Posted on 12/20/2004 3:51:46 AM PST by crushelits
It was bad enough the first time around.
I just got a really really bad mental picture from this paragraph. I knew the music business was tough and cutthroat, but really ...
I respect Geldof for DOING something, but just like last time, I have to wonder who this is going to benefit. I think these efforts would have been better spent on telling the UN to DO ITS JOB. Geldof's first go-round led to food rotting on docks and supplying all the wrong people. The road to Hell,,,
This season's lame attempt at controversy, courtesy of a fading minor star.
Keep in mind, they're to trying to raise money to support research that will-presumably-be put towards AIDS research.
You figure that they could have at least thought of some new lines that are content-specific.
Another problem I have with these "LIVE AID" concerts is that they don't accomplish much of anything, other than boosting the reputations of a bunch of dilettantish, vapid pop stars, who have no real insight into this issue.
Furthermore, Harry Chapin was doing this type of thing years before Bob Geldof, Bono or any of the other-much less talented-rock musicians took up arms against poverty, famine, pestilence, insert burning social/economic issue of the day.
His family will probably still be doing the same years after these people have vanished from the scene.
Given that Geldof has been around for 28 years and Bono for 24, I dont think either of them can be classed as transitory
I've only ever heard Americans express that view. I think its a nuance between UK and American English
The line is not celebratory as in "be happy its not us". Its more of an "Understand how lucky you are and act accordingly" - - i.e. give
To answer the musical question: No. The original song was about Ethiopia, a country that has a plurality of Muslims and suffered a Marxist revolution in the late '70s. So, no. They most likely didn't know it was Christmas. The few that even acknowledged it were oppressed first by the Muslims and later by the Marxists.
Did they at least know it was Kwanzaa?
I dont think the writers of the song were thinking politics or religion. It may (just possibly) have been no more than an altruistic attempt to help starving people.
I doubt Kwanzaa is not celebrated in Africa. It was started by an American to help blacks rediscover their heritage.
http://www.historychannel.com/exhibits/holidays/kwanzaa/hist.html
I doubt=I doubt it
What a nauseating song that was!
Ah, Kwanzaa.
FReepers need to make up our own holiday to coincide with MLK day. THAT would eliminate the Kwanzaa nonsense.
Politics had everything to do with the African famine in the early 80s. Communism, to be precise.
I guess Festivus is out of the question...
That has got to be THE most cotton-candy history of Kwanzaa I have ever seen.
Where are the mentions of the murders and torture commited by it's founder?
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