I always find it remarkable how magical religious thinking goes hand-in-hand so perfectly with magical conservative thinking.
The script is always the same:
- Believe something based only on random mysticism, and not on facts or evidence (e.g., age of the Earth, Jesus riding Dinosaurs, cutting taxes inevitably trickling golden showers of largesse onto the poor, etc.); then
- Craft all sorts of rigid opinions based only on those beliefs, with a shield against facts or evidence ever challenging those opinions.
I can’t remember the last time I heard a Republican politician make some claim and connect it to any kind of arguably reputable non-partisan source. Pick the topic: global warming, abortion, tax policy, heath care policy, Medicare, etc.
As our modern dystopian bard said: “IGNORANCE IS STRENGTH.”

It would appear that Bill O’Reilly is making a foray into music criticism.
Admittedly, O’Reilly is fish in a barrel to some extent. He’s just a loudmouth who thinks he knows about everything, including not only the things he’s actually gotten recognition for (journalism, broadcasting, punditry), but also various other things like historical fiction, television writing, and now music. He’s like a renaissance man, only he now lacks talent at any of them other than broadcasting, where he remains able to keep peoples’ attention if nothing else. He’s a know-it-all in a literal sense, and in addition to being tiresome, such people are best treated by being ignored. Still, sometimes that just isn’t possible, and this is one of those times.
I’ll admit that I’m no music expert, I’m merely a fan, and when I write about music I write about it from that perspective. Nobody is an expert in everything. Except for Bill O’Reilly, of course! O’Reilly writes a short history of post-WWII music and starts out writing exactly the sort of article on the topic you’d think he would write, a standard rockist narrative cribbed seemingly more from Time-Life documentaries about rock’n'roll than a deep connection to the music. (A taste: “In the ’50s, many young people, tired of conformity, began to rebel. The rise of Elvis Presley illuminated that rebellion.”) It’s standard pabulum celebrating the vision and chops of one white man after another (notable exceptions include Chubby Checker and Hendrix, the latter of which is rather a safe exception if you ask me). He also mentions Madonna in passing, not so much as a visionary as someone who was popular at one point. He probably could have better insulated himself from charges of sexism by paying homage to Grace Slick, but then again, she isn’t much of a fan of religion, so no dice for a traditionalist like Bill-O. His narrative is bizarrely incomplete and one gets the sense that he’s less trying to craft a narrative than take an index of music he likes, to confine the British Invasion to merely the Beatles, Stones and Animals without including The Who is baffling, only able to be explained by O’Reilly not liking The Who. Of course, The Kinks were better than all of them, and they did have a certain thread of conservatism running through their work, but being British they cut that with an incredible disdain for the rich and their empty lives and lifestyles, to an even greater extent than the Stones even did. It’s a conservatism of the working-class, not of the upper-class, which self-styled man of the people Bill O’Reilly wouldn’t know what to do with. This list is so incomplete, probably due to word constraints, that it gets comical at points. Going by this list, you’d think the Bee Gees dominated the entire ’70s rather than just a year or two near the end, and that glam rock, R&B, funk and soul never had their own moments. Presumably they’re not included because, well, gay, black, black and black respectively. That decade also saw the birth of heavy metal, a pretty popular subgenre, but Black Sabbath doesn’t get a mention because of “Satanism” no doubt.
Naturally, you might expect all this to act as an edenic prelude to the fallen world of contemporary music, and if that’s your guess you are indeed correct. After paying reverent homage to so many white men, he feels the need to slam black people (“At first, the anger-fueled [rap] recordings were confined to urban radio stations and a niche audience.”) and women, notably Jennifer Lopez and Lady GaGa. This is the original rockist sin, though it’s baffling that he feels the need to swipe at Lopez, who was last relevant for her music…actually, probably around the time that O’Reilly himself held real cultural currency. He himself is now a niche performer, albeit one with a rather large niche and $20 million a year. But note this, and note it well: whenever an older white guy starts lashing out at J-Lo, GaGa, Rihanna, and so on, they’re pining for an older, whiter, maler musical scene. Which is not to defend or damn the music at all–I personally don’t much care for Rihanna’s sex robot act, and Lopez’s music has not held up well at all–but there are all sorts of male mediocrity out there that could be mocked, and goes unmocked. People pay Jack Johnson tons of money to make glorified elevator music, but he’s a white guy. Green Day and Aerosmith have had second acts as shells of what they once were, and Rod Stewart is a shell of a shell of a shell of what he was during his Faces/”Maggie May” period (another great thing going on in the ’70s that O’Reilly has undoubtedly never heard of). This schlock goes un-slammed, while two women (one of whom is a minority) gets hit by an angry old white guy. It again begs the question.
O’Reilly also lacks a basic understanding of music history. He attributes the mainstreaming of rap music to “when Elton John sang a duet with the white rapper Eminem on a Grammy telecast [...],” when the real date was probably fifteen or so years earlier, when Aerosmith and Run-DMC gave birth to the (in retrospect unholy) genre of rap-rock. Of course, new music is only legitimized when boomer icons like Elton John give it their blessing. Complaining about rap just seems unbearably passe now, since pretty much all that remains now is pop and R&B in various forms. One would think that O’Reilly would be happy about the epic decline in rap’s popularity, since now it’s mostly confined to single sections of hit songs in those two genres, but no dice. Once again, the music itself isn’t what he cares about, or what he knows about. But there is one thing that gives him hope for the future of music, one thing that keeps him going:
The talent is still there. I heard Justin Bieber do a knockout version of Paul McCartney’s classic “Let It Be.” And Bruno Mars with his little hat was pretty good on the Grammy show this year.
Hallelujah! White men! Salvation, at long last!
The crux of it is that The Doors are lauded as “introspective” artists, while Lady GaGa is derided as an empty narcissist. Doesn’t really fit in either particular. GaGa certainly has opinions, if anything her trouble is that she doesn’t ever stop talking about her opinions, to a wearisome extent at times. Jim Morrison, though, was his generation’s Sting, a self-hating pop artist who produced a whole ton of dreck to prove how deep he was, and mainly proved the opposite. But Sting had the misfortune to be born ten years too late to be “cool” in the way Morrison was, even though his output is simply much better than Morrison’s in terms of overall quality. Bill O’Reilly thinks that a group whose output is far outpaced by The Police (and is arguably outpaced by Sting’s solo work) is one of the greatest groups in history, and what else do you need to know?
Since O’Reilly wants to write the Kinks out of the British Invasion, here’s their most anti-privilege album ever:
[T]he hallmark of much of the opposition to health care reform has been a lot of people who don’t appear to have any idea what they’re talking about.
I’m convinced there’s a connection between current GOP dysfunction:
[...] what’s happened is that mainstream conservatives have allowed the Michele Bachmanns and Louie Gohmerts and Tim Huelskamps – and the Glenn Becks and Rush Limbaughs – to define “real” conservative ideas. And those folks aren’t really more conservative than, say, John Boehner or Mitch McConnell; they’re just shills and hucksters, either because they really believe a lot of nonsense or because it’s in their interest to peddle it to other chumps.
and new anti-vaccination title Melanie’s Marvelous Measles:
Often today, we are being bombarded with messages from vested interests to fear all diseases in order for someone to sell some potion or vaccine, when, in fact, history shows that in industrialized countries, these diseases are quite benign and, according to natural health sources, beneficial to the body.
I may need to break out the calipers and cephalic index hoop, but I will find it, never fear. In closing, here’s some words of hope from a Marvelous Measles’ reviewer:
A long overdue book on the unexpected and delightful upside to a potentially deadly infectious disease. I look forward to “Toby’s Terrific TB” and “Polly’s Precious Polio.”
Measles malarky via Salon’s Katie Mcdonough; Banjo Salve in a roundabout way via CT Indie.
Anonymous hacked into the email accounts of Syrian officials and their advisers and are posting troves of confidential messages online.
One of my absolute favorites so far is a message from a press attaché to Syrian President Assad on how to put one over on the gullible rubes in flyover country:
She advised: “It is hugely important and worth mentioning that ‘mistakes’ have been done in the beginning of the crises because we did not have a well-organized ‘police force.’ American psyche can be easily manipulated when they hear that there are ‘mistakes’ done and now we are ‘fixing it.’
She’s got us dead-to-rights there. It almost reads like a PR memo from Karl Rove to GW.
I really can’t get enough of the thoughtgarbarge that emanates from this woman’s headsewer:
Hors D’oeuvres
The Obama Administration is threatening to veto SOPA/PIPA’s cousin CISPA. Much as I rag on those guys at times, they have a very good record on opposing these sorts of internet invasion bills, and I’m happy to give credit when it is due. (0 comments)Which One Are You -- Tim Conway or Don Knotts?
Via TPM, sounds like South Carolina’s Rollercoaster of Love is ratcheting up the incline o’perversity agin’:Former South Carolina Gov. Mark Sanford must appear in court two days after running for a vacant congressional seat to answer a complaint that he trespassed at his ex-wife’s home, according to court documents acquired by The Associated Press on Tuesday. > more ... (0 comments)
Actual Living Pro-labor Republicans Sighted?
Given that the bill itself seems to be redundant–a bill requiring the NLRB to observe quorum rules?–to the extent that voting for it is essentially a slap at labor, the Republican no votes here are probably a legit accounting of which House Repubs aren’t completely antagonistic to labor. The number appears to be ten, though > more ... (2 comments)I honestly hadn’t given it too much thought, and was probably disposed against it just because of who was for it, but Emily makes a very strong case for why Israeli spy Jonathan Pollard ought to be released from prison. She argues that it makes sense on humanitarian and political grounds, and I agree with > more ... (0 comments)This Is What the Internets Were Made For
As much as I love WJHL’s article Witnesses: Man drove 90 mph with genitals hanging out the window (and with lines like:At over 90 miles per hour, he had his penis out [the window]… he was masturbating… and that’s when it got really, really bad. I wouldn’t look over any more, and I wrote his tag number down on my hand, which I believe he noticed, and he exited very quickly.
> more ... (0 comments)An unintentional libertarian anthem/meditation from Sully at the Dish:By then, the subtleties, the mixes of CBD and THC, the nuances of sativa and indica strains will all be turned by the genius of the free market into something quite marvelous. We will finally have made of this weed what was long made of the simple grape. And we will all be happier.
> more ... (0 comments)Jack Shafer says “Foreign Correspondents”: Pyongyang reliably remains defiant; talks have resumed or been proposed, canceled, or stalled, while a U.S. envoy seeks to lure the North back to those talks to restart the dialog; North Korea is bluffing, blustering, or is engaging in brinksmanship; tensions are grim, rising, or growing—but rarely reduced, probably because > more ... (0 comments)Not Too Tired To Fight, Just Too Bored This Time
If it’s okay with you, I’m just going to take a powder on this one. It’s only minimally news, we knew that Obama wants to cut “entitlements” already, only now he’s just putting it in an official document that is going to be duly ignored by Paul Ryan in a matter of months. The article > more ... (0 comments)Plebs is coming to ITV: httpv://youtu.be/xlm1VAN4XXQ Somewhat tangentially, I ran across a Cicero quote just recently impuning the moral fiber of the poor; it reminded me of our own current and continuing struggle with the morality of poverty: Gaius Gracchus passed a grain law: this delighted the plebs, for an abundance of food could now be had > more ... (0 comments)What's the average amount of times a smartphone user visits Facebook per day?
Fourteen. I’m a little under that, with zero on most days. Really, Facebook is only still useful to me as a way of handling event correspondence, which coupled with the (fairly nominal but needless and annoying) social effects of closing my account is the reason why I still have it. In a word, inertia. Y’all > more ... (2 comments)I Am Gonna Get Pranked *Hard* Come April Fool's Day
What with one thing or another — brain cells giving their final, weak-ass fuck; supposed leaders of society running around like they lost their damn minds; dogs and cats, living together, mass hysteria — I find I can no longer tell what’s an actual news story anymore, and what’s some made-up middle-school fart-type-joke. Via the Raw > more ... (2 comments)Ketchikan’s KRBD recently broadcast a story about Congressman Don Young (R-AK). In one segment, Young waxed nostalgic about Tha Browns of his youth: My father had a ranch. We used to hire 50 to 60 wetbacks to pick tomatoes, you know. It takes two people to pick the same tomatoes now. It’s all done by machine. Today’s > more ... (0 comments)New Hampshire is moving forward with repeal of the state Stand Your Ground law. Of course, New Hampshire is a “blue” state generally. But it’s quite gun-friendly, with a pronounced libertarian ethos. So this could be a somewhat risky move, and if you read the article, it looks like the paranoiac NRA-loving assholes are in rare > more ... (0 comments)You know what pisses me off? Any jibber jabber at SCOTUS about hurting the fee fees of backward states like Alabama. The question is whether legislating against gays marrying (like legislating against different races marrying) violates equal protection. None of this has anything to do with whether southern governors will have a Sad, or > more ... (1 comments)If The Tolerators Are Intolerant Of The Tolerant, Will The Intolerators Be Tolerant Once More?
God’s precious accident, Texas Gov. Rick Perry, had a brain/mouth-leak today about Mean Gays: “The underlying problem is that there is this very vocal, very litigious minority of Americans willing to legally attack anybody who dares utter a phrase or even a name that they don’t agree with,” he said. “In a twisting of logic, they > more ... (0 comments)Your Daily FOX News Desperation Play On Gay Marriage
To paraphrase: Yeah, sure, a lot of people say they like same-sex marriage. But maybe they secretly don’t. Also, what about all those state bans! You know, the ones that passed nearly a decade ago, during which time opinion has changed rapidly on the issue, thus invaliding my premise. Also, Prop 8! Remember when the > more ... (1 comments)Recent Trackbacks
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