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To: dfwgator
2 posted on
07/06/2023 3:15:45 PM PDT by
SaveFerris
(Luke 17:28 ... as it was in the days of Lot; they did eat, they drank, they bought, they sold ......)
To: Be Careful
Pair this song with Eric Burdon’s Sky Pilot. 8 min version.
To: Be Careful
You don’t believe in war, but what’s that gun you’re totin’?
I tote a gun in an attempt to avoid war.
4 posted on
07/06/2023 3:16:06 PM PDT by
Larry Lucido
(Donate! Don't just post clickbait!)
To: Be Careful
Went on to become a born-again Christian and a ‘Jesus music’ performer.
5 posted on
07/06/2023 3:26:42 PM PDT by
jjotto
( Blessed are You LORD, who crushes enemies and subdues the wicked.)
To: Be Careful
One can only wish that we on the eve of BiXiden Destruction.
6 posted on
07/06/2023 3:28:52 PM PDT by
Paladin2
To: Be Careful
Stop hey what’s that sound, everybody look what’s going’ down
7 posted on
07/06/2023 3:28:56 PM PDT by
bigbob
(Q)
To: Be Careful
The song was written by P. F. Sloan, one of the better songwriters of the mid-Sixties. He died some years ago. It was Phil Sloan who played the opening guitar riff on “California Dreaming” by the Mamas and the Papas.
8 posted on
07/06/2023 3:29:57 PM PDT by
Publius
To: Be Careful
10 posted on
07/06/2023 3:32:03 PM PDT by
ChildOfThe60s
( If you can remember the 60s.....you weren't really there..)
To: Be Careful
From what I read years ago, he played it at the end of a recording session, but never intended for it to be released. When he discovered the hard way that it had been released (hearing it on the radio while in an L.A. diner), he blew a gasket—he thought his career was done.
13 posted on
07/06/2023 3:34:47 PM PDT by
M1903A1
("We shed all that is good and virtuous for that which is shoddy and sleazy...and call it progress" )
To: Be Careful
I liked the tune, not so much the lyrics. I thought the were too pessimistic at the time. Turns out nothing has changed over all these years.
We first heard it from Radio Luxemburg, a pirate AM station, while I was attending London Central High School (American DoD school) in the mid '60s.
16 posted on
07/06/2023 3:39:16 PM PDT by
pfflier
To: Be Careful
Hitler once said that for the good of the German people, there should be a war every 20 years.
What a repulsive and disgusting comment! But our neocon/Deep Staters are advocating the very same thing. They just use more polite language.
And now a word from some guy who was definitively not a 60’s hippie:
“In the councils of government, we must guard against the acquisition of unwarranted influence, whether sought or unsought, by the military-industrial complex. The potential for the disastrous rise of misplaced power exists, and will persist.”
Dwight D. Eisenhower
18 posted on
07/06/2023 3:41:57 PM PDT by
Leaning Right
(The steal is real.)
To: Be Careful
They played this song at the end of the movie
Run, Hide, Fight. It is a great movie and recommend it if you get a chance to see it. It is basically "Die Hard" with a teenage girl as the protagonist who survives because her father taught her how to hunt.
22 posted on
07/06/2023 3:46:56 PM PDT by
Bubba_Leroy
( Dementia Joe is Not My President)
To: Be Careful
To: Be Careful
This answer to "Eve of Destruction" sounds like it could have been recorded in 2023. It made #35 on the Billboard Hot Hundred and #14 on the country-western charts.
The Day for Decision--Johnny Sea (1966)
To: Be Careful
To: Be Careful
A couple more songs that sock it to the turncoats, cowards and peaceniks:
To: Be Careful
Another pop singer takes to social commentary, perhaps inspired by Barry McGuire
Home of the Brave--Jody Miller (1965)
To: Be Careful
To: Be Careful
There was a funny remake of this called
“The Eve of Construction”
Regarding the endless construction on the Ohio Turnpike.
36 posted on
07/06/2023 5:44:29 PM PDT by
Boiler Plate
("Why be difficult, when with just a little more work, you can be impossible" Mom)
To: Be Careful; Gay State Conservative
This group of Top 40 hitmakers waxed one of the few pro-Vietnam War songs of the sixties:
Take the Time--The Shangri-Las (1967)
And this group, known for being laid back and mellow and certainly not political, cut this militant anti-war anthem:
Revelation: Revolution '69--The Lovin' Spoonful (1968)
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