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Lost Your Hair

2025年12月9日 06:18

As a child born at the end of 1962, I caught the dying gasp of the Beatles run as a band. My family bought a copy of the 45 RPM single Let it Be, released in 1970. I suppose by that time, the band was already a thing of the past, but my older brothers (by one and two years) and I sat in front of the family hi-fi and listened to it repeatedly. The flip side was You Know My Name (Look Up the Number), which, as a music obsessed adult, now strikes me as poorly executed filler, but as a child, it was simply weird, so we never flipped the record over for a break. We just listened to Let It Be and Let It Be and Let It Be.

For the next six years. I immersed myself in popular music. I latched onto the Beach Boys’ Endless Summer, Elton John’s Goodbye Yellow Brick Road, and much of the music that I heard on the radio, Sweet’s Ballroom Blitz, R. Dean Taylor’s Indiana Wants Me, Zeppelin’s Black Dog, etc. Like most young listeners, I gravitated towards whatever songs my preteen classmates played. During that period the Beatles music was everywhere.

For Christmas one year, my mother bought me what is colloquially known as the Beatles Red Album, the hits from 1962-1966. With that album as my launch pad, I sought out other early Beatles compilations, my favorite being Rock ‘n’ Roll Music which I listened to nonstop until my cassette tape stretched out and broke. My mother also bought my brother the Blue Album, hits from 1967-1970. This album spent as much time on the family stereo as the Red Album.

In ninth grade, I fell in with a group of stoners. We spent our afternoons smoking pot, quoting Monty Python, and listening to the Beatles. Being high, we preferred the band’s later, more psychedelic music. I purchased Revolver, Sgt. Pepper, Magical Mystery Tour, The White Album and Abbey Road. I spent countless hours closeted in my bedroom listening to those five albums. I can still, fifty years later, sing along with each LP from beginning to end. The songs on those five Beatles albums remain my favorite to this day.

I give this background as testimony to prove that I’m not a casual Beatles fan. By the end of high school, I identified as a Superfan. Over the decades, I’ve branched out and enjoy most musical genres, but the Beatles still show up annually on my Spotify list of top artists. So, what’s my favorite Beatles song? Don’t Pass Me By, written and sung by Ringo Starr on The White Album.

This morning, for the zillionth time, I read yet another ARTICLE trashing Ringo Starr in general and Don’t Pass Me By specifically. You might ask why Far Out Magazine, a UK pop culture website is reviewing a fifty-seven-year-old song, a song almost twice as old as half the people in the world. I’m not sure. People love to hate on this song. And it’s high time for me to speak up, cuz I’m f*cking sick of it.

Don’t Pass Me By is often cited for its simplicity, tucked in the middle of a double album exalted for its experimental tracks. But as a reminder, the Beatles made their name with simple songs like She Loves You Yeah, Yeah, Yeah? Yes, Don’t Pass Me By lacks the complexity, lyricalness, and depth of many Beatles songs, but it might very well be the most fun. No other song by the Beatles, or maybe any other band I know of, makes me want to sing along like Don’t Pass Me By.

The title of the article I read: “Is ‘you were in a car crash, and you lost your hair’ the worst lyric the Beatles ever wrote?” by Reuben Cross. It’s true, the song does include this unfortunate line:

I’m sorry that I doubted you, I was so unfair
You were in a car crash, and you lost your hair
You said that you would be late, about an hour or two
I said that’s alright, I’m waiting here, just waiting to hear from you

But the line isn’t the only complaint Cross has with the song. In his article, before he starts digging into this one lyric, he slams the backing track: “The honky-tonk piano and bluegrass violins are grating to say the least.” I disagree, Mr. Cross. The bluegrass flair is what makes the song amazing. In fact, as a one-time Beatles Superfan, it’s my opinion that those violins might be the most charming aspect of the entire White Album.

In the second to last paragraph, Cross briefly addresses the lost your hair line “at no other point does (Starr) mention the person he is pining over suffering from traumatic alopecia.” I don’t know if Cross is being willfully ignorant, trying to be funny, or is just stupid, but ‘lost your hair’ is clearly an idiom that was in usage when the song was written—much like ‘lost your mind’ or ‘lost your shit.’

Regardless, the White Album easily has worse lyrics. The very next song on the album goes like this (repeated three times, and that’s the whole song):

Why don’t we d-do it in the road?
Why don’t we do it in the road?
Why don’t we do it in the road? Hmm
Why don’t we do it in the road?
No one will be watching us
Why don’t we do it in the road?

Much better? Absolutely, people say, because the song was written by Paul McCartney. The hate directed towards Don’t Pass Me By is part of a snobbishness against Ringo Starr so many rock critics have embraced over the decades. Three of the Beatles were touched by the divine. George Harrison, McCartney and John Lennon all channeled something otherworldly during their stint with the Beatles. Ringo Starr, critics say lucked into the mix.

That’s bullshit. Starr was a solid drummer, and the fab four finally clicked when he joined the band. He just might be the mysterious force that corralled those three supernovas together into a cohesive unit that worked. Starr only wrote a couple of songs for the Beatles, and Don’t Pass Me By is easily the best. Give my song a break, before I lose my hair.  

Photo by Faizan on Unsplash

Well Played Mr. Trump

2025年7月5日 04:13

So *this* is who we are!

Sally Edelstein’s blog Envisioning the American Dream included a post yesterday (July third, the day the house approved the senate version of Project 2025) that mourned the loss of American exceptionalism. To her, exceptionalism meant a country striving towards the ideal stated in the last line of the original Pledge of Allegiance: One nation, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all.

I left a comment that I began workshopping earlier in the week on a couple of other blogs touching on the concept of American exceptionalism: American exceptionalism began its slow crawl to its grave with the U-S-A chant at the 1980 Olympics. The only exceptional part of America today is our arrogance. We are now the bullies of the world–the kid you liked in 2nd grade but became a dick long before high school. The house is about to cast the vote that will codify poverty, double-down on climate change and cast us ever closer to insolvency. The America you’re looking for is gone.

Today is the culmination of the Republican vision from my entire adult life. The rich get richer… Other benefits include more funds to deport our working class, millions of Americans losing health insurance coverage, more financial pressure on American colleges and college-bound Americans, and a last-ditch-effort to try to prove trickle-down economics can work.

A couple of populist tax cuts included in Trump’s “big, beautiful bill” directly benefit my family:  Susan earns tips, and both our kids earn overtime. All that income is now tax free. I suppose this should make me happy, but I’d rather see the nation pay down its debt. Donald Trump’s businesses have filed for bankruptcy six times. Is this his clever endgame for America?

On the day Trump solidified his first Republican nomination, I posted on Twitter: Today’s news seems like the last sentence in the first chapter of a dystopian novel. Using that analogy, I feel like today, Independence Day 2025, we’ve hit the cliffhanger chapter break immediately prior to Armageddon. The chaos of the past nine years was the exposition. Tomorrow, things get ugly.

Trump is often portrayed as an undisciplined megalomaniac. The undisciplined part just got harder to prove. Today, he achieved many long-held goals of the Republican party. That he did it on his self-imposed, symbolic deadline of Independence Day is icing on his cake. Well played, my nemesis, well played.

Buckle up, America. The ride gets rougher from here.

Photo by Sonder Quest on Unsplash

The Growing Threat of Violence

2025年6月21日 23:33

He stood on the corner before me as I crossed the street. His head bobbing and nodding, making eye contact, his lips already moving before I even made it to the sidewalk. A Fox 43 camera dangled at his side. I couldn’t hear him—a live version of Folsom Prison Blues by the Dream Syndicate filled my ears—but I already knew what he was saying. I raised a finger, the universal sign for ‘hang on a second.’ I dug my phone out of my pocket and paused my music. “What’s up?” I asked, as if I didn’t know. 

“I’m hoping to talk with you about an incident this past weekend with Sheriff Muller.” Of course. Everyone’s talking about the incident with Sheriff Muller. The Fox News guy went on for thirty seconds about Facebook memes, No Kings protests and public perceptions. He didn’t need to bother. I’m following the story closely. I’ve jumped into the online fray. 

James Muller, the Sheriff of Adams County, Pennsylvania, my county, attracted attention by posting a meme on Facebook the same day as the Gettysburg No Kings protest. He posted a photo of a white Dodge Ram pickup splattered with gallons of blood. The caption: The All New Dodge Ram Protestor Edition. I’ve included an image of the truck, but not the caption. I don’t want to make it too easy for people to repost the meme. This is humor to a seventy-nine-year-old law enforcement officer. To me, and many other citizens of my county, it’s reprehensible.   

I turned down my opportunity to be interviewed. I work in a semi-public, non-partisan position. Yes, I publish my leftist opinions weekly, but I’m not on TV. People need to seek out what I write. TV comes directly to their home. Plus, Fox News, won’t they just edit me to sound like a ranting fluffy-haired snowflake?

Unsurprisingly, the outrage against Muller isn’t universal. It falls along partisan lines. Here’s a sampling of Facebook comments associated with a neutral Pennsylvania news website that ran the story:

Melissa S: Love it. He has my vote

Wyatte E: What happen to the first amendment!?!

Christinia M: Democrats can promote assignation attempts and that is Ok. But this meme is causing such problems. Only in America.

On a side note, many of the comments echoed this sentiment: Why does any county have a SEVENTY-NINE year old sheriff??

Good question.

I couldn’t resist the urge to dive into the fray, make my opinion known. In response to a comment by John W: This outrage from the same group of people who thought it was “funny” of Kathy Griffin to post a meme of her holding the decapitated head of Donald Trump. Give me a break. #doublestandards

I responded: No, Kathy Griffin is a comedian whose job it is to shock people. Sheriff Muller’s job is to protect the very people he’s threatening. Also, if you found it abhorrent when Griffin threatened Trump, why don’t you find this abhorrent as well. Seems like you’ve got some #doublestandards of your own.

I got a couple of likes, but not the dust-up I expected.

The story seems to be growing, becoming the national news item it deserves to be. My wife and I hesitated over attending the No Kings protest fearing political violence. Since the protest, I’ve talked with a dozen people who stayed away for that very reason. As we inch ever closer to an ideological civil war, it’s not lost on me that the violent rhetoric seems to come primarily from Trump supporters, with many of the threats coming directly from the Trump administration. John W needed to reach back eight years for his Kathy Griffin example. I don’t recall any Republican politicians being handcuffed and/or arrested by the Biden administration.

Sheriff Muller’s joke about murdering citizens expressing their first amendment rights is just another step along an increasingly trodden path of citing violence as a valid method to combat dissent. When half the commentors on news websites agree with this rhetoric, how far behind can the actual violence be? I’ve heard that in discussions on Gettysburg subreddits, people are advocating against visiting our town this summer. Seems like a pretty sane idea to me.

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