Create an Account
username: password:
 
  MemeStreams Logo

MemeStreams Discussion

search


This page contains all of the posts and discussion on MemeStreams referencing the following web page: Four years later, and we are still rolling, downhill.. (gravity is a bitch). You can find discussions on MemeStreams as you surf the web, even if you aren't a MemeStreams member, using the Threads Bookmarklet.

Four years later, and we are still rolling, downhill.. (gravity is a bitch)
by Rattle at 8:38 pm EDT, Sep 11, 2005

Its been awhile since I had a good old fashioned unstructured rant..

As I recall, Let's Roll was offered by Neil Young as a free download when released. I'd assume that should still be the case, it being freely available, but I can't find it anywhere I can link to.

I'm sure a place exists.. But Young's label doesn't appear to be doing anything link/search engine friendly. And all search results are pretty much spammed out.

I give you, ladies and gentleman, a perfect example of how the record industry has failed to use the Internet to do something culturally significant. Its a small example, but a perfect one. "Out of the sky, into the dirt."

I have a copy of the mp3, but color me reluctant when it comes to making it available online. I'd have to take the statement a level further and publicly offer to burn CD's outside my recording industry classes. If I want that kind of heat, I might as well just go for broke get a few bumper-sickers for my car that say things like "Officer, yes I'm speeding, fuck off.", "I break for nothing.", and a few of those yellow triangle signs you stick on the inside of your windows that say "Guns on board" and "Drugs on board". To make room, I'll just leave off the stickers for the ACLU and the EFF because I don't expect them to ever be helpful any time I'm the one getting screwed over.

But don't worry, the right to be a cantankerous asshole still exists thanks to it being upheld in ways ranging from Bill O'Reilly to myself. Just don't expect it to be done in a way that might actually change or provoke anything with its hands on the reigns of power. The terrorists couldn't change that.

So, as we graduate terror high school and get our diploma, what have we learned? I'll give you a hint, it has something to do with that fact that they did not prepare us for the real world. Take a look at hurricane Katrina.

When viewed through the right lens, the response to this hurricane, a biological attack, a major earthquake, a nuclear detonation in a major city, and a host of other real threats, all begins to look exactly the same. Its a good lens to look through, but right now it might make you nausious. In the last election the people trusted the Bush administration to prepare America to handle this type of thing. They made it an election issue, and the people embraced it. We can't blame the hurricane being able to strike on our intelligence agencies, but the rest of the analogy -- pardon the pun -- holds water.

If all we know how to do is fight fire with fire, we are not positioned well for the long term, as some of mankind's recent wet tragedies allow to be spille... [ Read More (0.2k in body) ]


 
RE: Four years later, and we are still rolling, downhill.. (gravity is a bitch)
by Vile at 11:06 pm EDT, Sep 11, 2005

What's September 11th? Isn't that All Saint's Day? By the way, "Let's Roll" was one of Neil's shittiest songs. That's why you can't find it anymore. No one wants it. The album it was on wasn't much better. His new single is worthwhile, though. Seems that aneurysm did him some good. Hopefully the past four years taught us what the previous forty should have...Don't vote. It makes no difference, either way. People wanna get fucked over and you get what you deserve...I've never been cheated out of anything in life, and neither have most people. Most lives tend to fit the living like custom-tailored gloves...Long live America.

Rattle wrote:
Its been awhile since I had a good old fashioned unstructured rant..

As I recall, Let's Roll was offered by Neil Young as a free download when released. I'd assume that should still be the case, it being freely available, but I can't find it anywhere I can link to.

I'm sure a place exists.. But Young's label doesn't appear to be doing anything link/search engine friendly. And all search results are pretty much spammed out.

I give you, ladies and gentleman, a perfect example of how the record industry has failed to use the Internet to do something culturally significant. Its a small example, but a perfect one. "Out of the sky, into the dirt."

I have a copy of the mp3, but color me reluctant when it comes to making it available online. I'd have to take the statement a level further and publicly offer to burn CD's outside my recording industry classes. If I want that kind of heat, I might as well just go for broke get a few bumper-sickers for my car that say things like "Officer, yes I'm speeding, fuck off.", "I break for nothing.", and a few of those yellow triangle signs you stick on the inside of your windows that say "Guns on board" and "Drugs on board". To make room, I'll just leave off the stickers for the ACLU and the EFF because I don't expect them to ever be helpful any time I'm the one getting screwed over.

But don't worry, the right to be a cantankerous asshole still exists thanks to it being upheld in ways ranging from Bill O'Reilly to myself. Just don't expect it to be done in a way that might actually change or provoke anything with its hands on the reigns of power. The terrorists couldn't change that.

So, as we graduate terror high school and get our diploma, what have we learned? I'll give you a hint, it has something to do with that fact that they did not prepare us for the real world. Take a look at hurricane Katrina.

When viewed through ... [ Read More (0.3k in body) ]


 
 
Powered By Industrial Memetics