Bob Dylan - Subterranean Homesick Blues

share
2
0

Recent videos from apblogs

2 Halo 3 Trailer
Nov 29, 2007
4 Original Transformers!
Jun 20, 2007
21 videos see all

what people are saying

by Andy WorthingtonFeatured WriterDandelion Saladwww.andyworthington.co.uk6 June 2009On Monday, just hours after the first war crimes hearing for four months was convened at Guantnamo, and just hours before the Pentagon announced that a sixth prisoner had died, apparently by committing suicide, the small group of reporters less than a dozen, according to Michelle Shephard of [...]
Jun
6
gingatao commented on this video
The first ever music video?
Jan
17
LoudonWakeful added this video and said
Is that Ginsberg lurking to the left?
Jan
16
Zvika Krieger at TNR has a solid report on the demise and dissolution of the Minuteman movement:In this environment, Gilchrist's movement is falling apart, overtaken by new members whom he describes as "troublemakers with personality disorders and criminal propensities." In contrast, he insists that the group's original members were able to give voice to the immigration concerns of ordinary Americans because they demonstrated "a passionate allegiance to the United States of America and its priceless principles." There is no doubt that the Minutemen--aided by sympathizers in the media like Lou Dobbs--drove the national conversation in 2005. But whether the enormous wellspring of American anger over illegal immigration that they claim to have tapped into actually existed is another question.However, it's not merely Gilchrist's organization (The Minuteman Project) that's falling apart; so is the other major "Minuteman" outfit, cofounder Chris Simcox's Minuteman Civil Defense Corps.For what it's worth, I reported on this aspect of the story, as well as Gilchrist's, back in October for The American Prospect:Today the Minuteman movement is beyond mere disarray; it is in the early stages of complete decay. The arc of the Minutemen's decline and fall happens to trace almost precisely that of previous right-wing populist movements, notably the Klan of the 1920s and the militias of the 1990s. The pattern goes like this: The group is beset by financial manipulators who seem naturally drawn to them. Then, following an initial wave of popularity, the group splinters under the pressure of competing egos into smaller, more virulent entities who then unleash acts of public ugliness and violence that eventually relegate them to the fringes.The Minutemen haven't quite reached that final stage yet, but they are well on their way. And while that may be welcome news to those who oppose the Minutemen's nativist agenda, that last stage represents some natural and equally toxic consequences.
Nov
2008
Webcruiser commented on this video
I like it.
Mar
2008

add a comment

2000 characters left.
First collected by apblogs
Feb 28, 2007
from youtube.com
join Your favorite videos on the web, in one place. Start your collection now.

advertisement

related videos

tags

collected by 30 people

details

676 views

original description

... from D. A. Pennebaker's film, Dont Look Back (a documentary on Bob Dylan's tour of England in 1965). In the film, Dylan holds up cue cards for the audience ...
Flag this Video as inappropriate or broken