I can't remember if I cried
When I read about his widowed bride
But something touched me deep inside
The day the music died
Perhaps the
most dissected lyrics in all of rock music (maybe except for that walrus
thing). I will now shed light on the
true meaning (no matter what Don McLean might try to get you to believe).
Patrick L. Smith, the left-leaning columnist at the left-leaning
Salon has offered
the following:
I have watched my favorite daily…At
the pace of crabgrass across a lawn, its correspondents have cautiously but
stealthily corrupted the narrative.
Corrupting the narrative – appropriate for just about any
mainstream news organization. In this
case, he is writing of the New York Times. The specific issue upon which he is
commenting is almost irrelevant, secondary to the story. A left-leaning columnist at a left-leaning
site is openly questioning the left-leaning mouthpiece of the empire.
Let’s just say that December 22, 2015 (the date of the
column), is the day the music died (well, at least had a heart palpitation, but
indulge me).
For those curious about the specific topic…
Forgetting, not paying attention
and feeling as opposed to thinking are, of course, acts of patriotism in our
great nation. Let us, then, do the un-American thing together as we consider
the just-agreed plan to end the violence in Syria and send its people into a
post-crisis future.
When it comes to questioning empire, the segments of the left
and most libertarians have much in common.
But this isn’t the good stuff.
Smith writes of the recent UN resolution regarding Syria,
calling for a cease-fire and for talks to include the Assad government. I know; I bet you think this is somehow an
about-face for the empire. Not according
to the Times. After listing several stipulations in the
resolution, the Smith offers:
Do not miss this, finally: The U.N.
resolution makes no mention of President Assad. There is no stipulation that he
is to step down, or aside, or do anything else as a precondition of a
settlement. Syrians are left to determine for themselves what place, if any,
Assad has in their future political formations.
Recognize any of this? Readers of
this column should. These provisions vary little from a settlement plan Sergei
Lavrov put on the table in Vienna last October, when a new round of talks among
more than a dozen of the Russian foreign minister’s counterparts began.
On the other hand, readers of our
corporate media, notably the New York Times, will be terribly confused at this
point. They have been reading for some time that the U.N. resolution last
Friday in New York was the consequence of Secretary of State Kerry’s arduous
diplomacy. Facts being facts, the record the record, and history being history,
this takes a lot of forgetting.
The only “diplomacy” that could be credited to Kerry in this
regard is that which he has accomplished within the Obama administration, many
members of which seem prepared to start a nuclear war.
Smith, the leftist, goes on to recite several bits of evidence
in support of the Times’ failures. I won’t
repeat these here.
So bye, bye, Miss American Pie
Drove my Chevy to the levee but the levee
was dry
And them good ole boys were drinking whiskey
'n rye
Singin' this'll be the day that I die
This'll be the day that I die
The death of The New
York Times – does it get any more “bye, bye, Miss American Pie” than
that?
Someone on the left put a knife in the Times; isn’t that a nice thought?
When my eyes were becoming wide open - - such opening being aided by Zerohedge and J.H.K and T.B.P. along the way - - I stopped buying the Sunday Times after more than a decade.
ReplyDeleteI see things more clearly now, and sleep better too. I see the evil of American Empire . . . .
SnowieGeorgie