MOG MOG

WHERE THE HOKEY POKEY "IS" WHAT IT'S ALL ABOUT

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(18)



  I am taken by this song.  The sad, mournful lyric and the martial drums create a sense of time's inevitability.

   At one time I owned all of Death Cab For Cutie's music.  I won a 30G ipod here on the MOG a year & 1/2 ago and it came loaded with Death Cab/ The Postal Service and a nice assortment of cds thru the years.  About 275 song & a few videos.  By the time I figured the whole thing out, (I was just getting used to computers and knew nothing of ipods), I had lost everything the MOG had loaded into it for me.  I remember I wasn't too impressed  with DCFC at the time and said so.

Well,  I'm here to tell you, I was wrong. (did you catch that Chris?)

The more I hear Of Death Cab,  the more I become impressed.  Live n learn, huh?

I think I may put some politics in the comments so be warned.

Posted on 08/28/2008
Comments
annieander says:

I am glad to hear...both your news and this song.  Anything I can do to help facilitate your enjoyment of DCFC?  Just let me know.

Now maybe you can turn August into a fan?

If you can, I'll give Dylan another shot...Deal?

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THE fact that Barack Obama lost nine of the final 14 primaries might have something to do with the fact that, when he descends from the ether to practicalities, he reprises liberalism's most shopworn nostrums. Russia, a third-world nation with first-world missiles, is rampant; Iran is developing a missile inventory capable of delivering nuclear weapons, the development of which won't be halted by Obama's promised "aggressive personal diplomacy." Yet Obama has vowed to "cut investments in unproven missile-defense systems." Steamboats, railroads, airplanes and vaccines were "unproven" until farsighted people made investments. Furthermore, as Reuel Marc Gerecht of the American Enterprise Institute notes, Democrats will eventually embrace missile defense in Europe because they "will have nowhere else to go short of pre-emptive strikes against Iran's nuclear facilities." Obama, who might be the last person to learn that schools' cognitive outputs aren't simply functions of financial inputs, promises more money for teachers (who, as usual, are about 10 percent of the Democrats' convention delegates and alternates). He waxes indignant about approximately 150,000 jobs sent overseas each year - less than 1 percent of the number of jobs normally lost and gained in the creative destruction of America's dynamic economy. US exports are fending off a recession while he complains about free trade. He deplores NAFTA, although since it was implemented in 1994 the US, Mexican and Canadian economies have grown 50 percent, 46 percent and 54 percent, respectively. Recycling George McGovern's 1972 "Demogrant" notion, Obama promises a $1,000 check for every family, financed by a "windfall profits" tax on oil companies. He is unintimidated by the rule against legislating about subjects one can't define. Obama thinks government is not getting a "reasonable share" of oil companies' profits, which in 2007 were, as a percentage of revenues (8.3 percent), below those of US manufacturing generally (8.9 percent). Exxon Mobil pays almost as much in corporate taxes to various governments as the bottom 50 percent of American earners pay in income taxes. Exxon Mobil does make $1,400 a second in profits - hear the sharp intakes of breath from liberals with pursed lips - but pays $4,000 a second in taxes and $15,000 a second in operating costs. Obama's rhetorical extravagances are inversely proportional to his details, as when he promises "nothing less than a complete transformation of our economy" in order to "end the age of oil." The diminished enthusiasm of some voters hitherto receptive to his appeals might have something to do with the seepage of reality from his rhetoric. Voters understand that neither the "transformation" nor the "end" will or should occur. His dreamy certitude that "alternative" fuels will quickly become real alternatives is an energy policy akin to an old vaudeville joke: "If we had some eggs, we could have ham and eggs . . . if we had some ham." When he speaks tonight in a venue consecrated to the faux combat of football, the NATO alliance (which was 12 years old when he was born) may be collapsing because of its unwillingness to help enough in Afghanistan and its inability to respond seriously to Russia's combat in Georgia. It's unfair to neither NATO nor Obama to note that the alliance is practicing what he preaches: It's preaching to Vladimir Putin, who is unimpressed. NATO, said Lord Ismay, speaking of Europe in 1949, was created to "keep the Americans in, the Germans down and the Russians out." That Germany's appeasement reflex is part of NATO's weakness is perhaps progress, of sorts. Journalism often must be preoccupied with matters barely remembered a week later. But decades hence, historians will write about today's response to Russia by the West, perhaps in obituaries for the idea of "the West." If Obama doesn't speak to this crisis tonight, that will speak volumes.

 


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annieander says:

Why wasn't I warned there was going to be politics in the comment section.

You are a sly one DMDM...lure me in with promises of Death Cab and then ZING!

You went all George Will on me.

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Hi Annie,

  I'm slowly building a library of DCFC,  as I say,  the more I dig the more I find to enjoy.  I really did sell them short.  I'm not sure if my powers of persuasion would suffice in getting August1 to reconsider.  But anyone who enjoys good poprock/rocknroll gotta give them a lsten.

Thanks for the offer. 

One must vest a bit in developing a taste for Dylan's oeuvre.  One must not dive in to deeply at first.

 

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You were warned

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Cinful says:

Don't feel badly about not loving DCFC from the beginning.  I remember my son telling me about this group he saw in a small venue downtown (around 5 years ago) ... I listened quickly to a couple songs and blew them off. 

Lo and behold, it was my (now) beloved DCFC!!  

I think we sometimes have to grow to enjoy some groups  :) 

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annieander says:

I know I was warned....I was just playing with ya Jeff...

You're always good for a laugh...that's what I like about you.

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dermahrk says:

So DMDM times DCFC does not equal B.O.? I never was good at math...

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I have actually had a similar experience with DCFC, getting a bunch of albums all at once, but never giving one a proper listen.  I tend to lean towards the Postal Service stuff, but really mean to give it all a spin again.  I think like you said about Dylan, the same goes for DCFC, "One must not dive in to deeply at first."

Great, I can already see the bumper stickers on DMDM and dermahrk's car:

"Your Country May Stink, But This Country's Got B.O." ™ <---- I get any risiduals you guys make off that!

 

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poebegone says:

there are certain moments for which DCfC is a perfect fit. Transatlanticism was the song that reeled me in.

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