RIF Radio: A working class Christmas: lefty-themed holiday songs to call attention to the reason for the season


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Monday Dec 23, 2013
North Kingstown, RI – Happy Holidays Ocean State and fellow futurists … This is Bob Plain and as always I am podcasting to you from The Hideaway on the banks of the Mattatuxet River behind the Shady Lea Mill in North Kingstown, Rhode Island. But this is a special edition of the RI Future podcast celebrating that solstice time of year – or, as we call it here in America, Christmas.

Because so many of us suffer from seasonal affective disorder, and maybe take a little bit of umbrage at all the wanton consumerism posing as peace on earth and goodwill towards all people, we put together an extended podcast today dedicated to all the Christmas tunes Jesus would want us to spin at his birthday party … none are about how disgustingly sweet our lives can be or religious dogma or getting presents. Instead our playlist – ranging from rap to rock and from punk to funk – are about the real reason for the season: building community between our brothers and sisters during this otherwise dark and depressing time of year.

Footnotes:

John Lennon “Happy Xmass (War Is Over)

The Kinks “Father Christmas”

Stevie Wonder “Someday at Christmas”

Woodie Guthrie  “1913 Massacre”

The Mighty, Mighty Bosstones “This Time of Year”

The Flaming Lips “Christmas at the Zoo”

Run DMC “Christmas Is”

The Sonics “Don’t Believe in Christmas”

The Ramones “Merry Christmas, I don’t want to fight tonight”

Robert Earl Keen’s “Merry Christmas from the Family”

Steve Earle “Christmas Time in Washington”

Billy Squier “Christmas Is the Time to Say I Love You”

Simon and Garfunkel “Silent Night”

MXPX “Auld Lang Syne”

Happy Labor Day: A history of working class music


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Happy Labor Day, Rhode Island. Enjoy your day off, and thank a union member that you get them. Here are some of my favorite working class songs to help you celebrate.

While all such lists much start with Dust Bowl Poet Woody Guthrie, the godfather of the modern working class song and a real life folk hero himself, he certainly wasn’t the first one to sing about labor struggles.

That dubious distinction belongs to the early American slaves.

Blues guitarists like Leadbelly took it from there.

And then artists like Johnny Cash took over.

Joan Baez was one of the folk singers to follow in Woodie Guthrie’s footsteps by singing about folk heroes like Joe Hill, most famous for saying, “Don’t mourn. Organize.”

All of a sudden, the working class was a meme in pop music once again.

Reggae legend Bob Marley wrote many songs about the struggles of black people. This one is my favorite.

Once John Lennon shed Paul and Ringo, he joined in too:

But no one since Woodie Guthrie has better portrayed the working class struggle than Bruce Springsteen. This song is called “Factory”

Through the mansions of fear, through the mansions of pain
I see my daddy walking through the factory gate in the rain
Factory takes his hearing, but he understands
He’s just a working, a working a working man

End of the day, factory whistle cries
Men walk through the gates with death in their eyes
And you just better believe boy somebody’s gonna get hurt tonight
It’s the work, the working, just the working life

The eighties, for reasons related to Ronald Reagan, wasn’t the best era for working class anthems, but punk bands kept the tradition alive.

So did country music, and to some extent Hollywood:

Here’s another of my favorite working class songs that come from the stage. “Annie” is one of America’s great examples of anti-government propaganda – the poor kids are mistreated in the public orphanage until Daddy Warbucks comes and rescues the lucky ones. The American dream, indeed.

In the 1990’s rap acts like Public Enemy kept alive the tradition of creating music about the struggles of the poor.

And today, artists like Steve Earle are keeping the tradition alive.

Progress Report: Downside of High Stakes Testing; More WPRI Poll Results; Ann Coulter on RI Voter ID; Patch


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Downtown Providence from the Providence River. (Photo by Bob Plain)

Last week we reported that education activists plan to attend Thursday’s Board of Regents meeting to protest new graduation requirements tied to high stakes testing. Today, the Providence Journal reports that “If those rules were already in place, 44 percent of this year’s seniors would be in jeopardy of not receiving a diploma, based on their poor math performance last year on the [NECAPs].”

Proponents of the change say it will help raise the level of education in the Ocean State, while opponents, according to ProJo education writer Jennifer Jordan “say education officials are forcing students to bear the consequences of a failed education system — with disastrous consequences. Without a diploma, young people cannot join the Army, participate in programs such as City Year, or apply to college.”

Speaking of high stakes testing, the Journal also runs this AP story about the El Paso, Texas school district that “was trying to push out hundreds of low-performing sophomores to prevent them from taking accountability tests.”

More WPRI poll results: Gov. Chafee is still unpopular but his approval rating is improving, while Angel Taveras and Gina Raimondo are deadlocked each with 58 percent approval ratings … it’s gonna be an interesting gubernatorial campaign in 2014!!

Did you know conservative pundit Ann Coulter uses Rhode Island as an example when she advocates for voter ID laws. According to Politifact, she told “The View” on Thursday, “One of the first states in the union to pass voter-ID bills was Rhode Island, 85 percent Democratic legislature,” she said. “And who pushed it? A black Democrat in the House, a black Democrat in the Senate. That’s a fact.” It’s true our voter ID law was supported by minority legislators in both chambers but it’s not true that our law was among the first in the country.

Even the gas is better in Massachusetts, or at least cheaper.

I mentioned Patch in yesterday’s Progress Report and it attracted some interesting comments. It’s true that Patch is slashing editorial budgets while increasing the workload on the local editors. It’s also true that many of the local editors don’t place a high value on hard news. One Patch editor told me they don’t even cover their local school committee!! Cranston Patch, on the other hand, does a great job doing real journalism on the community it covers.

Best correction of the day: “The tortoise won its race with the hare in Aesop’s fable about those animals. A clue in Sunday’s crossword puzzle inaccurately described the race’s outcome.”

The first presidential debate is tonight … here’s how the candidates will try to dodge the tough questions.

Today in 1967, the legendary Woodie Guthrie died.