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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
1 y

I Heard Ol’ Neil
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www.theamericanconservative.com

I Heard Ol’ Neil

Music I Heard Ol’ Neil  Politically, Young is nothing if not Whitmanesque, containing multitudes. Prepping for a molasses-slow crawl up the Queen Elizabeth Way to Toronto in hopes of seeing 78-year-old Neil Young bash out “Powderfinger” and caterwaul “Like a Hurricane,” I reread two essential texts of Canadiana: Jimmy McDonough’s Young biography Shakey (2002), the best rock’n’roll bio I have ever read (admittedly, the field is fallow), and the philosopher George Grant’s Lament for a Nation (1965), the meditation of a “Red Tory” on the absorption of Canada into the economic and military sphere and “homogenized culture of the American Empire.” Grant’s 92-page masterpiece was occasioned by the defeat of the progressive conservative prime minister (1957-1963) John Diefenbaker, a small-town Saskatchewan attorney who had defied Kennedy administration Cold Warriors by rejecting the placement of nuclear-tipped missiles in Canada. His advocacy of a “kind of neutralism, a simple refusal to accept any demand from the present imperialism” brought “the full weight of the North American establishment” down upon poor Diefenbaker. Sophisticated Canadian liberals played the role of Uncle Sam’s lapdog in these debates while the hayseed Diefenbaker, with his rural and provincial base of support, stood manfully against the colossus. “The election of 1963 was the first time in our history,” marveled Grant, that “a government was brought down for standing up to the Americans.” The low-brow analogue of this expression of old-style Canadian conservatism might be the Guess Who’s anthem of Great White North anti-Americanism, “American Woman”—“I don’t need your war machines/I don’t need your ghetto scenes”—cowritten by Neil Young’s old buddy from the Winnipeg bar scene, Randy Bachman. Of course George Grant understood that a healthy nationalism—or, much better, a healthy patriotism—is grounded in love and loyalty, not resentment or simple-minded anti-ism. Growing up 40 miles from the border, I have long had off-kilter, something’s-not-quite-right Canuck sounds tickling my ear, thanks largely to local-content rules requiring Canadian radio to serve up Leonard Cohen and the Poppy Family and Martha and the Muffins alongside the American buffet. George Grant would approve of the intent, if not the tunes. Son of a mismatch between a philandering novelist/sportswriter and a Manitoba harridan, Canadian expatriate Neil Young didn’t need local-content regulations to invade the radio. The high-school dropout lit out for California at the age of 20, falling in with druggy scamps who probably couldn’t have read one of his dad’s hockey novels for boys, let alone works by his old man’s Canadian litterateur friends (Robertson Davies, Farley Mowat). Yet over a remarkably productive half-century, Neil Young has churned out beautifully ragged ballads and sonic booms whose evocative (if sometimes clumsy) lyrics bespeak a strange and dreamy peace-and-love flannel-shirted rural orneriness. He was in fine form in Toronto, a high-rise city that has effaced its past and doesn’t seem bothered by it in the least. Buttressed by an octogenarian rhythm section, the aptly surnamed Young pounded out an ear-crunching “Hey, hey, my, my, rock and roll will never die,” and one might almost believe that the singer will outlive the genre. Young’s Covid-deranged hissy fit about podcaster Joe Rogan’s willingness to interview medical outlaws was uncharacteristic, so let’s write that off as a favor to his friend and fellow expat Joni Mitchell. We all deserve a few mulligans, don’t we? Young has generally shied from political polemics, though his godawfully preachy early 1970’s numbers “Southern Man” and “Alabama” rival John Lennon’s “Imagine” in triggering one’s kill-the-radio impulse. (Neil, being Neil, sometimes wore a Confederate uniform in his days with the 1960’s band Buffalo Springfield.) In any event, the Southern patriots Lynyrd Skynyrd offered an enduring retort: “I heard Mr. Young sing about her/I heard ol’ Neil put her down/I hope Neil Young will remember/A Southern man don’t need him around, anyhow.” (Neil later regretted his self-righteous bilge.) Politically, Young is nothing if not Whitmanesque, containing multitudes. Elliot Roberts, his late manager, explained: “Neil is more American than anyone, even though he’s Canadian….Neil’s an isolationist. I mean, if it were up to him, we’d have no foreign aid, we’d talk to no one, we’d really deal with no one else—‘If they can’t cut it, f— ‘em.’ Neil is extreme….One minute he’s a leftist Democrat, and the next minute he’s a conservative.” Doesn’t that describe most people who haven’t been ventriloquized by Fox or MSNBC? (Greendale, his raucous 2003 album depicting a ranching family vs. the world, captures Young’s family-values-meet-Earth-First!-environmentalist orientation. It breathes Edward Abbey.) Neil Young’s 2005 album Prairie Wind, written and recorded as he awaited brain surgery and pondered mortality, conjured the pastoral Canadian memories of his youth. “It’s a dream, it’s only a dream,” he lamented, “and it’s fading, fading away.”  Patriots of Neil’s two countries know the feeling. The post I Heard Ol’ Neil appeared first on The American Conservative.
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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
1 y

Marine Veteran, 2nd Wounded Victim In Trump Assassination Attempt Identified [VIDEO]
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www.rvmnews.com

Marine Veteran, 2nd Wounded Victim In Trump Assassination Attempt Identified [VIDEO]

Marine Veteran, 2nd Wounded Victim In Trump Assassination Attempt Identified [VIDEO]
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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
1 y

Cartoon of the Day: Time to Reflect
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conservativefiringline.com

Cartoon of the Day: Time to Reflect

The following article, Cartoon of the Day: Time to Reflect, was first published on Conservative Firing Line. Cartoon of the Day: Time to Reflect. A.F. Branco Cartoon – Presidential politics in Minnesota isn’t looking good for Democrats. Trump is sneaking up fast on Biden, well within the margin of error. And after the assassination attempt on Trump, polls could well surpass Biden in the next few days. WSJ, NYT polls latest in string of … Continue reading Cartoon of the Day: Time to Reflect ...
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Intel Uncensored
Intel Uncensored
1 y

Archaeoacoustics, Elongated Skulls & Missing People in Malta’s Subterranean Megalithic Labyrinth
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api.bitchute.com

Archaeoacoustics, Elongated Skulls & Missing People in Malta’s Subterranean Megalithic Labyrinth

Archaeoacoustics, Elongated Skulls & Missing People in Malta’s Subterranean Megalithic Labyrinth - 21,490 views July 31, 2023 Stargate Voyager - Malta is one of the most mysterious islands in the world. A prehistoric civilization once thrived here building megalithic sites all over the landscape, yet its most mysterious site lies hidden deep underneath the ground. Known as the Hypogeum of Ħal Saflieni, this subterranean labyrinth of interconnecting elliptical chambers was engineered straight from the bedrock and features three different levels. - This mysterious site features an oracle chamber that resonates throughout the entire structure where 7,000 + skeletons were discovered inside - most of whom possessed ELONGATED SKULLS. Who were these ancient humanoids? - Strangest of all, stories from the 1920s recount how a group of children descended down into the Hypogeum never to return again... - Join us for the adventure of a lifetime on one of our upcoming tours, click this link for more info: https://megalithicmarvels.com/tours/ #malta #ancient #ancienthistory - FAIR USE FOR EDUCATIONAL PURPOSES - Mirrored From: https://www.youtube.com/@stargate_voyager
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AllSides - Balanced News
AllSides - Balanced News
1 y

Former President Trump survives assassination attempt, FBI IDs shooter as Thomas Matthew Crooks
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www.allsides.com

Former President Trump survives assassination attempt, FBI IDs shooter as Thomas Matthew Crooks

Former President Trump was shot at his rally in Butler, Pennsylvania, on Saturday, July 13, 2024 Trump ducked to the ground and was surrounded by Secret Service agents, who evacuated him from the scene. He later posted on Truth Social that a bullet "pierced the upper part of my right ear" Three spectators were hit by gunfire. One person was killed and two others critically injured, authorities said The FBI is investigating the shooting as an assassination attempt. The shooter has been...
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AllSides - Balanced News
AllSides - Balanced News
1 y

Thomas Matthew Crooks: What we know about the Trump attacker
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www.allsides.com

Thomas Matthew Crooks: What we know about the Trump attacker

The small Pittsburgh suburb of Bethel Park in Pennsylvania is reeling after the FBI named a young local man, Thomas Matthew Crooks, as the person who shot at Donald Trump during a campaign rally and shocked the nation. Investigators believe that Crooks, armed with a semi-automatic AR-15 rifle, opened fire at the former president while he was addressing a crowd in Butler, Pennsylvania, leaving one audience member dead and two others wounded. The 20-year-old kitchen worker was...
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AllSides - Balanced News
AllSides - Balanced News
1 y

Trump rally shooter appears to have acted alone, FBI says
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www.allsides.com

Trump rally shooter appears to have acted alone, FBI says

The FBI said Sunday that investigators have not yet identified any ideology fueling the gunman who fired at former president Donald Trump at a packed campaign rally, and they believe he carried out the horrifying assassination attempt on his own. The gunman was identified as 20-year-old Thomas Matthew Crooks, of Bethel Park, a strong math student in high school who was working as a nursing home employee. Seconds after he opened fire from a rooftop outside the rally’s security...
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Classic Rock Lovers
Classic Rock Lovers  
1 y

The song that made Def Leppard choose their guitarist
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faroutmagazine.co.uk

The song that made Def Leppard choose their guitarist

"This guy is amazing." The post The song that made Def Leppard choose their guitarist first appeared on Far Out Magazine.
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Classic Rock Lovers
Classic Rock Lovers  
1 y

Why The Prodigy’s ‘Firestarter’ is a masterclass in sampling
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faroutmagazine.co.uk

Why The Prodigy’s ‘Firestarter’ is a masterclass in sampling

A masterclass. The post Why The Prodigy’s ‘Firestarter’ is a masterclass in sampling first appeared on Far Out Magazine.
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Intel Uncensored
Intel Uncensored
1 y News & Oppinion

rumbleRumble
Richard Nixon on The Toxic Faggotry of Bohemian Grove
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