Peace, Love and Rock-n-Roll

Oh sure Chad.

If Peace and Love moved into the same neighborhood as Rock and Roll I think I think Rock and Roll would TP it’s house and spray weed killer on it’s lawn until it moved away.

But this is a cool article,  and I’m very proud of all three of you so welcome to My Irregular Bones.

You wild men you.

amm

Peace, Love, and Rock-n-Roll

The Three Chord Progressives came together in the summer of 2007 as the brainchild of Luis Moscoso, Secretary of the Washington State Democrats and Director of Government Relations for the Washington Public Employees Association. Joining Moscoso are Jackie Minchew (Chair of the 44th LD Democrats) and Chad Shue (Chair of Democracy for Snohomish County and Blogger at The Left Shue and Washblog).
 

After only a few a few weeks of rehearsals the trio made their debut at the Snohomish County Democrats picnic at the Tulalip Amphitheater (where they were asked to repeat their four rehearsed songs a couple of times). They have since performed for 32nd LD Chair, Lila Smith (in her DNC Candidate Hospitality Suite) at the WSDCC quarterly meeting in Wenatchee, at the King County Democrats Awards Banquet, and most recently as the motivational entertainment for the WPEA’s “Lobby Day” in Olympia.

( Luis Moscoso- otherwise known as Mr A.M. Moscoso- my blog guys so hahahaha)


( Jackie is on the left ….and Chad is on the left – oh I’m on fire tonight- for real he’s standing…on the left I just can’t say it Right Chad is on the right. God that’s going to cost me – amm )

Each of the members of the Three Chord Progressives has a history of performing in musical groups in their previous lives. They have found that a common appreciation of the music of those mentioned above (and other musician/activists) has made working together a real pleasure. While most of the material they perform comes from the folk/rock era of the 60’s, an occasional love song or finger snapper has been known to be thrown in simply for the pleasure of it.

If you have the time and happen to find yourself in the Everett area on February 15th, you should drop in for a couple of hours of Peace, Love and Rock-n-Roll with the Three Chord Progressives.
Peace,
Chad (The Left) Shue

The Girl With The Man’s Name

The Girl With The Man’s Name

and her son

Who Could Be Our Next President

 from the Seattle Times, Seattle Washington:

 

Stanley Dunham, in a Mercer Island High annual.

Memories of Obama’s mother

By Nicole Brodeur
Seattle Times staff columnist

This is going to sound strange, Maxine Box says, but 50 years later, she can’t forget it:

Barack Obama’s mother used to crack her knuckles.”Constantly,” Box told me as we sat in her Bellevue home on the eve of Super Tuesday, talking about Stanley Dunham, the girl with the man’s name and the son who could be president of the United States.

Box, 65, was Dunham’s best friend at Mercer Island High School, where they were members of the Class of 1960.

“Obama Mama,” is how they refer to her in the school’s front office when reporters come around. The Mercer Island Reporter. The Chicago Tribune. Staffers got used to pulling out the 1960 yearbook, until it was recently misplaced.

Same with Box’s copy of the yearbook; it’s in her house somewhere.

But it doesn’t matter — the memories are still clear as day.

And Box wants to keep them that way, to somehow honor the friend who died of ovarian cancer in 1995, before she could see what her son would accomplish; that he would become one of the final two Democratic candidates in the race for president.

Politics may divide us, but a mother’s pride, well, that’s a feeling that easily crosses party lines.

“She’d be overwhelmed that he’s done what he’s done,” Box said of her friend. “To think that your child has grown up to be this fine man that so many people love. … “

Box called her friend “Stannie,” a nickname for Stanley. She was named for her father, who wanted a boy — and the girl knew it. As a result, their relationship was strained.

“He was hard on her, in that he picked on her,” Box said of Stanley Dunham, a furniture salesman in downtown Seattle.

“He had a sarcastic humor,” Box said, “and she could give it back.”

Dunham’s mother, Madelyn, a bank employee, was “very quiet and serious” and often protected her daughter from her husband’s sarcasm, Box said. (She is still alive, but the Obama campaign has not made her available for interviews).

Dunham and Box were part of a close group of girls who attended football games and sock hops but didn’t really date. They listened to The Limeliters, The Kingston Trio, The Brothers Four. Their parents played cards together.

Dunham and Box walked home together after school, usually stopping at Box’s house for mint-chocolate cake before Dunham went on to the Shorewood apartments, where she lived with her parents.

“I don’t remember prolonged intellectual discussions,” Box said. “But we were all questioners. It was the feeling of the whole school. We were on the debate team, we knew about current events.”

And they felt “destined” to attend college.

Box wanted to work with children, and got a teaching degree at the University of Washington.

Stannie “was such a good student, very intellectual and above all of us. Not just thinking about boys and clothes.”

When her father took a job selling furniture in Hawaii, Dunham moved with them and enrolled in the University of Hawaii.

Not long after, Dunham wrote Box that she had met a Kenyan grad student named Barack Obama. They married and had a son.

For all the tension Dunham had with her father, Box said, her parents stood by her when her marriage fell apart a few years later.

Dunham eventually remarried an Indonesian man and moved to Jakarta. At one point, she sent her son, Barack, back to Hawaii to live with her parents for a year.

Later, Dunham worked with international relief agencies, focused on women’s development.

Box last saw her friend in 1961, when she visited Seattle on her way from Honolulu to Massachusetts, where her then-husband was attending Harvard.

“She seemed very happy and very proud,” she said. “She had this beautiful, healthy baby. I can see them right now.”

If only Box could see them together again; her friend with her son, the U.S. senator. The husband and father. The presidential candidate.

Obama’s book “The Audacity of Hope” is dedicated “To my Mother, whose loving spirit sustains me still.”

Box has vowed to support Obama.

“And not just because of knowing his mother. I would have the same feelings. But this makes it extra special.”

Nicole Brodeur’s column appears Tuesday and Friday. Reach her at 206-464-2334 or nbrodeur@seattletimes.com.

Hey, bring that yearbook back!

I’m On My Way…

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I’m on my way to Super Tuesday…

Here’s a Shiny Toy for you to play with while I’m sitting in front of my TV throwing microwave popcorn at the TV screen as the Poll results come back in and making good use of all those curse words I learned in my foreign language classes back in high-school.

So.

If you’re going to be out in the blogosphere looking for a place to get some news about Super Tuesday this ain’t the place to do it.

I would suggest that if you want information about what’s going on you visit Air America HERE or you could go to BBC and of course if you’re in one of the Super States you should stick with your own local news sources because CNN and FOX sux the big one.

 If you can catch Keith Olbermann  I would say do it, otherwise bag MSNBC too. I don’t know what the heck those guys hope to accomplish by the end of a news-day and I don’t think they do either.

So think of me out here in Washington State scarfing back PEZ and hoping we Americans can do something else besides produce suxy Reality TV shows and monster sized SUV’s.

Do you know what?

I think we can do it.

No fooling.

Here’s to Hope.

See You Wednesday.

amm

1964

Some Very Important Things Happened in 1964.

Well- for one- that’s the year I was born

( hurray)

In addition to that- two months later this hit the airwaves-

( trust me, it DOES figure )

Nobody was doing much with archeology  in 1964 but who would have guessed that the Beatles – yes those loveable ( geeze, I can’t believe I said that)  little mop tops- would one day be the poster Grand Dads of Rock and Roll?

Okay, this  picture was a big deal in 1964

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It’s called The Son of Man.

I think it’s dumb.

But on the other hand this is my idea of art so…

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 as an FYI this is what a commercial for Aspirin looked like in 1964-

it’s a tad bit dramatic.

Here’s a  movie that came out in 1964 proved that not only is war a really bad idea but working under the influence of controlled substances isn’t a very good one either

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To me the highlight of 1964 was when the Russians sent their astronauts into Space without a Space Suits- oh and the spacecraft didn’t have an escape hatch either.

 I don’t know who was drinking what when they dreamed up that idea, but there are writers out there that would pay good money for a swig.

It gets better, though- the Voskhod crashed in the Ural Mountains instead of landing in water and the crew spent the night in the  surrounded by Wolves.

Plus the rescue crew had to cut down trees to get to them.

I mean…WOW.

So let’s hear it for 1964

You know, after you all quit laughing.

amm

What I Want In A Leader

I’m glad you asked. 

I want someone to get out there

and

  Rock It Like Amadeus.

 Thank you for asking.

amm

Mom, I Don’t Want To Go To School

When I  in grade school part of our lessons involved  memorizeing  poems or math or English lessons.

To this day I can still remember what it felt like to go up to the blackboard and have to recite those lessons in front of the class with the teacher sitting there with his or her green ( and later red ) grade book.

Nah, I wasn’t scared I used to blow it for fun.

Just to see the look on everyone’s face.

Or I’d bust out with a song from School House Rock.

Those were the days.

 

Bring It On

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Nobody on this planet 

knows psychological warfare like my

Parents. 

When I was a kid and my Parents used to argue

and it was clear no one was giving in

this is how they called a winner.

The first one to convince the other

that they could get to a store

first

and buy me this toy

before the other one

and get it into my hands

WON.

No.

I never did get the toy.

Darn It.

If

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Looks COUNT.

Skin color COUNTS.

What sex you are COUNTS.

Your religion COUNTS.

Then

 WHY does it feel like

so many of us

DON’T MATTER

And When She Was Bad…

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All About Eve is one of my favorite movies.

I like it, because no matter how you dress it up- with the censored version that made it to the screen or the original version where Eve not only tastes but indulges in the bitter fruit of her wicked ways-

all of the characters remained patronizing and vapid.

Not to mention self indulgent.

So I really enjoyed seeing something like Eve show up and set the house on fire.

It’s also worth noting that the women in this movie- from Airy Fairy Karen to Self Adoring Margo to our Wonderfully Wicked Eve

 kicked some serious backside.

In High Heels no less.

amm

Morning Edition, January 21, 2008 · Said the real-life actress Celeste Holm, once upon a time, about the fictional actress Eve Harrington: “She had the manners of an ambassador and the morals of a pirate.”

 Anne Baxter (with Celeste Holm, left, in enlargement) on sofa in 'All About Eve'

Ruthless people: Anne Baxter plays Eve Harrington in the 1950 classic All About Eve; Celeste Holm (left) is Karen Richards, a friend she uses on her way to the top. Hulton Archive/Getty Images