Posted on 03/25/2003 12:27:06 PM PST by Houmatt
Sheryl Crow wore a white T-shirt emblazoned with "War Is Not the Answer" when she accepted her American Music Award in January. Limp Bizkit frontman Fred Durst was received with cheers when he said, "This war has got to go away as soon as possible" during the Grammy telecast. But when Natalie Maines of the country music trio the Dixie Chicks said from a London stage that she was "ashamed" that President Bush was from Texas, the result was quite different.
Angry fans flooded radio stations in San Diego, Nashville and Dallas with calls demanding that the Dixie Chicks' music be removed from playlists. Many fans-turned-enemies burned posters, and one group of protesters in Louisiana mounted a 33,000-pound tractor and ran over CDs.
First, Maines tried to explain herself. But anti-Chicks warriors continued to destroy CDs, so she took a deep breath and issued a formal apology to Bush, proclaiming that she was "proud to be an American." But South Carolina legislators were not swayed; they passed a resolution asking that the Dixie Chicks apologize directly to South Carolinians and play a free concert for the troops.
No one is mad at Sheryl Crow. No one is burning Limp Bizkit posters. It appears that San Diego, Nashville and Dallas care not at all about the opinion of America's rock stars. But apparently country music and its idols have a duty to be patriotic.
While rock music has its roots in rebellion, country music comes from a storytelling tradition. Considered to be white Anglo-Celtic ethnic music, country was born in the southern Appalachians during the late 19th century; its role was to depict rural life and its hardships. Patriotism stemmed from the fact that people there lived off the fruit of the land; America was feeding them.
While the northern part of the United States continued to industrialize during the early 20th century, the South remained agricultural and politically conservative. Country music then became a reflection of Southerners' desire to preserve their culture and core values: love your country, love God, love your family.
The easy argument to make is that country music fans are patriotic because they're uneducated, poor, white rednecks and hillbillies who don't know any better. This stereotype is justified for some, but not all. According to market research, they are indeed overwhelmingly white but have an average household income of $50,000, and 77 percent of them own homes.
Being patriotic is also an identity, a badge that country music devotees wear proudly. The more patriotic the better. Take honky-tonk country star Toby Keith's Sept. 11-inspired hit song, Courtesy of the Red, White and Blue (The Angry American. Fans embraced the song's lyrics, especially the verses: "You'll be sorry that you messed with the US of A / Cuz we'll put a boot in your ass / It's the American Way."
Country fans want their music to tell tales about their woes, their heartaches, their anger. Keith wasn't being political; he was just mad.
Country enthusiasts don't like their music mixed with politics, but for some reason they do embrace sad tunes about soldiers dying for the United States.
The Dixie Chicks' song Travelin' Soldier, about a boy who goes to Vietnam and never comes back, follows in the tradition of such classics as Jimmie Rogers' The Soldier's Sweetheart and Loretta Lynn's Dear Uncle Sam.
Aren't these antiwar songs? For Northern liberal Democrats, they are. But for Southern Republicans, dying for your country is patriotic; it's noble.
Of course, now anti-Chicks activists are claiming the trio didn't actually write Travelin' Soldier. How could they -- anti-American heathens that they are?
Sadly, those who shun the Dixie Chicks have become exactly what they say they are not: anti-American. By burning CDs and posters and throwing verbal stones at Maines, they are violating her most important right and the foundation of this country -- her freedom of speech.
But this time, I will not renew.
The liberal democrates that run this piece of crap they call a newspaper have supported our 'affirmative action' mayor for 6 yrs along with the city's 'affirmative action' chief-of-police. The city is in the worst shape since I can remember and the crime lab scandal will result in multitudes of appeals in the courts.
Yet The Comical supports a recall of term-limits and has bashed President Bush every chance it gets!!
I can't wait till I get a call asking why I cancelled.
Most Liberals don't work for a living so it surprises them that business would suffer just for speaking one's mind.
"Got to go away as soon as possible"? Is war a cold or a case of the "sniffles"? We're not treating an anxiety disorder with Zoloft, we're fighting a real war with real men and women and real weaponry with a real strategy.
she took a deep breath and issued a formal apology to Bush, proclaiming that she was "proud to be an American."
Right -- about as much as she's proud to be a Texan.
When the controversy first got started Ms. Maines chose to defend her attack on President Bush as free speech but as the wildfire started to rage across the land and radio stations began to pull The Dixie Chicks music from their rotations Ms. Maines decided that her remarks where less than appropriate. Ms. Maines said in a statement released by her representatives that she was sorry for her comments and that anyone who held the office of President of the United States was worthy of respect.
One cant help but be amazed by entertainment types and their propensity for opening their mouths and sticking their foot in it up to their ankles. One also wonders at the sincerity of an apology issued in the face of a growing national boycott of all things Dixie. Has Ms. Maines truly seen the error of her ways and learned that disrespectful comments about an extremely popular President, while protected under free speech rights, often carry larger consequences. Perhaps Ms. Maines has learned that a large flag waving fan base also has the ability to carry a very big stick.
While I will defend Ms. Maines right to disagree with our Presidents policy, and as a former Army man and current member of the American Legion I have done so, I will remind Ms. Maines that the right to Free Speech is not a right to have others agree with you, nor does it, in any way, absolve you from having to accept the responsibility for your words and actions. When you do unpopular things you must be prepared to face negative reactions. This is not censorship Ms. Maines; this is simply other citizen's exercising their right to Free Speech by telling you loudly and clearly to just Shut Up!!!
This is the best I could come up with:
http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/hollywoodreporter/info/contact.jsp
Yeah, and if Bill Clinton had been a conservative Republican...
Amazing. Our exercise of our freedom of speech is a violation of Maines's freedom of speech. Few liberals are this blunt with their double standard.
Man, this author is a moron. It's not a matter of people "claiming" that the Chicks didn't write this; the Dixie Chicks don't write ANY of their songs!
Uh Ms. Conniff, what the hell is wrong with that?
Wrongo!
By burning CDs and posters and throwing verbal stones at Maines, they are violating exercising their most important right and the foundation of this country -- their freedom of speech.
And I wish they'd keep all the other so-call "stars" off the T.V. whenever a charge of electricity happens to pass by one of their brain cells.
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