"Freedom is never more than one generation away from extinction. We didn't pass it to our children in the bloodstream. It must be fought for, protected, and handed on for them to do the same, or one day we will spend our sunset years telling our children and our children's children what it was once like in the United States where men were free." - President Ronald Reagan
Wednesday, August 21, 2024
Let the Midnight Special, shine its everlovin’ light on me
Let the Midnight Special, shine its everlovin’ light on me - American Thinker https://t.co/9wVT5GfK3T
— Silvio Canto. Jr. (@silvio_canto) August 21, 2024
We remember Kenny Rogers (1938-2020)
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Hawaii made it 50 in 1959
We remember that Hawaii made it 50 on this day in 1959. Alaska became a state in January 1959 and it was followed by Hawaii months later.
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2013 post: A word about Eydie Gorme
Let's take a break from politics today and remember Eydie Gorme, who passed away at 84
"Ms. Gorme, who was born in New York City to Sephardic Jewish parents, grew up speaking English and Spanish. When she and her husband were at the height of their career as a team in 1964, the president of Columbia Records, Goddard Lieberson, suggested she put that Spanish to use in the recording studio.
The result was "Amor," recorded with the Mexican combo Trio Los Panchos."
And
this is where my parents and thousands of other Cuban parents
came in! She recorded music that was heard from here to Argentina.
In those early days in the US, my parents found tropical relief in cold Wisconsin winters by listening to all of those Spanish ballads that Eydie Gorme recorded.
In those early days in the US, my parents found tropical relief in cold Wisconsin winters by listening to all of those Spanish ballads that Eydie Gorme recorded.
I can remember listening to her LP (that's what we had before CD or MP3 files) over and over again. My mom really loved them. It was the romantic music that she and my dad dance to in a little town in central Cuba.
Frankly, I learned to love it too, especially as I got a little older and could not find anything exciting in pop music. I found myself doing what a lot of friends did; I got the CD version of the old LPs that we used to listen to. One of those CDs was Eydie Gorme singing in Spanish.
My friend Bill Katz (of Urgent Agenda) discussed her career and musical elegance:
"Eydie Gorme's career reminds us that we once had truly great popular music in America, sung by singers who actually could sing, and who could engage the audience. We had real composers and lyricists. Our music entertained, but didn't degrade. I have to believe there's still an audience for that music. And I know there are young people who still love it. I've met them."
RIP
to Eydie Gorme. I hope that the young people check out some of her
Spanish songs. They will love them as much as I do. The words are
romantic, the arrangements are great and you won't cover your kids' ears
when her songs come on the radio.
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Prague 1968 and memories of the old USSR
(My new American Thinker post)
As a kid, we heard the stories of Cuban political prisoners. Our family dinner table was a classroom with my parents telling us about communism or reading the latest letter from Cuba.
We read about Putin and Russian troops threatening neighbors. It's enough to remind us of another time when the then USSR invaded the then country of Czechoslovakia. It happened this weekend in 1968:
On the night of August 20, 1968, approximately 200,000 Warsaw Pact troops and 5,000 tanks invade Czechoslovakia to crush the “Prague Spring”–a brief period of liberalization in the communist country. Czechoslovakians protested the invasion with public demonstrations and other non-violent tactics, but they were no match for the Soviet tanks. The liberal reforms of First Secretary Alexander Dubcek were repealed and “normalization” began under his successor Gustav Husak.
It was the second time that USSR tanks under the banner of The Warsaw Pact had crushed democratic impulses in Eastern Europe. It also happened in Hungary in 1956 when Soviet tanks actually fought with people in the streets.
As a kid, we heard the stories of Cuban political prisoners. Our family dinner table was a classroom with my parents telling us about communism or reading the latest letter from Cuba.
I grew up admiring the men and women who risked their lives to fight for freedom. Some of these men were Cardinal Mindszenty of Hungary, those who tried to cross the Berlin Wall, the guerrillas who fought Castro in The Escambray Mountains and those who tried reforms inside the Soviet bloc.
On August 21, 1968, the Rascals were riding high with a song called "People got to be free".
It was a pop hit in the US. It was reality in the streets of Prague.
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August 1968: Tanks in Prague & "People got to be free" # 1 on Billboard
We remember that Warsaw Pact tanks were crushing the people of Prague this week in 1968. Like Hungary 1956, the USSR did not tolerate dissent in any of its satellite states.
Over here, “People got to be free” by The Rascals was #1 on Billboard USA. It spent much of the month of August as the most popular song of that summer.
We don't know if the Rascals were inspired by The Prague Spring but it was a timely message.
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