 A Clockwork Orange Music Blog » Secular Christian Music Comparison The high-school band came pounding down Main Street, past the post office and the library and Christ the King Church. Trumpeters in gold-tasseled coats tipped their horns to the sky, heralding the arrival of teenage demigods. ….. In a later entry, on April 13, 1996, he described the Oklahoma bombing as “stupid,” adding, “I wish violence would vanish clear from the earth.”LOOKING BACK ON their childhood, Dena remembers a pestering little brother who followed her like a … read more…
SHERWOOD LAUNCHES U.S. HEADLINING TOUR FEBRUARY 17 IN LOS ANGELES … A Beach Boys-inspired power pop band hailing from San Luis Obispo, California, Sherwood came together in 2002 while the band members were still students at the local university. Now signed to Myspace Records, … Sun-Feb-28 Oklahoma City, OK The Conservatory Tue-Mar-02 St Louis, MO The Firebird Wed-Mar-03 Nashville, TN Exit In Thu-Mar-04 Knoxville, TN Square Room Fri-Mar-05 Atlanta, GA The Masquarade Sat-Mar-06 Jacksonville, FL Jack Rabbits Mon-Mar-08 Orlando, … read more…
sundries: Are You a Christian Hipster? A lot of them love skateboarding and surfing, and many of them play in bands. They tend to get jobs working for churches, parachurch organizations, non-profits, or the government. They are, on the whole, a little more sincere and idealistic than their secular hipster counterparts. ….. Why the city matters - As a follow up to the previous post God’s bias for the city, here’s some thoughts on why the cities are strategic to anyone who wants to make a global impa. … read more…
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Oklahoma City clubs Oklahoma City clubs are beehives of activity, buzzing with entertainment, games and beers. One of these is Citywalk, a wel… read more…
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Headed Home | The Non puts on a two-city album release party for newest project (Urban Tulsa) For almost any native English speaker, the word “tadaima” does not translate instantly from the eye to the mouth. One needs to gently decode the collection of vowels aloud before the Japanese greeting rolls off the tongue. But the informal way of saying “I’m home” in the Far East is now locally som… By C.M. Rodriguez. read more…
Residents oppose move to annex (The Tuttle Times) August, 2009 brought Tuttle area residents out in force to voice their opposition to being annexed into the Tuttle city limits.After listening to more than a dozen citizens, several of whom received enthusiastic applause for their comments, Ward 4 Councilman James Brunson moved to cease all activity on the annexation. read more…
Who Says Three’s a Crowd? (The Cornell Daily Sun) Last Sunday night at The Haunt, Ithaca Underground brought a touring trio of bands to town that represent a subgenre of music loosely dubbed as “post-metal.” Essentially, post-metal is the umbrella term for the expansive sound of heavy music in the wake of ’90s Neurosis, a wide range of influences from post-rock (another loaded term) to space rock to sludge to doom metal and psychedelic rock. read more…
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Resolved Question: Did you Know White Terror Racist Terrorist Groups in the Heart of the USA?
The Bush men decorate our holidays in Homeland Security yellow, orange
and red, while demonizing Islamic green as the color of the most
implacable foes of Western “civilization.” Yet official silence
conspires to hide genocidal maniacs in our midst who have sworn to erase
the Black presence from the landscape of the United States: White
Terror.
Tens of thousands of members of a racist legion operate openly in every
corner of the nation – men, women, juveniles, extended families,
cells, gangs, churches, clans, militias, border armies, all engaged in
what they consider to be a war to the death against non-white America.
George Bush and John Ashcroft don’t want you to hear about White Terror,
understandably fearing that the lyrics of white supremacy strike the
same racial chords as the Pirates’ own War on Terror theme, itself a
rearrangement of the many martial tunes written throughout American
history in praise Manifest Destiny. Less than a decade ago Timothy
McVeigh’s band of terrorists got carried away with the logic of America
as a White Man’s Country, and may have cost the Republicans the White
House in 1996. That’s why the homeland security colors didn’t change in
May of this year, when federal agents arrested a white racist couple
dealing in weapons of mass destruction in a small town near Tyler,
Texas. The feds seized a cyanide bomb capable of unleashing a deadly,
poison cloud, chemicals and components for additional WMDs, gas masks,
100 conventional bombs, an arsenal of automatic weapons, silencers and
half a million rounds of ammunition.
The bust went unreported last Spring, although George Bush was said to
have been regularly briefed about the “ongoing” investigation. Finally,
the Dallas-Fort Worth CBS affiliate broke the story on November 26, when
longtime militiaman and traveling gun merchant William J. Krar and his
common-law wife pled guilty to possession of a chemical bomb and lesser
charges. Local Channel 11 news producer Todd Bensman thought he had a
huge national story on his hands, but CBS network refused to pick up his
report. “I guess they didn’t think it was important enough,” Bensman
told David Neiwert, a Seattle-based journalist who has covered
right-wing terrorism since 1978. In fact, the national news blackout was
near-total, as reported online by The Memory Hole.
The only media that saw fit to report about this terrorist plot within
the US were a few newspapers and TV stations in Texas. The Web-based
news outlet WorldNetDaily ran a story about it, but Google News shows
that there hasn’t been a word in the New York Times, Washington Post, LA
Times, CNN, Fox News, MSNBC, or any other big media outlet. Why have the
media decided that this is a non-story? It’s hard to say, but we can say
with certainty that if Muslims had been caught with these weapons of
mass destruction, fake I.D., gas masks, and books on making explosives,
it would’ve been front-page news for days.
A huge array of weapons, ammunition, bomb-making equipment, and racist
literature were discovered in the Tyler arrest.
The New York Times got around to the story on December 13, not on the
news pages, but through a back door Op-Ed article titled “Enemies at
Home.” Daniel Levitas’ piece passed the Times’ blandness test.
“Americans should question whether the Justice Department is making
America’s far-right fanatics a serious priority,” Levitas wrote. “And
with the F.B.I. still struggling to get up to speed on the threat posed
by Islamic extremists abroad, it is questionable whether the agency has
the manpower to keep tabs on our distinctly American terror cells. There
is no accurate way of analyzing the budgets of the F.B.I., Justice
Department and Department of Homeland Security to discern how much
attention is being devoted to right-wing extremists. But in light of the
F.B.I.’s poor record in keeping tabs on the militia movement before the
1995 Oklahoma City bombing, one wonders whether the agency has the will
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