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Why People Lost Their Minds When A Brooklyn Store Played ‘Sweet Home Alabama’
The Federalist ^ | 23NOV16 | By David Marcus

Posted on 11/29/2016 1:59:33 AM PST by vannrox

Why People Lost Their Minds When A Brooklyn Store Played ‘Sweet Home Alabama’

Why People Lost Their Minds When A Brooklyn Store Played ‘Sweet Home Alabama’

Upscale progressives have gotten used to tuning out the voice of the Trump voter. But there's an America out there that they can no longer ignore.
David Marcus
By

Three days after the election, my wife and I were shopping at the Fairway Market in Red Hook, Brooklyn. For those unfamiliar with it, Fairway is a less corporate, more co-op version of Whole Foods, offering pretty produce and exotic cheeses that don’t come cheap. The mood in the store was glum. As in most of Brooklyn, people stared ahead, moving slowly, still in shock from the political earthquake of Tuesday night.

After getting our Brazilian Arabica ground for drip (I know, I should really use a French Press), Libby and I walked towards the organic maple syrup. That’s when it started. I suppose there had been music playing in the store, but I hadn’t noticed until a familiar guitar lick pierced the air and a soft voice said, “Turn it up.”

Libby and I both stopped and looked at each other. “Seriously?” said my wife, a very disappointed Clinton supporter. She started gripping her soft Tomme Crayeuse a little too hard. By the time Ronnie Van Zant’s drawl started in with “Big wheels keep on turnin’,” everyone in the store was standing in shock. Brows were furrowed, people mumbled to each other. The song seemed to get louder as one of those New York moments happened, when everyone was thinking the exact the same thing.

A woman in her fifties, wearing a Love Trump Hates button, turned to her Brooklyn-bearded husband and said loudly, “This is unbelievable!” She found the nearest store clerk, a young woman in a green apron who was staring up at the ceiling, looking for the invisible speakers blaring this message from the other America. “This is so inappropriate,” the woman said. “Can we turn this off?”

The City of Homes, Cafés, and Clinton

Brooklyn was the epicenter of the Clinton campaign. Throughout the summer and fall in Brooklyn Heights, you could see young staffers near the campaign headquarters: expensive coffee in hand, eyes bright, ready to tackle the future. Cafés turned into phone banks, where you could buy a croissant and make a few calls to flyover country. Buttons, banners, and bumper stickers were everywhere.

As the election grew near, confidence was overflowing. A big victory was on the horizon for Lena Dunham and the new Brooklyn. This ground zero for upscale progressivism was ready for a party; white male supremacism was about to be crushed beneath a professional high heel.

Fittingly, perhaps, the only exception to Clinton mania in Brooklyn was in the southern part of the borough. In Dyker Heights and Bensonhurst, big trucks could be seen with “Hillary for Prison” and “Make America Great Again” detailed on their back windows. This is not the Brooklyn of “Girls” or “The Slap.” It is the Brooklyn of “Blue Bloods,” the home of cops and firemen, plumbers and construction workers immune to the appeal of a President Clinton. These are people who listen to Skynyrd, and not ironically.

Everything Old Is New Again

I couldn’t stop laughing as the Fairway patrons tried to continue shopping with “Sweet Home Alabama” blasting in the background. And in retrospect, the moment was a perfect encapsulation of a very old fight within America

The song itself was written in response to two songs by Neil Young: “Southern Man,” and “Alabama.” It was 1974, and as the Civil Rights era faded into history, the South and Southern rock was reasserting pride in their culture and way of life.

Last year, “Garden and Gun” talked to Gary Rossington, the last surviving member of Lynyrd Skynyrd, about the creation of the song. He said:

“Neil Young had “Southern Man,” and it was kind of cutting the South down. And so Ronnie just said, We need to show people how the real Alabama is. We loved Neil Young and all the music he’s given the world. We still love him today. It wasn’t cutting him down, it was cutting the song he wrote about the South down. Ronnie painted a picture everyone liked. Because no matter where you’re from, sweet home Alabama or sweet home Florida or sweet home Arkansas, you can relate.”

For his part, Young would eventually agree that he had painted the South with too broad a brush. In his 2012 autobiography “Waging Heavy Peace,” Young would write, “My own song ‘Alabama’ richly deserved the shot Lynyrd Skynyrd gave me with their great record. I don’t like my words when I listen to it. They are accusatory and condescending, not fully thought out, and too easy to misconstrue.”

If “accusatory and condescending” sounds familiar, it should. Along with being called deplorable, Trump’s supporters (of which I was not one) have been treated in a way that is rare in American politics, and deeply troubling. The campaign that emerged from Brooklyn didn’t just attack the politics of people who don’t live in big cities. It attacked their entire way of life, and promised it was dying.

Ignoring It Doesn’t Make It Go Away

When the angry older woman with the anti-Trump button asked the clerk to turn off the song, the younger woman looked at her sympathetically and said, “I don’t know how.” In that moment, something seemed to click.

Of course, this woman thought that “Sweet Home Alabama” could just be turned off. After all, we can block out things we disagree with. We can unfriend people on Facebook, block them on Twitter, and decide not to let their negativity be a part of lives. For many progressives, this is the key to wellness.

But turning off Skynyrd doesn’t make it go away. Somewhere in the land where the stars still shine, it plays on, whether you hear it or not. The shock and despair in Brooklyn over Hillary Clinton’s unfathomable defeat comes in no small part because her denizens refused to hear the rumblings of an America they chose to ignore.

Just like a hillbilly band rocketing to the top of the national charts, Donald Trump has awakened the right sort to the fact that they do not control everything. For Trump and his supporters, the protests and challenges to the Electoral College should be seen as another victory. Not only did they win, they are being heard—even in Brooklyn.



TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; US: Alabama
KEYWORDS: hillary; lynyrd; richsnowflakes; skynyrd; trump
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To: TalBlack

“Now Watergate does not bother me
Does your conscience bother you?
Tell the truth”


41 posted on 11/29/2016 5:44:53 AM PST by itsLUCKY2B (?Borders, Language, and Culture.?)
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To: vannrox

Sweet Home Alabama...the redneck national anthem, should have been my high school fight song. Proud redneck here


42 posted on 11/29/2016 5:52:01 AM PST by fungoking (Tis a pleasure to live in the 0zarks)
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To: vannrox

Any one watching the Voice last night that is a LIB and a muzzy would have had a cow.

Sundance Head did a Blue Grass rendition of Me and JESUS
https://youtu.be/X9aIRv8Ycnc

Best performance of the night in my book.


43 posted on 11/29/2016 5:52:35 AM PST by GailA (Ret. SCPO wife: Merry CHRISTmas, Happy Birthday JESUS CHRIST, suck it up buttercup you lost)
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To: Alas Babylon!

Years ago, I used to go down to Huntsville, AL for the
Christmas Craft Show at the Von Braun Civic Center with my
mother. - Then, some Progressive came along and redid the
streets and roads down there which created a boondoggle for
years, a traffic nightmare. It got where you couldn’t get
there from here; so in my sixties, I gave up going to that
town. Still have a soft spot in my heart for Alabama, from
a distance deep in rural Tennessee.


44 posted on 11/29/2016 5:54:52 AM PST by Twinkie (John 3:16)
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To: ontap

Or the Yellow Rose of Texas, Tennessee Waltz, Rocky Top. I love them all.


45 posted on 11/29/2016 5:56:13 AM PST by GailA (Ret. SCPO wife: Merry CHRISTmas, Happy Birthday JESUS CHRIST, suck it up buttercup you lost)
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To: TalBlack

The draft riots in NYC during the Civil War killed plenty of blacks; these NIMBY jack-asses should STFU.

Here in NJ people are liberal about everything except race; many had parents/grandparents that had lived in our cities, and they have no misconceptions about what destroyed them.


46 posted on 11/29/2016 6:11:34 AM PST by kearnyirish2 (Affirmative action is economic warfare against white males (and therefore white families).)
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To: vannrox

Why did this guy marry a Clinton supporter?


47 posted on 11/29/2016 6:34:21 AM PST by SVTCobra03 (You can never have enough friends, horsepower or ammunition.)
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To: Fai Mao
You beat me to it.

The eclectic Finnish band, the Leningrad Cowboys, and the Soviet Red Army Band and Choir do a fantastic rendition of Sweet Home Alabama.

Here's another clip of them is full "regalia": Leningrad Cowboys and Red Army Band and Choir Playing Sweet Home Alabama

48 posted on 11/29/2016 6:58:08 AM PST by HotHunt
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To: vannrox

Since I am a straight, white male from the south, I know they hate me. For 40 years I have watched progressives turn the urban areas into ghetto shooting-galleries while vilifying rural values and traditions. I’ve seen the factories turn to empty parking lots, the jobs go overseas, and the uncontrolled immigration depress wages and make life more dangerous. To hell with the social-engineers, and self-righteous Gruber, Lerner, Clinton elites, urban journalists, et al ... these pretend humanitarians who care so much about everyone but the half of the country they hate and who suffer for their policies.


49 posted on 11/29/2016 7:13:26 AM PST by spodefly (This is my tag line. There are many like it, but this one is mine.)
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To: HotHunt

Cray cray


50 posted on 11/29/2016 7:27:20 AM PST by yldstrk (My heroes have always been cowboys)
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To: SamAdams76

Lol! It’s almost become an old joke with my wife and me, here in Colorado. We’ll go to a restaurant grill or be in the car - and SHA will play as I mock bash my head. My wife will say “Ooh! Turn it up!!” :)


51 posted on 11/29/2016 7:54:29 AM PST by LittleBillyInfidel (This tagline has been formatted to fit the screen. Some content has been edited.)
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To: COBOL2Java

Ha ha! Yes!! (As long as it’s not a ‘dog barking’ version of Sweet Home Alabama!)


52 posted on 11/29/2016 8:00:45 AM PST by LittleBillyInfidel (This tagline has been formatted to fit the screen. Some content has been edited.)
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To: vannrox

So I went to the Federalist to read the original article and I went to Google to get the lyrics of Sweet Home Alabama. After doing all that, Ï don’t understand. I just don’t understand the furor. I think it is a beautiful song...almost a lamentation (one of my favorite genres.)


53 posted on 11/29/2016 8:38:21 AM PST by Bodega (we are developing less and less common sense...world wide)
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To: ClearCase_guy
For me, this sums up the delicate nature of Progressives. They live in a very special, fragile world.

Damned progressives...can't live with 'em, can't kill 'em.

54 posted on 11/29/2016 10:33:38 AM PST by JimRed (Is it 1776 yet? TERM LIMITS, now and forever! Build the Wall, NOW!)
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To: yldstrk

? ?


55 posted on 11/29/2016 4:40:00 PM PST by HotHunt
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To: HotHunt

It means crazy lol


56 posted on 11/29/2016 5:38:45 PM PST by yldstrk (My heroes have always been cowboys)
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To: exDemMom

My dear late mother used to say, “It would be a dull world if we all liked the same things.”


57 posted on 11/29/2016 5:42:04 PM PST by Bigg Red (To Thee, O Lord, I lift my soul. Thank you for saving our Republic.)
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To: Emergencyawesome

Okay, I gave it a 1 minute 10 seconds. Not impressed. Sorry.

Chacun a son gout, mon ami.


58 posted on 11/29/2016 5:45:26 PM PST by Bigg Red (To Thee, O Lord, I lift my soul. Thank you for saving our Republic.)
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To: Bigg Red

Well like Neil says about Cortez in the song, your a plenty bad man


59 posted on 11/29/2016 6:11:49 PM PST by Emergencyawesome
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To: Emergencyawesome

Yes, I am a terrible man, I guess, because I am a woman. :)


60 posted on 11/30/2016 11:17:51 AM PST by Bigg Red (To Thee, O Lord, I lift my soul. Thank you for saving our Republic.)
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