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The Who Sing to the Obama Faithful

I must admit that as soon as I heard that The Who would be the halftime entertainment at the Super Bowl, the timeliness of what would likely be their last song immediately crossed my mind. However, that didn’t lessen the impact of seeing the aging rockers belt out their classic, “Won’t Get Fooled Again,” although this time with more significance for America than at any time since the song was written. The enthusiastic crowd - thousands of whom undoubtedly sport Obama/Biden bumper stickers on their vehicles - joined Townshend and Daltrey in thunderous unison each time the line “We don’t get fooled again” was sung. Ironically, the extent to which the song indicts Obama was probably lost on all, save the venerable old Englishmen themselves, who hail from a bygone era when the left was actually anti-establishment.

Certainly, there has not (yet) been “fighting in the street” here in America, but most of the Obama faithful do believe that the “change” he has promised represents a “new revolution,” whilst opponents certainly object to the “new constitution.” I’m not sure why, since as Jay Leno quipped a few years back, we’re not using the old one anyway. In any case, as Townshend says to begin the second verse, “the change it had to come.” What we are changing from and what we are changing into are questions that Townshend leaves to us to answer.

Fittingly, the word “change” is used five times during the song. However, the real message of the song is summed up in the last verse.

“There’s nothing in the street
Looks any different to me
And the slogans are replaced, bye the bye.
And the parting on the left
Is now parting on the right,
And the beards have all grown longer overnight.”

It is hard to believe that these words were written in the early 1970’s, as well as they describe the Obama campaign and presidency. Certainly, the slogans have been replaced. Obama started his presidential campaign as an anti-war candidate. Upon receiving the Democratic nomination for president, he subtly changed his stance from being anti-war to arguing that America was merely “in the wrong war.” Now, as he escalates the war in Afghanistan, expands that war into Pakistan, and revives his predecessor’s antagonism towards Iran, we find that even Iraq is not such a wrong war that we will not be leaving thirty to fifty thousand troops there after our combat mission officially ends. Haven’t we heard this strategy before?

Regarding “parting on the left now parting on the right,” the neo-conservatives that Obama was supposedly the antithesis of during his campaign couldn’t be cheering his war-mongering any more enthusiastically. While there is obligatory criticism by Republicans towards some of his tactical decisions or supposed hesitation in making them, they do not fail to dutifully commend the emperor for his overall strategic plan: more war, more debt, and – just as in every year of the Bush administration – the largest total DOD budget in American history (counting the actual on-budget Defense budget, the appropriations for the active wars, and the Homeland Security expenditures on the war formerly known as “The War on Terror”).

Domestically, those who hoped that “Change” meant an end to or at least a decrease in corporate welfare have been disappointed as well. In a classic bait-and-switch, it turns out that his signature health care “reform” plan is nothing more than a gift-wrapped half trillion dollars per year presented to corporate health insurance giants, courtesy of American taxpayers who will now have no choice but to buy their insurance. It is hard to imagine how any self-respecting progressive can “smile and grin” at this change, but so far they still do. The hypnotized may never lie, but they also seem completely unable to tell when they are being robbed blind.

Of course, President Obama did at least do something about the Bush administration’s practices of spying on its own citizens, tapping their phones, and reading their e-mails (to keep them safe). He sent a team of lawyers to court to defend all of these abominable practices, hoping to solidify his legal sanction to do exactly the same thing. This shouldn’t have surprised anyone, since while still in the U.S. Senate, Obama voted to grant immunity to telephone companies who complied with the Bush administrations invasions. Perhaps they were expecting Obama himself to “change” on this issue once he became president.

Finally, Obama had promised to go through every one of President Bush’s executive orders and overturn any that “trampled upon liberty.” Having completed his review, the only executive orders overturned or considered relate to stem cell research, oil drilling on federal land, and Bush’s “gag order” on international aid organizations regarding abortion. Conspicuously absent from the list are the infamous orders wherein Bush granted his office vast new powers during a state of emergency, which the hysterical Keith Olbermann quite justifiably wet himself over during several of his anti-Bush diatribes.

To summarize, let us review what liberals/progressives said they hated about the Bush administration. Unless memory fails, it was his immoral and unfunded wars, his preferential treatment of Wall Street and large corporations at the expense of Main Street, his illegal spying on and wiretapping of American citizens in the name of security, and his assumption of dictatorial powers via executive orders and a rubber-stamp Republican Congress. For all of those who voted for Obama to protest and end these atrocities, the last lines of “Won’t Get Fooled Again” couldn’t be more appropriate.

“Meet the new boss. Same as the old boss.”

Indeed he is. We have been fooled again, and if we simply put the neo-conservative Republicans back into office, it won’t be much different the next time, either. Isn’t it time we stopped doing the same thing over and over again and expecting a different result?

Check out Tom Mullen’s new book, A Return to Common Sense: Reawakening Liberty in the Inhabitants of America. Right Here!

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© Thomas Mullen 2010




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The Who Sing to the Obama Faithful

Yes! i myself was thinking the same thing.
It was strange for me..........

It's the resentment of the Cousins

they have no choice. The
ANTICAPITALISTIC
MENTALITY
by
LUDWIG VON MISES explains it quite clearly the role of entertainers.

http://mises.org/etexts/anticap.pdf

Wow my thoughts exactly.

I had the same things running through my head during that song at the super bowl.

By far the best decade for

By far the best decade for music was the 70's..

“Defiance of God’s Law will eventually bring havoc to a society.” - Dr. Ron Paul

The 1960s...

...beg to differ.

Split the difference

'64 to '74. Hits the Stones and the Beatles, skips disco.

The Who's Libertarian Themes run Deep

The Who are more than a one hit libertarian wonder.

Tommy is an album about a traumatized boy, going through life in a deaf, dumb, and blind state, awakening to celebrity only to find despair as he discovers he's just being manipulated and the masses that worship him are hopeless idiots.

Won't Get fooled Again is a track on an incompleted concept album originally titled "Lifehouse" which was set in a green-totalitarianism that had wiped out individuality. But humanity is rediscovered. All the songs on "Who's Next" celebrate the individual.

'Baba O'Reilly' (Teenage Wasteland) is about youth wasted on institutional indoctrination (namely fraud religions) "...I don't need to be forgiven"
'Bargain' is about the sacrifice for purpose, truth and meaning "...to find you, I'll suffer anything and be glad.".
'Going Mobile' is about the freedom of the automobile "...I don't care about pollution, I'm an air-conditioned gypsy. That's my solution. Watch the police and the taxman miss me."
"Won't Get Fooled Again" is about the futility of violent revolution
(THIS SONG SHOULD BE RON PAUL'S ANTHEM)

The Album 'Quadrophenia' re-explores the Tommy theme of disillusionment and the liberation of self expression.

And the theme continues in their most recent album- 'Endless Wire' which has a couple gems (and some crap too).

Check out "A Man in a Purple Dress"- which is a terrific, in your face protest song.

I love this band. I regret not being old enough to see them in there prime '69-'75. They were always raw, and passionate, and deep. They were British nutcases, hypies with afinity for ROCK, revolting against the statist-despair associated with the decay of the British Empire.

I posted the lyrics and a video here a few days ago:

http://www.dailypaul.com/node/121774

Brilliant, Vanilla Gorilla. Thanks

Hate to admit it but despite listening to this music since college, never realized before this moment how wonderful the meaning behind it is. Hope I'm not the only one.

More important for all, everybody knows this music and thanks to this post it should be clear that every lover of liberty has a fantastic opening to awaken others whenever it is played.

Maybe this is the reason why this music is so persistent, that people are responding to the message, without really being aware of it?

Deep. Nice.

Yeah, that song is eerily apropos. Lovely essay.

Unfortunately, I haven't seen much clarity coming from the musicians of that generation (or any generation) regarding the current state of the State (except for Arlo Guthrie - big hats off!). They all seem in lock step - diehard statists. I hope you are right, though, and the members of the Who are different.

I am always shocked when artists are reflexive statists. It is a harsh contradiction. Art requires liberty in every way. (I noticed someone on the DP named "Artists for RP" - very cool - hello!...) Anyway, it boggles my mind when artists refuse to think things through regarding the state...

I had a lot of feelings seeing the Who play at the Super Bowl. They are so establishment to me, notwithstanding the subject of that particular song. They are "the New Boss". I guess it's all about demographics and advertising... but we were disappointed it was them - would have liked to see have seen some new American blood up there.

All you artists and musicians out there on the DP - Hoorah!!!!

Offended

The Who "establishment"?

"Old?" Yes. "Sad cabaret act impersonating themselves?" Yes. "Establishment?" Don't be ridiculous.

99% of the crap that is churned out by big-media today is your 'establishment'. See "American Idol" for a mountain of heaping, pointless crap. If The Who were born today they would never be permitted to even cut a record.

There is nothing that challenges the "system" today. It is all inane, shallow, talentless, and safe. Rock has been dumbed down to the lowest common denominator. Even rap music has been castrated by the machine.

Allow me to posit this image before you: Beyonce glorifying two dozen stormtroopers at the emmys.

I rest my case.

"Long Live Rock."- the Who

Establishment, as in

established. Yeah, doing it for 45 years might "establish" one. That is what I meant.

Didn't mean to offend you, VanillaG. The Who makes quality music. I am a musician. As such, yes, it does annoy me when the "established for 45 years" guys whom we've been seeing over and over for 45 years get these gigs. To me, it's boring.

However, I'm glad you enjoyed it! You needn't be offended by me.

That's Fair

All fair comments. I say better The old Who than Beyonce and her stormtroopers.

I am totally WITH you there!

Really, really sickening.

I don't watch much TV, but watching the Superbowl ads was a dark reminder of Amerika's current values... Beyonce is an excellent example.

I saw Roger Daltrey playing Scrooge in a musical Christmas Carol about 6 years ago. He was electrifying! An incredibly powerful talent. It was a treat.

"Won't Get Fooled Again" is THE quintessential rock song...

I contend the greatest rock song ever.

Rock music from that era, by its very nature, was about rebellion in the first place.

No song framed that idea better in my opinion.

Even the Doors (who came close) didn't touch this tune.

"We have allowed our nation to be over-taxed, over-regulated, and overrun by bureaucrats. The founders would be ashamed of us for what we are putting up with."
-Ron Paul

Our Band

does that song but we sing
"We just got fooled again"
Peace

Tom Mullen's picture

LOL! That is awesome

so much irony--

bump

it's hard to be awake; it's easier to dream--