By CR on Monday, 15 June 2020
Category: Constitution and Law

Which Beatles Disgusted Me the Most? By James Reed

     Definitely cucked socialist one world dreamer, John Lennon, but Paul McCartney comes in second. He has basically the same globalist values as Lennon did, but not so fanatical. Lennon, if alive, would be in his wheelchair at the BLM march, waving his fists, while Yoko screamed, and screamed, and just kept screaming, like a severely mentally retarded child being tortured, as a critic once described it. Here, listen to this cacophony:
  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HdZ9weP5i68
  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CZ-eudMTcoc
  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IpX1wBrCymo
  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pCBTh9G4TTg

     There is plenty of Yoko material on YouTube just in case you need more! It gives the existential absurdist movement, of the likes of Beckett and Ionesco, a bad name!
  https://www.breitbart.com/entertainment/2020/06/06/paul-mccartney-on-george-floyd-saying-nothing-is-not-an-option/

“Former Beatles frontman Paul McCartney is the latest celebrity to drive the message that “saying nothing is not an option” in the wake of the police involved death of George Floyd. In a statement posted across social media, the 77-year-old weighed in on how to promote positive change and pointed out how his band refused to play at a segregated show in Jacksonville back in 1964. “As we continue to see the protests and demonstrations across the world, I know many of us want to know just what we can be doing to help. None of us have all the answers and there is no quick fix but we need change,” McCartney said. “We all need to work together to overcome racism in any form. We need to learn more, listen more, talk more, educate ourselves, and, above all, take action.” “In 1964 The Beatles were due to play Jacksonville in the US and we found out that it was going to be to a segregated audience,” he continued. “It felt wrong. We said “We’re not doing that!” and the concert we did was to their first non-segregated audience. We then made sure this was in our contract. To us, it seemed like common sense.”

     Another superficial response to a complex problem, like much of the pretentious Beatle’s music, which is pushed as being so profound, but in essence is really just “silly love songs,” good for elevators and supermarkets. I think Bob Dylan said that there was some library containing thousands of songs like theirs, and I should add, his mumblings too. “If you go into the library of Congress, you can find a lot better than that.” He then concluded his attack with this vicious line: “There are millions of songs like ‘Yesterday’ and ‘Michelle’ written in Tin Pan Alley.”
  https://faroutmagazine.co.uk/bob-dylan-the-beatles-songs-he-hates/
  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wh15LOppcWQ

     Listen to Dylan, contradicting himself, do a version of Yesterday; my dog could sing better:
  https://faroutmagazine.co.uk/bob-dylan-george-harrison-the-beatles-yesterday-1970-listen/

     It is important for cultural critics to begin deconstruction the culture of the 1960s that had led us to “the eve of destruction.”
  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qfZVu0alU0I

     The more I learn about people like this, the more I like dogs.

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