/Inferno Friendshop Society
Kid Rock
Ted Nugent
Jessica Simpson
Britney Spears
Lee Ann Womack

Update: Additions from a NYT article (thanks Len) and Rock Against Bush Vol. 1 (thanks Ryan — the page for RABv2 didn’t have artist listings, otherwise there’d be more additions, I’m sure).

iTunes: “Music and Politics” by Disposable Heroes of Hiphoprisy, The from the album Hypocrisy is the Greatest Luxury (1992, 4:01).

One of these things is not like the others…

I love seeing things like this. From today’s iTMS “new releases” e-mail from Apple:

New Releases

  • The Essential Isley Brothers – The Isley Brothers
  • Living Hallelujah – Single – Sarah Kelly
  • The 9-11 Commission Report: Final Report of the National Commission On Terrorist Attacks (Unabridged) – National Commission on Terrorist Attacks
  • Riot On an Empty Steet – Kings of Convenience
  • A Long Hot Summer – Masta Ace
  • Dead Disco (Kylie Kills Mix) – Single – Metric
  • Crosby & Nash – EP – Crosby & Nash
  • Davy Crockett – Riders in the Sky
  • Ride This – The Covers EP – Los Lobos
  • Green Imagination – The Sunshine Fix
  • Until the End – Kittie
  • Accentuate the Positive – Al Jarreau

iTunes: “What Have I Done to Deserve This?” by Pet Shop Boys from the album Discography (1987, 4:19).

Kerry and Bush: Achievements

Lately, Bush’s line of attack has been that Kerry just hasn’t done that much during his time in the Senate — a charge that, unfortunately, is being blindly accepted and parroted until it’s accepted as “truth”. I had a conversation with a gentleman yesterday during my lunch break where he delighted in pointing out Kerry’s supposed lack of real experience.

Now, being relatively new to trying to keep track of all this political fun and games, and occasionally being a bear of very little brain, I couldn’t do much yesterday to turn this man’s opinion around, not being able to call much evidence to the contrary to the table off the top of my head. Two posts popped into my reading today, though, that’d give me a good place to start should the topic come up again.

From Matt Deatherage: Bush Criticizes Kerry’s Achievements

Before he was 40, John Kerry graduated Yale with higher than Bush’s 2.0 GPA, and volunteered for service in Vietnam. After earning all those medals, he returned to the US, testified before Congress about the War, and founded Vietnam Veterans for America. He was then accepted to Boston College Law School, graduated, and became a prosecutor in Boston. He ran for the US House of Representatives once and lost, but in 1982, he ran for Lt. Governor of Massachusetts and won. In 1984, at age 40, he was elected to the US Senate, where he’s served for 20 years.

Before he was 40, George W. Bush was accepted as a “legacy” student at Yale University, where he blew off classes and graduated with a GPA variously described as 1.68 or 2.0. His family’s friends pulled connections to get him into the Texas Air National Guard, and to get him accepted for flight training despite the lowest acceptable score on the test. In both cases, he magically jumped ahead of hundreds of other people on waiting lists for those positions through absolutely no merit or achievement of his own.

And, of course, he goes on from there. At the end of his post, Matt points to Josh Marshall’s take on the situation

“My opponent has good intentions,” the president said today. “But intentions don’t always translate into results. After 19 years in the United States Senate, my opponent has had thousands of votes but very few signature achievements.”

This might be a plausible line of attack coming from another opponent. Unlike, say, Russ Feingold or Ted Kennedy, there’s no prominent piece of legislation with Kerry’s name on it, though admirers of Kerry point to his critical role in a series of high-profile Senate investigations.

But coming from George W. Bush? A guy whose handlers had to get some of the more gullible run of journalists to refer to his life before he turned forty as his ‘lost years’?

But will the media actually look into any of this and make the comparisons? Unlikely, and it’s the “swing voters” and the voters who don’t have or take the time to investigate on their own, who rely on the major news sources in print and on the television, that will suffer when it’s time to decide which way they’re going to vote.

And if the charges stick, it’ll be the entire country that suffers if Bush is elected.

(via Lane)

iTunes: “World Outside Your Window” by Tikaram, Tanita from the album Best of Tanita Tikaram, The (1988, 4:52).

Seeing Cheney requires signing ‘loyalty oath’

Kirsten sent this my way earlier today, and then I ran across it again on Len’s site, and both times it just made my skin crawl: Obtaining Cheney Rally Ticket Requires Signing Bush Endorsement.

Some would-be spectators hoping to attend Vice President Dick Cheney’s rally in Rio Rancho this weekend walked out of a Republican campaign office miffed and ticketless Thursday after getting this news:

Unless you sign an endorsement for President George W. Bush, you’re not getting any passes.

The Albuquerque Bush-Cheney Victory office in charge of doling out the tickets to Saturday’s event was requiring the endorsement forms from people it could not verify as supporters.

[…]

An endorsement form provided to the Journal by Random says: “I, (full name) … do herby (sic) endorse George W. Bush for reelection of the United States.” It later adds that, “In signing the above endorsement you are consenting to use and release of your name by Bush-Cheney as an endorser of President Bush.”

So much for open government, of the people, for the people, and by the people.

iTunes: “Injected With a Poison (Sinsational)” by Khan, Praga from the album Injected With a Poison (1998, 6:12).

Ballard Locks Photo Workshop

So yesterday was the big photo gathering at the Locks. Prairie and I picked up her sister Hope and then headed out, eventually getting there about an hour into the event. As I’d never been to the Locks before, I wasn’t entirely sure where to go at first, so we just started following the paths and wandering around. It wasn’t long before we stumbled across a fairly large group with a higher-than-average ratio of cameras…

Photographers at the Locks

Myk spotted me when I wandered in and we spent a few minutes chatting, idly wondering what could potentially get him into more trouble with Homeland Security: organizing the event, or taking a wild leap into the water in an attempt to escape should anyone try to arrest him. Of course, nothing along those lines happened, and the day was quite nice, just a lot of people gathered to talk and look for some decent shots.

A nice medium-format camera

Many photos were taken by everyone, of the Locks, boats, and — of course — all the other photographers. A representative from the ACLU was there (complete with an old 110 pocket camera, which I hadn’t seen in years), along with a photographer from the Seattle P-I, some people who’d read about the event in the Stranger, and many who’d read about it online. I’m afraid I didn’t end up meeting very many of the people who were there, but seeing the turnout was great.

Wave Sculpture

After milling with the crowd for a while, Prairie, Hope and I decided to go wandering around the area for a bit and see what all was there. There were a fair amount of activities going on in addition to the photographer’s gathering, including a flower show, a band playing on the grass, and many tourists wandering around the grounds. Prime people-watching, in other words, which we took full advantage of.

Children at the Fish Ladder

There were a couple of attempts at group photos during the gathering, one of which I was around for, but I think I missed a later one set up by the P-I photographer. Still, at one point he made sure to come by and get my name, so I suppose I must have made it into one or another of his shots. Who knows, maybe I’ll have another appearance in a local paper sometime this week? It’s getting hard to keep track of all my press…;)

Anyway, all things considered, it was a very pleasant time, and many thanks to Myk for organizing the event. There are rumbles of a similar workshop day being set up at some point later on from a different vantage point (after it was pointed out that Ian was taking his photos from Commodore Park, rather than on the Locks themselves). Should that come through, I’ll definitely see what I can do to attend that one, also.

I’ve uploaded the majority of the photos I took yesterday to my gallery, as always.

Other writeups and photo collections:

iTunes: “One Too Many Mornings” by Chemical Brothers, The from the album Exit Planet Dust (1995, 4:13).

Ballard Locks photo workshop today

Just a reminder — today is the day of the Ballard Locks Photo Workshop organized in response to Ian Spiers’ experiences while photographing the Locks.

Sunday August 1st, 2004

1PM – 4PM

We’ll meet at the front gates at just before 1PM, if you’re late, just look for the gaggle of tripods inside the property by the locks.

As word of this event quickly spread across the Seattle blogosphere, the organizer felt it would be worthwhile to clarify the intent of today’s gathering.

My event was meant to just be a day of photography where photographers could get together and just be photographers; to show everyone that photographers care about our rights, and to show Ian how many people support him.

I initially called this a workshop, not a protest, as that is the vision I had – and BTW still have. So, even if in your mind this may be a protest, please keep in mind that the event itself is NOT a protest. I’m just encouraging people to go and take some pictures.

That having been said, I feel a need out of fear to be very clear about the vision for this event. We will not be getting in the faces of other people there; be they event participants, police, security, tourists, or any other group for that matter. There will be no rally, there will be no speakers, there will just be a bunch of people taking pictures and discussing the issue at hand amongst themselves as they meet.

Sounds good to me. I’ll be there, camera in hand.

iTunes: “Gödel” by Phoids, The from the album Marianne Doesn’t Know Yet (1996, 4:47).

Kerry’s DNC speech

Thanks to C-Span‘s video archive, I just sat back and watched Kerry’s speech to the 2004 Democratic National Convention. I must say, I’m more impressed than I thought I was going to be, not having been overly impressed by what little I’ve seen of Kerry in the past. A good, well-written speech, and he delivered it quite well.

A few choice quotes that especially impressed me:

We’re told that outsourcing jobs is good for America. We’re told that new jobs that pay \$9,000 less than the jobs that have been lost is the best we can do. They say this is the best economy we’ve ever had. And they say that anyone who thinks otherwise is a pessimist. Well, here is our answer: There is nothing more pessimistic than saying America can’t do better.

I am proud that after September 11th all our people rallied to President Bush’s call for unity to meet the danger. There were no Democrats. There were no Republicans. There were only Americans. How we wish it had stayed that way.

As president, I will ask hard questions and demand hard evidence. I will immediately reform the intelligence system, so policy is guided by facts, and facts are never distorted by politics. And as president, I will bring back this nation’s time-honored tradition: The United States of America never goes to war because we want to, we only go to war because we have to.

As president, I will wage this war with the lessons I learned in war. Before you go to battle, you have to be able to look a parent in the eye and truthfully say: “I tried everything possible to avoid sending your son or daughter into harm’s way. But we had no choice. We had to protect the American people, fundamental American values from a threat that was real and imminent.” So lesson one, this is the only justification for going to war.

For four years, we’ve heard a lot of talk about values. But values spoken without actions taken are just slogans. Values are not just words. They’re what we live by. They’re about the causes we champion and the people we fight for. And it is time for those who talk about family values to start valuing families.

I want to address these next words directly to President George W. Bush: In the weeks ahead, let’s be optimists, not just opponents. Let’s build unity in the American family, not angry division. Let’s honor this nation’s diversity; let’s respect one another; and let’s never misuse for political purposes the most precious document in American history, the Constitution of the United States.

I don’t want to claim that God is on our side. As Abraham Lincoln told us, I want to pray humbly that we are on God’s side.

Good stuff.

Now, let’s get this man into office.

iTunes: “More” by Crystal Method, The from the album Plastic Compilation Vol. I (1997, 5:59).

9/11 commission: Everything we knew was wrong

The New York Times nicely summarizes the recently released report from the 9/11 commission:

When the National Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the United States set to work early last year to prepare the definitive history of the events of Sept. 11, 2001, it seemed that much of its hard work was already done, because so much of the horrifying story seemed to be known.

At the time, it was understood that all of the hijackers had entered the country legally and done nothing to draw attention to themselves; Osama bin Laden had underwritten the plot with his personal fortune but had left the details to others; American intelligence agencies had no warning that Al Qaeda was considering suicide missions using planes; President Bush had received a special intelligence briefing weeks before Sept. 11 that focused on past, not current, terrorist threats from Al Qaeda.

But 19 months later, the commission has released a final, unanimous book-length report that, in calling for a overhaul of the way the government collects and shares intelligence, showed that much of what had been common wisdom about the Sept. 11 attacks at the start of the panel’s investigation was wrong.

Until I have time to pore over the entire report — a copy of which is sitting here on my desk — this is a good overview.

iTunes: “First Encounter” by P.I.M.P. from the album Twisted Secrets Vol. 2 (1996, 7:52).

Gagging and swallowing

Blacks are gagging on the donkey but not yet ready to swallow the elephant.

— George W. Bush, quoting Charlie Gaines, while addressing the 2004 National Urban League Conference

According to the transcript, this comment was answered with “laughter and applause.” My first response was more along the lines of a dropped jaw. Simply amazing.

Lots more fun commentary on this by doing a simple Google search for “gagging on the donkey” (admittedly, rather amusing in itself).

iTunes: “Nica’s Dream” by Blakey, Art and the Jazz Messengers feat. Silver, Horace from the album Jazz: The Definitive Performances (1956, 11:53).