Saturday, September 17, 2011

David Rovics sings GOOD GOOD GOOD STUFFS!!!

What if You Knew David Rovics  (sometimes it's hard to tell when we've been infiltrated but even when we realize we post the other side's stuffs, then we stand up and say, WE KNOW and you are going down.)  ...cal
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LYW6S3hHvrI

After the Revolution David Rovics
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VdodojUTMG0&feature=related

No One Is Illegal David Rovics
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kA9FE6ekOog&feature=related
Excerpt:
May the fortress walls come down
May we meet our sisters and our brothers
Stand arm and arm there in the daylight
No longer fighting one another
Will we stand together
For therein lies our might
Will we understand these words
"People of the world unite"


We Are Everywhere Daid Rovics
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n8j8BmgeYLA&feature=related

Coke is the Drink of the Death Squads David Rovics
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5HFZ3cH1UAI


Jim Meigs is a LIAR
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=joQ9o6bcYMQ

http://www.bollyn.com/home
Excerpt:
Key 9/11 Question asked of Kevin Barrett in interview by Kourosh ZiabariKourosh Ziabari: What’s your precise stance on the 9/11 attacks?  Do you believe that the U.S. officials had foreknowledge of the incident?  Do you think that it was an inside job or a false flag operation?  Have you traced any sign of the Israel’s involvement in the attacks?

Kevin Barrett: To know means to believe based on sufficient evidence. So I know, not just believe, that 9/11 was a false-flag attack, that many individuals at or near the top of the US Executive Branch, military, and intelligence apparatus were complicit in the attack, and that the state of Israel and its American agents were heavily involved. This is the inescapable conclusion of anyone who reads David Ray Griffin’s books on the subject, alongside Bollyn’s Solving 9/11 , with an open mind. 


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Kourosh_ziabari
Excerpt:
Kourosh has interviewed political commentator and linguist Noam Chomsky, member of New Zealand parliament Keith Locke, Australian politician Ian Cohen, member of German Parliament Ruprecht Polenz, former Mexican President Vicente Fox, former U.S. National Security Council advisor Peter D. Feaver, Nobel Prize laureate in Physics Wolfgang Ketterle, Nobel Prize laureate in Chemistry Kurt Wüthrich, Nobel Prize laureate in biology Robin Warren, famous German political prisoner Ernst Zündel, Brazilian cartoonist Carlos Latuff, American author Stephen Kinzer, syndicated journalist Eric Margolis, former assistant of the U.S. Department of the Treasury Paul Craig Roberts, American-Palestinian journalist Ramzy Baroud, former President of the American Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Sid Ganis, American international relations scholar Stephen Zunes, American singer and songwriter David Rovics, American political scientist and anthropologist William Beeman, British journalist Andy Worthington, Australian author and blogger Antony Loewenstein, Iranian geopolitics expert Pirouz Mojtahedzadeh, Lebanese scholar and researcher Gilbert Achcar, American journalis Charles Glass, American historian and author Michael A. Hoffman II and Israeli musician Gilad Atzmon.

David Rovics The Commons
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=blOeXMcapBI

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gilad_Atzmon
Excerpt:
His criticisms of Zionism, Jewish identity, and Judaism, as well as his controversial views on The Holocaust and Jewish history have led to allegations of antisemitism from both Zionists and anti-Zionists. A profile in The Guardian in 2009 which described Atzmon as "one of London's finest saxophonists" stated: "It is Atzmon's blunt anti-Zionism rather than his music that has given him an international profile, particularly in the Arab world, where his essays are widely read."[4]

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UWIryS__YDE&feature=related

In One World David Rovics
In 1948 I fled my village
The Stern Gang drove my family from the lands
We ran into the desert
Where I've spent these decades living by my hands
Life in Haifa wasn't easy
But so much better than this hellhole with the soldiers and barbed wire
And the closures, and the hunger
The humiliation and the checkpoints, the machine gun fire
And each day I wonder after Haifa
The home that we abandoned when the Zionists had won
Is there a family with a child
Does it's father love it as I loved my only son
Before the soldiers shot him down
Riddled him with bullets in his back and in his head
Home in Haifa, in my house
Does someone's father know the pain there is in an empty bed

In 1960 I fled my country
Left the Tigris River for this foreign place
I had to leave home, I didn't want to
But they were rounding up the leftists and the papers had my face
And my son, a student leader
On the streets of Baghdad was nowhere to be found
So I walked through the mountains
Just the shirt upon my back, knowing not where I was bound
Now here I am, this town of Haifa
In this little house, but at least I'm still alive
And each night I wonder how is Baghdad
Would I recognize my friends if any did indeed survive
It took a long time, but I made a home here
And I wished my son could be here in this town upon the shore
I was with my wife, it was the Sabbath
When an old Arab couple knocked upon our door

We asked them in, gave them tea
For that's what you do with strangers, and we could see they meant no harm
They told their story, we told ours
Us of our life in Baghdad, them of their family farm
And of this house, which they once lived in
Where once they raised a family, long before their hair turned grey
Of their son, and the troopers
And of ours, who we cry for every day
So much in common, so much gone bad
So much running, and never coming home
You can hear the cards falling down
See the faces of the children, forever forced to roam
And here we were, in this house
Fearing that tomorrow would be just like yesterday
So much resentment, so much at stake
And I really don't remember who was the first to say

In one world
In one village
In one home
Let us live together

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