Monday, October 24, 2016

THURSDAY: Rally In Boston against US arms sales and military cooperation with Saudi Arabia


    • THURSDAY: Rally against US arms sales and military cooperation with Saudi Arabia

      Thursday, Oct. 27, 5 pm, MIT at 77 Mass Ave (main building)
      Demand that MIT end its collaboration with the King Abdulaziz City of Science and Technology (KACST).  According to the Oxford Business Group, KACST has developeded partnerships with the two largest US military contractos (Lockheed Martin and Boeing) and is a key institution in carry out R&D in support of Saudi Arabia's military modernization.  It is unclear at this stage whether MIT's collaboration specifically includes research with military applications.  But given US supported Saudi Arabian war crimes in Yemen and its abysmal human rights record, it is inappropriate for US universities to be supportive of key institutions in Saudi Arabia's military infrastructure.
      Join us on October 27 to demand an end of US arms sales to Saudi Arabia and an end to collaboratin between US universities and Saudi institutes that strengthen the Saudi military.
      Sponsors: Massachusetts Peace Action, United for Justice with Peace & AFSC Peace and Ecoonmic Security program.
       
      Upcoming Events: 
      Newsletter: 

      Sunday, October 23, 2016

      A View FromThe Left -Expropriate the Drug Companies!-EpiPen Price Gouging

      Workers Vanguard No. 1097
      7 October 2016
       
      Workers Vanguard No. 1097
      7 October 2016
       
      Expropriate the Drug Companies!-EpiPen Price Gouging

      Keeping an EpiPen at hand is a matter of life and death for millions of children and adults in the U.S.—people who have severe allergies to bee stings or common foods like milk or peanuts. Available by prescription only, the auto-injectors deliver emergency doses of epinephrine (adrenaline) intended to stop anaphylactic reactions that can kill in minutes. Epinephrine has been available for a century and is dirt cheap. The pens themselves cost next to nothing to make. It stands to reason that lifesaving devices like these should be available everywhere and that a person who might die without one should not have to worry about paying. But in capitalist America, Mylan Pharmaceutical has steadily jacked up the price from about $100 when it bought the patent nine years ago to an obscene $600 for every two-pack sold today. Mylan does not actually manufacture the device itself. The San Jose Mercury News (1 October) reported that, after reverse engineering an EpiPen, two Silicon Valley engineers estimated that it would cost only $8.02 to make.

      Small wonder, then, that a tidal wave of outrage has swept over the pharma parasite. Much of the anger has rightly been directed against Mylan’s cavalier CEO, Heather Bresch. The company chief has watched her personal salary rise even faster than the price of the EpiPen—Bresch draws down a cool $18 million a year. Bresch is the daughter of a West Virginia Democratic Senator; she got her first job at Mylan because of her father.

      Called to testify before a Congressional oversight committee, she deadpanned: “Price and access exist in a balance, and we believe we have struck that balance.” Tell that to the people who have no health insurance or who cannot pay the astronomical out-of-pocket costs under their policies! They are left to choose between groceries, utilities or medicine for themselves and their families. Some gamble on keeping an EpiPen past the expiration date. Others resort to stocking prefilled syringes or vials of epinephrine as a substitute. Apart from the added risk of getting a dose wrong or puncturing a vein, the minutes lost in attempting to fashion a homemade injection while constricted breathing and lowered blood pressure set in could be fatal.

      The pricing scandal has provoked much liberal hand-wringing and calls for more competition against Mylan’s near monopoly. “Bring a comparable product to market,” they say, or produce a generic version that is not quite as expensive. Such alternatives still allow Bresch and her investors to keep their profits while other companies get to muscle in on the action. Mylan’s own proposal is a “savings card” scheme in which the company may offer up to a 50 percent discount—leaving the cost at a still outrageous $300!
      Price gouging by pharmaceutical companies is not new. Before EpiPen there was Daraprim, an anti-malarial drug commonly used nowadays to treat AIDS patients. Last year, “pharma bro” Martin Shkreli, CEO of Turing Pharmaceuticals, became the “most hated man in America” when he raised the price of the drug from $13.50 to $750 per pill overnight! Shkreli eventually resigned under pressure, only to be replaced by one of his close associates—who kept the price at $750.

      It seems that when it comes to the most vital medicines, that’s when the capitalists raise the prices the most. In the late 1980s, with the AIDS epidemic raging, the Reagan administration finally threw a sop to HIV victims and allowed AZT, one of the first anti-retroviral medications, to be approved by the Food and Drug Administration. Patients were forced to fork over $10,000 a year for AZT treatment in a desperate attempt to stay alive. As we wrote in 1987: “The U.S. ‘health care’ system with its medicine for profit is a market in death. The pharmaceutical giants eye potential profits, while insurance vultures deny coverage to those judged ‘bad risks’ for AIDS.”

      Under capitalism, the development and sale of medicine is driven by profit and medical care is rationed. The wealthy, who are always assured of the best health care, are concerned about the price of an EpiPen to the extent they have stock in Mylan. But for the working class and poor, who often struggle to get any care, the cost of medicine matters very deeply. We call for quality health care for all, free at the point of delivery, and for the expropriation of the parasitic drug companies, which are a menace to public health. Assuring such basic human needs requires socialist revolution to overthrow the whole capitalist profit system.



      With Skip James’ Lyric I’d Rather Be With The Devil Than Be That Woman’s Man In Mind-Why I Won’t Vote For Hillary Clinton (Needless To Say Dump The Trump Too)

      With Skip James’ Lyric I’d Rather Be With The Devil Than Be That Woman’s Man In Mind-Why I Won’t Vote For Hillary Clinton (Needless To Say Dump The Trump Too)



      By Fritz Taylor
      Okay, let’s go by the numbers. Sometime in maybe late 2007, early 2008 in any case before it became clear that one Senator Barack Obama of Illinois would pose a serious challenge to then Senator Hillary Clinton of New York I had been bombarded with a few books written probably by minions or otherwise tied to the Clinton brand name. As such things go they were political biographies commissioned to advance Mrs. Clinton’s ultimately ill-fated campaign or material to be used a sound bite fodder for the same purposes. I was asked by some serious political people, maybe political pimps is the better way to put the matter to get on board her train or at least review the various books to let people outside her direct camp know how good a candidate, how well-qualified she was and so on. I balked at such an insidious task although I did to my subsequent regret review some items for which I was sent to the gallows by those same serious political folk. (At that point I had not particular animus against the relatively unknown Obama although I was subsequently to have many a vile word to say against him and his endless wars and endless bullshit about a “post-racial” society and the sand in my mouth “hope” noise he spouted).         
      My vantage point for writing about the various Clinton works was encapscalated almost perfectly by the old sweet falsetto-voiced bluesman from the late 1920s Skip James, who would be “discovered” by us budding folkies in the 1960s folk minute and have a second short career before passing on, in a signature song of his-Devil Got My Woman. The key line which I used shamelessly every time I could during the early part of that campaign year before I gave up covering the whole thing as one more act of futility for those of us who were serious about social change and who furthermore had no illusions in anything any candidate speaking for the Democratic Party of war and corruption had to say-“I’d rather be with the devil than be that woman’s man.” (Needless to say the various Republicans were and are beyond the pale and not worth even a sardonic look.) That very factual comment got me in hot water with some of my die-hard Clinton supporter friends (mostly politically savvy women looking to launch the first woman into the barren American presidency). But it also got me in Dutch with my more radically-inclined feminist friends who saw my comment as “sexist,” misanthropic and misogynous. Jesus didn’t they do their own castigations and aspirations against that woman for her lug-head vote with both hands for the Iraq War resolution which still lives with us burnt in our memoires for seemingly all eternity.   
      Come 2016 and the age of Dump the Trump supposedly a greater threat to the American democracy than the “reds under every bed” of the red scare Cold War rhetoric of my youth back in the early 1960s and those same cohorts have taken once again to making the same silly accusations about my Neanderthal attitude (I am being kind to myself here since their language was significantly more heated that I care to quote). But everybody knows that bourgeois politics, hell, any politics is a tough dollar so for those who forgot my retort back then about my socially backward ways I am resurrecting my talisman-my defense.     
      You see the blues lyrics, folk music in general, is almost always open to copying and tweaking. So the great modern (and very feminist) blues singer Rory Block came to my rescue after I remembered that she had done a version of Skip James’ song. Except naturally when she sang the song she said- I’d rather be with the devil than be that man’s woman.” Touché. I used the masculine version of that statement when somebody asked me if I supported Barack Obama for President in 2008. (I supported the very black, the very beautiful, and very feminist ex-Georgia Congresswoman Cynthia McKinney in her Green Party-etched efforts and Jill Stein of the same party in hers this year so there). I use the feminine version this year for Mister Clinton once again. Oh yeah, and Dump The Trump.       

      Honor An Historic Leader Of The American Abolitionist Movement-John Brown Late Of Harper's Ferry


      Honor An Historic Leader Of The American Abolitionist Movement-John Brown Late Of Harper's Ferry  


       


      
      

      Chapter Eight
      Harpers Ferry


      Unless otherwise noted, all images are from the Boyd B. Stutler Collection

      
      
      “The passage of the Patowmac through the Blue Ridge is perhaps one of the most stupendous scenes in nature. You stand on a very high point of land. On your right comes up the Shenandoah, having ranged along the foot of the mountain an hundred miles to seek a vent. On your left approaches the Patowmac, in quest of a passage also. In the moment of their junction they rush together against the mountain, rend it asunder, and pass off to the sea. . . . For the mountain being cloven asunder, she presents to your eye, through the cleft, a small catch of smooth blue horizon, at an infinite distance in the plain country, inviting you, as it were, from the riot and tumult roaring around, to pass through the breach and participate of the calm below. . . . This scene is worth a voyage across the Atlantic.” – Jefferson, Notes on the State of Virginia Harpers Ferry in Jefferson County, Virginia (now West Virginia), was settled in the mid-1700s by Robert Harper. Located at the confluence of the Shenandoah and Potomac rivers, the town was still little more than a ferry crossing when Thomas Jefferson visited the place in the early 1780s and described the view from the hillside. Growth came after President George Washington selected Harpers Ferry in 1794 as the site for one of the new federal arsenals authorized by Congress. Construction of a factory along the Potomac River began in 1799 and arms manufacturing began soon thereafter.

      Jefferson Rock
      Jefferson Rock
      Two decades later, the United States expanded its facilities at Harpers Ferry with the addition of a rifle works along the Shenandoah. Under the direction of gunmaker John H. Hall, the rifle factory served as an incubator for the development of interchangeable parts for rifles, which later spread to the government's other armory at Springfield, Massachusetts. A major upgrade was undertaken to the government facilities in the 1840s, after which the armory consisted of nearly ten buildings at the rifle factory and about twenty at the musket factory. Construction of government-owned dwellings also took place, but many of them would be sold to private owners in 1852. Harpers Ferry
      Map of Harpers Ferry, 1869, by S. Howell Brown, from Senate Report 556, 43rd Cong., 2nd sess.
      Harpers Ferry
      Harpers Ferry, 1839
      Stone Steps
      The historic stone steps, leading to
      the Catholic Church
      Harpers Ferry
      The confluence of the Potomac and
      Shenandoah rivers at Harpers Ferry
      Connection with the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal, the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad, the Winchester and Potomac Railroad, and area turnpikes in the 1830s enhanced the town’s accessibility and attracted other industries. At mid-century, Harpers Ferry included a cotton mill, an iron foundry, and a flour mill; and the town and the adjoining community of Bolivar, where many armory workers lived, had a combined population of 2,800, of which approximately 300 were free or enslaved African Americans. In 1850, nearly 24,000 slaves lived in the seven-county area comprised of Jefferson County and the surrounding counties of Berkeley, Clarke, Frederick, and Loudoun counties in Virginia, and Frederick and Washington counties in Maryland.
      Harpers Ferry Armory
      U. S. Armory in Harpers Ferry, by Ed Beyer, 1857, from his Album of Virginia
      In the 1857-58 year, the Harpers Ferry armory produced more than 8,500 rifle muskets and 1,700 rifles, both 1855 models; more than 1,400 percussion muskets, 1842 model; and nearly 2,700 other rifles, .54 or .58 calibre. The musket and rifle factories also manufactured various firearms appendages, including several thousand tompions, sword bayonets, and long-range sights. In 1859, roughly 100,000 weapons were stored in the government arsenal at Harpers Ferry.“He [John Brown] often stopped over night with me, when we talked over the feasibility of his plan for destroying the value of slave property, and the motive for holding slaves in the border States. That plan . . . was to take twenty or twenty-five discreet and trustworthy men into the mountains of Virginia and Maryland, and station them in squads of five, . . . He further proposed to have a number of stations from the line of Pennsylvania to the Canada border, where such slaves as he might, through his men, induce to run away, should be supplied with food and shelter and be forwarded from one station to another till they should reach a place of safety . . . .” – Frederick Douglass, Life and Times
      
      

      Primary Sources:

      Letter, John Mackey to Samuel Hodgdon, February 21, 1799
      Letter, John Mackey to Samuel Hodgdon, March 1, 1799
      Letter, John Mackey to Samuel Hodgdon, December 26, 1799
      Peregrine Prolix Description of Harpers Ferry, 1830s
      Brantz Mayer Description of Harpers Ferry, 1856
      Documents on Harpers Ferry for "On This Day in West Virginia History," September 16

      Secondary Sources:

      “A Nineteenth-Century Mill Village: Virginius Island, 1800-60,” by Mary Johnson (West Virginia History, Vol. 54)
      
      
      Table of Contents | Previous Chapter | Next Chapter
      
      

      *Early Texas Blues All Wrapped Up In One Package-The Music Of Henry Thomas

      Click On Title To Link To YouTube's Film Clip Of Henry Thomas Performing "Bull Doze Blues".

      CD Review

      Texas Blues: Early Blues Masters From The Lone Star State: 4CD Set, Various artists, JSP records, London, 2004


      Well here we go again. Just when you thought I had stopped talking about Texas after my many reviews of things Texas like the work of the writer Larry McMurtry and singers Janis Joplin, Blind Lemon Jefferson, Mance Lipscomb, Lonnie Johnson and the electric Lightnin’ Hopkins I am here to review a four CD compilation of early Texas bluesmen. Now in this space I have reviewed North Carolina blues, Delta blues, traveling up river to Memphis blues and then to the Mecca, Chicago blues. They all have their own distinct variations and to a musicologist there are some subtle ways of playing that draw those distinctions out. For the laity though what makes that distinction is the rather laid-back way in which the music flows. Flows nicely, to be sure, but not in the pristine pick of North Carolina blues, the sweat of the plantation of Delta blues, the honky-tonk sound of Memphis or the raw blues sound of Chicago but the hard strum and slurring of words that is much softer by comparison than those other sounds.

      I mentioned above the names Blind Lemon Jefferson, Mance Lipscomb and Lonnie Johnson. These are the traditions that the artists on these CDs are working with. They are mainly contemporaries and obviously not as well known either because the vagaries of fate, personal or otherwise didn’t leave much room for their work to become widely recognized in the “golden age” of this type of music in the late 1920’s before the deal when down in the Great Depression and cut off their sources of wider fame. Nevertheless we can, thanks to the producers of this set, get to hear them almost one hundred years later. Hell, most of them still sound good, at least in spots. Here is the cream: Disc A, Henry Thomas on the much-covered classic “John Henry” , a great version of “Don’t You Leave Me Here” and the novelty number (all railroad stops) “Railroadin’ Some”; Pete Harris on “Blind Lemon’s Song” (the also much-covered “See That My Grave Is Kept Clean” :Disc C, Oscar Woods on the salacious “Don’t Sell It” and “Boll Weevil Blues” and Smith Casey on “East Texas Rag”. Also included in this series are Ramblin’ Thomas, Willie Reed, Coley Jones, Little Hat Jones, Jesse Thomas and Black Ace. Some good stuff by the lot of them but nothing that really jumped out like with Henry Thomas and Oscar Woods.

      Bull Doze Blues - Henry Thomas

      I'm going away, babe, and it won't be long
      I'm going away and it won't be long
      I'm going away and it won't be long

      Just as sure as that train leaves out of that Mobile yard
      Just as sure as that train leaves out of that Mobile yard
      Just as sure as that train leaves out of that Mobile yard

      Come shake your hand, tell your papa goodbye
      Come shake your hand, tell your papa goodbye
      Come shake your hand, tell your papa goodbye

      I'm going back to Tennessee
      I'm going back to Memphis, Tennessee
      I'm going back, Memphis, Tennessee

      I'm going where I never get bulldozed
      I'm going where I never get the bulldoze
      I'm going where I never get bulldozed

      If you don't believe I'm sinking, look what a hole I'm in
      If you don't believe I'm sinking, look what a hole I'm in
      If you don't believe I'm sinking, look what a fool I've been.

      Oh, my babe, take me back. How in the world, Lord, take me back.

      *Yes, Indeed There Is Not Cure For Those Summertime Blues- The Work Of Rock’s Eddie Cochran- A CD Review

      Click on the headline to link to a YouTube film clip of Eddie Cochran performing his classic, Summertime Blues.



      CD Review


      The Legendary Masters Series, Volume One: Eddie Cochran, Liberty Records, 1990



      Elvis made it. Jerry Lee Lewis made it. Chuck Berry made it. And I could go on and on about those early rockers who have given us classic songs that still sound good today to those of us who originally heard them today, and more importantly, to the younger musical-starved set who flip over them just as we did. And then there are those like Carl Perkins, Sonny Burgess, and the artist under review here, Eddie Cochran, who were either one-hit wonders or got caught in some one of life’s little quirks and never got the stardom that their talent warranted. Eddie Cochran's career was cut short by his death in a car crash.

      No question Eddie Cochran could play guitar. Just listen to his riffs on this compilation. He also had a voice and the looks that one would assume would make the girls go wild (and that was half the story of early rock, the girls going wild, and we boys, imitating as best we could, what the girls went wild over). Moreover, Eddie Cochran behind the scenes was a driving force encouraging others to take up rock. Still old Eddie was just off the big time. But get this, and I will swear that I am not alone on this. Every summer for a few years, anyway, I would get out his old Summertime Blues just as school ended for the year and play the thing about twenty times. A classic. Others that stand out here are: Sittin’ In The Balcony (great timing), Weekend, and Cut Across Shorty (Ron Stewart covered that one).

      *****Victory To The Fast-Food Workers The Vanguard Of The Fight For $15......

      *****Victory To The Fast-Food Workers The Vanguard Of The Fight For $15......Fight For $15 Is Just A Beginning-All Labor Must Support Our Sisters And Brothers

       
       
       
       
      From The Pen Of Sam Lowell

      Frank Jackman had always ever since he was a kid down in Carver, a working class town formerly a shoe factory mecca about thirty miles south of Boston and later dotted with assorted small shops related to the shipbuilding trade, a very strong supporters of anything involving organized labor and organizing labor, anything that might push working people ahead. While it had taken it a long time, and some serious military service during the Vietnam War, his generation’s war, to get on the right side of the angels on the war issue and even more painfully and slowly on the woman’s liberation and gay rights issues, and he was still having a tough time with the transgender thing although the plight of heroic Wikileaks whistle-blower Army soldier Chelsea Manning had made it easier to express solidarity, he had always been a stand-up guy for unions and for working people. Maybe it was because his late father, Lawrence Jackman, had been born and raised in coal country down in Harlan County, Kentucky where knowing which side you were on, knowing that picket lines mean don’t cross, knowing that every scrap given by the bosses had been paid for in blood and so it was in his blood. Maybe though it was closer to the nub, closer to home, that the closing of the heavily unionized shoe factories which either headed down south or off-shore left slim leaving for those who did not follow them south, slim pickings for an uneducated man like his father trying to raise four daughters and son on hopes and dreams and not much else. Those hopes and dreams leaving his mother to work in the “mother’s don’t work” 1950s at a local donut shop filling donuts for chrissakes to help make ends meet so his was always aware of how close the different between work and no work was, and decent pay for decent work too. How ever he got “religion” on the question as a kid, and he suspected the answer was in the DNA, Frank was always at the ready when the latest labor struggles erupted, the latest recently being the sporadic uprisings amount fast-food workers and lowly-paid Walmart workers to earn a living wage.        

      One day in the late summer of 2014 he had picked up a leaflet from a young guy, a young guy who later identified himself as a field organizer for the Service Employees International Union (SEIU), a union filled to the brim with low-end workers like janitors, nurses assistants, salespeople, and the like, passing them out at an anti-war rally (against the American escalations in Syria and Iraq) in downtown Boston. The leaflet after giving some useful information about how poorly fast-food worker were paid and how paltry the benefits, especially the lack of health insurance announced an upcoming “Fight for $15” action in Downtown Boston on September 4, 2014 at noon as part of a national struggle for economic justice and dignity for the our hard working sisters and brothers. He told the young organizer after expressing solidarity with the upcoming efforts that he would try to bring others to the event although being held during a workday would be hard for some to make the time.

      In the event Frank brought about a dozen others with him. They and maybe fifty to one hundred others during the course of the event stood in solidarity for a couple of hours while a cohort of fast-food workers told their stories. And while another cohort of fast-food workers were sitting on the ground in protest prepared to commit civil disobedience by blocking the street to make their point. Several of them would eventually be arrested and taken away by the police later to be fined and released.

      Frank, when he reflected on the day’s events later, was pretty elated as he told his old friend Josh Breslin whom he had called up in Maine to tell him what had happened that day. Josh had also grown up in a factory town, a textile town, Olde Saco, and had been to many such support events himself and before he retired had as a free-lance writer written up lots of labor stories. The key ingredient that impressed Josh in Frank’s description had been how many young serious black and Latino workers had participated in the actions. Later than night when Frank reflected further on the situation he broke out in a smile as he was writing up his summary of his take on the events. There would be people pass off the torch to when guys like him and Josh were no longer around. He had been afraid that would not happen after the long drought doldrums in the class struggle of the previous few decades. Here is what else he had to say:            

      No question in this wicked old world that those at the bottom are “the forgotten ones,” “los olvidados,” those who a writer who had worked among them had long ago correctly described as the world fellahin, the ones who never get ahead. This day we are talking about working people, people working and working hard for eight, nine, ten dollars an hour. Maybe working two jobs to make ends meet since a lot of times these McJobs, these Wal-Mart jobs do not come with forty hours of work attached but whatever some cost-cutting manager deems right to keep them on a string and keep them from qualifying for certain benefits that do not kick in with “part-time” work. And lately taking advantage of cover from Obamacare keeping the hours below the threshold necessary to kick in health insurance and other benefits. Yes, the forgotten people.

      But let’s do the math here figuring on forty hours and figuring on say ten dollars an hour. That‘s four hundred a week times fifty weeks (okay so I am rounding off for estimate purposes here too since most of these jobs do not have vacation time figured in).That’s twenty thousand a year. Okay so just figure any kind of decent apartment in the Boston area where I am writing this-say one thousand a month. That’s twelve thousand a year. So the other eight thousand is for everything else. No way can that be done. And if you had listened to the young and not so young fast-food workers, the working mothers, the working older brothers taking care of younger siblings, workers trying to go to school to get out of the vicious cycle of poverty you would understand the truth of that statement. And the stories went on and on along that line all during the action. 

      Confession: it has been a very long time since I have had to scrimp and scrim to make ends meet, to get the rent in, to keep those damn bill-collectors away from my door, to beg the utility companies to not shut off those necessary services. But I have been there, no question. Growing up working class town poor, the only difference on the economic question was that it was all poor whites unlike today’s crowd. Also for many years living from hand to mouth before things got steady. I did not like it then and I do not like the idea of it now.  I am here to say even the “Fight for $15” is not enough, but it is a start. And I whole-heartedly support the struggle of my sisters and brothers for a little economic justice in this wicked old world. And any reader who might read this-would you work for these slave wages? I think not. So show your solidarity and get out and support the fast-food and Wal-Mart workers in their just struggles. 

      Organize Wal-Mart! Organize the fast food workers! Union! Union!  
             http://www.boston.com/news/local/massachusetts/2014/09/04/boston-fast-food-workers-rally-for-wages-unions/bc1ZqZIgwsVcOw0QHIV74M/story.html         

      *****John Brown’s Body Lies A Moldering In The Grave-With The Massachusetts 54th Black Volunteer Regiment In Mind.

      *****John Brown’s Body Lies A Moldering In The Grave-With The Massachusetts 54th Black Volunteer Regiment In Mind.



       



      Every time I pass the frieze honoring the heroic Massachusetts 54th Black Volunteer Regiment across from the State House on Beacon Street in Boston, a unit that fought in the American Civil War, a war which we have just finished commemorating the 150th anniversary of its formal ending (April 1865) I am struck by one figure who I will discuss in a minute. For those who do not know the 54th Regiment the unit had been recruited and made up of all volunteers, former slaves, freedmen, maybe a current fugitive slave snuck in there, those were such times for such unheralded personal valor, the recruitment a task that the great abolitionist Frederick Douglass, himself an ex-slave had been central in promoting (including two of his sons). All knew, or soon became aware that if they did not fight to the finish they would not be treated as prisoners of war but captured chattel subject to re-enslavement or death.  The regiment fought with ferocious valor before Fort Wagner down in South Carolina and other hot spots where an armed black man, in uniform or out, brought red flashes of deep venom, if venom is red, but hellfire hatred in any case to the Southern plantation owners and their hangers-on (that armed black men acting in self-defense of themselves and theirs still bringing hellfire hatred among some whites to this day, no question).

      I almost automatically focus in on that old hard-bitten grizzled erect bearded soldier who is just beneath the head of the horse being ridden by Colonel Robert Gould Shaw, the white commander of the regiment who from a family of ardent abolitionists fell with his men before Fort Wagner and was buried with them, an honor. (See above) I do not know the details of the model Saint-Gauden’s used when he worked that section (I am sure that specific information can be found although it is not necessary to this sketch) but as I grow older I appreciate that old man soldier even more, as old men are supposed to leave the arduous duty of fighting for just causes, arms in hand, to the young.

      I like to think that that old grizzled brother who aside from color looks like me when he heard the call from Massachusetts wherever he was, maybe had read about the plea in some abolitionist newspaper, had maybe even gotten the message from Frederick Douglass himself through his newspaper, The North Star, calling Sable Brother to Arms or on out the stump once Lincoln unleashed him to recruit his black brothers for whatever reason although depleting Union ranks reduced by bloody fight after bloody fight as is the nature of civil war when the societal norms are broken  as was at least one cause, he picked up stakes leaving some small farm or trade and family behind and volunteered forthwith. Maybe he had been born, like Douglass, in slavery and somehow, manumission, flight, something, following the Northern Star, got to the North. Maybe learned a skill, a useful skill, got a little education to be able to read and write and advance himself and had in his own way prospered.
      But something was gnawing at him, something about the times, something about tow-headed white farm boys, all awkward and ignorant from the heartland of the Midwest, sullen Irish and other ethnic immigrants from the cities where it turned out the streets were not paved with gold and so took the bounty for Army duty, took some draft-dodger’s place for pay, hell, even high-blown Harvard boys were being armed to defend the Union (and the endless names of the fallen and endless battles sites on Memorial Hall at Harvard a graphic testament to that solemn sense of duty then). And more frequently as the days and months passed about the increasing number of white folk who hated, hated with a red-hot passion, slavery and if that passion meant anything what was he a strong black man going to do about it, do about breaking the hundreds of years chains. Maybe he still had kindred under the yolk down South in some sweated plantation, poorly fed, ill-treated, left to fester and die when not productive anymore, the women, young and old subject to Mister’s lustful appetites and he had to do something.
      Then the call came, Governor Andrews of Massachusetts was raising a “sable” armed regiment (Douglass’ word) to be headed by a volunteer Harvard boy urged on by his high abolitionist parents, Colonel Shaw, the question of black military leadership of their own to be left to another day, another day long in the future as it turned out but what was he to know of that, and he shut down his small shop or farm, said good-bye to kin and neighbors and went to Boston to join freedom’s fight. I wonder if my old bearded soldier fell before Fort Wagner fight down in heated rebel country, or maybe fell in some other engagement less famous but just as important to the concept of disciplined armed black men fighting freedom’s fight. I like to think though that the grizzled old man used every bit of wit and skill he had and survived to march into Charleston, South Carolina, the fire-breathing heart of the Confederacy, then subdued at the end of war with his fellows in the 54th stepping off to the tune of John Brown’s Body Lies A-Moldering In The Grave. A fitting tribute to Captain Brown and his band of brother, black and white, at Harper’s Ferry fight and to an old grizzled bearded soldier’s honor.             


      * Early Texas Blues All Wrapped Up In One Package- The Blues Of Oscar Woods

      Click On Title To Link To YouTube's Film Clip Of Oscar Wood's Classic "Lone Wolf Blues".

      CD Review

      Texas Blues: Early Blues Masters From The Lone Star State: 4CD Set, Various artists, JSP records, London, 2004


      "Lone Wolf Blues"

      Mama mother told me, when I was quite a child (2x)
      I say the life that you are living will kill you after a while

      I just begin to realize the things my mother say (2x)
      Since I been down here I been mistreated this way

      I never loved no one woman, hope to God I never will (2 x)
      All these triflin' women will get some good man killed

      Now I ain't no monkey and I sho' can't climb a tree (2x)
      And I ain't gonna let no woman make no monkey out of me

      Now I sent my baby a brand new twenty-dollar bill (2x)
      If that don't bring her, I know my shotgun will

      *Early Texas Blues All Wrapped Up In One Package-The Blues Of Johnny Temple

      Click On Title To Link To YouTube's Film Clip Of Johnny Temple Performing "The Evil Devil Blues".

      CD Review

      Texas Blues: Early Blues Masters From The Lone Star State: 4CD Set, Various artists, JSP records, London, 2004




      Eric Clapton Me and the Devil Blues Lyrics:


      By Robert Johnson



      Early this mornin', when you knocked upon my door
      Early this mornin', ooh, when you knocked upon my door
      And I said, "hello, satan, I believe it's time to go"

      Me and the devil, was walkin' side by side
      Me and the devil, ooh, was walkin' side by side
      [ Find more Lyrics on www.mp3lyrics.org/RAF ]
      I'm goin' to beat my woman, until I get satisfied

      She say you don't see why, that I will dog her 'round
      [Spoken:] Now, baby, you know you ain't doin' me right, now
      She say you don't see why, ooh, that I will dog her 'round
      It must-a be that old evil spirit, so deep down in the ground

      You may bury my body, down by the highway side

      [Spoken:] Baby, I don't care where you bury my body when I'm dead and gone
      You may bury my body, ooh, down by the highway side
      So my old evil spirit, can get a Greyhound bus and ride
      Lyrics: Me and the Devil Blues, Eric Clapton [end]

      *Early Texas Blues All Wrapped Up In One Package- The Music Of Ramblin' Thomas

      Click On Title To Link To YouTube's Film Clip Of Ramblin' Thomas Performing The Very Timely "No Job Blues".

      CD Review

      Texas Blues: Early Blues Masters From The Lone Star State: 4CD Set, Various artists, JSP records, London, 2004

      *****Once Again On The 1960s Folk Minute-The Cambridge Club 47 Scene

      *****Once Again On The 1960s Folk Minute-The Cambridge Club 47 Scene

       
       

      From The Pen Of Zack James

      Joshua Breslin, Carver down in the wilds of Southeastern Massachusetts cranberry bog country born, had certainly not been the only one who had recently taken a nose-dive turn back in time to that unique moment beginning in the very late 1950s, say 1958, 1959 when be-bop jazz (you know Dizzy, the late Bird, the mad man Monk the guys who bopped swing-a-ling for “cool” high white note searches on the instruments) “beatnik” complete with beret and bop-a-long banter and everybody from suburb land was clad in black, guys in black chinos and flannel shirts, gals in black dresses, black stockings, black shoes, who knows maybe black underwear which in Victoria's Secret time is not hard to image but then something the corner boys in front of Jimmy Jack’s Diner salaciously contemplated about the female side of that "beat" scene (what King Kerouac termed beatitude, the search for holiness or wholeness), was giving way to earnest “folkie” time. And no alluring black-dressed gals but unisex flannel shirts, or sometimes once somebody had been to Mexico peasant blouses, unisex blue jeans and unisex sandals leaving nothing in particular to the fervent corner boy imagination) in the clubs that mattered around the Village (the Gaslight, Geddes Folk City, half the joints on Bleecker Street), Harvard Square (Club Blue, the place for serious cheap dates since for the price of coffees and pastries for two you could linger on, Café Blanc, the place for serious dates since they had a five dollar minimum, Club 47, the latter a place where serious folkies and serious folk musicians hung out) and North Beach (Club Ernie’s, The Hungry Eye, all a step behind the folk surge since you would still find a jazz-poetry mix longer than in the Eastern towns). That scene would go on in earnest to the mid-1960s when folk music had its minute as a popular genre and faded a bit. Even guys like Sam Eaton, Sam Lowell, Jack Callahan and Bart Webber, who only abided the music back in the day, now too, because the other guys droned on and on about it under the influence of Pete Markin a guy Josh had met  in the summer of love, 1967 were diving in too. Diving into the music which beside first love rock and roll got them through the teenage night.

      The best way to describe that turn from be-bop beat to earnest folkie, is by way of a short comment by the late folk historian Dave Von Ronk which summed up the turn nicely. Earlier in that period, especially the period after Allen Ginsburg’s Howl out in the Frisco poetry slam blew the roof off modernist poetry with his talk of melted modern minds, hipsters, negro streets, the fight against Moloch, the allure of homosexuality, and Jack Kerouac’s On The Road in a fruitless search for the father he and Neal Cassady never knew had the Army-Navy surplus stores cleaning out their rucksack inventories, when “beat poets” held sway and folkies were hired to clear the room between readings Dave would have been thrown in the streets to beg for his supper if his graven voice and quirky folk songs did not empty the place, and he did (any serious look at some of his earliest compositions will tell in a moment why, and why the cross-over from beat to folkie by the former crowd never really happened). But then the sea-change happened, tastes changed and the search for roots was on, and Von Ronk would be doing three full sets a night and checking every folk anthology he could lay his hands on (including naturally Harry Smith’s legendary efforts and the Lomaxes and Seegers too) and misty musty record store recordings to get enough material.

      People may dispute the end-point of that folk minute like they do about the question of when the "turn the world upside down" counter-cultural 1960s ended as a “youth nation” phenomenon but clearly with the advent of acid-etched rock (acid as in LSD, blotter, electric kool aid acid test not some battery stuff ) by 1967-68 the searching for and reviving of the folk roots that had driven many aficionados to the obscure archives like Harry Smith’s anthology, the recording of the Lomaxes, Seegers and that crowd had passed.

      As an anecdote, one that Josh would use whenever the subject of his own sea-change back to rock and roll came up, in support of that acid-etched dateline that is the period when Josh stopped taking his “dates” to the formerly ubiquitous home away from home coffeehouses which had sustained him through many a dark home life night in high school and later when he escaped home during college, cheap poor boy college student dates to the Harvard Square coffeehouses where for the price of a couple of cups of coffee, expresso then a favorite since you could sip it slowly and make it last for the duration and rather exotic since it was percolated in a strange copper-plated coffee-maker, a shared pastry of unknown quality, and maybe a couple of dollars admission charge or for the “basket” that was the life-support of the performers you could hear up and coming talent working out their kinks, and took those "dates" instead to the open-air fashion statement rock concerts that were abounding around the town.

      The shift also entailed a certain change in fashion from those earnest flannel shirts, denims, lacy blouses and sandals to day-glo tie-dye shirts, bell-bottomed denims, granny dresses, and mountain boots or Chuck Taylor sneakers. Oh yeah, and the decibel level of the music got higher, much higher and the lyrics talked not of ancient mountain sorrows, thwarted triangle love, or down-hearted blues over something that was on your mind but to alice-in-wonderland and white rabbit dreams, carnal nightmares, yellow submarines, satanic majesties, and wooden ships on the water.             

      Some fifty years out others in Josh-like fits of nostalgia and maybe to sum up a life’s work there have been two recent documentaries concerning the most famous Harvard Square coffeehouse of them all, the Club 47 (which still exists under the name of the non-profit Club Passim which traces its genealogy to that legendary Mount Auburn Street spot in a similar small venue near the Harvard Co-Op Bookstore off of Church Street).

      One of the documentaries put out a few years ago (see above) traces the general evolution of that club in its prime when the likes of Bob Dylan, Joan Baez, Tom Rush, Eric Von Schmidt, the members of the Jim Kweskin Jug Band (the forming of jug bands, a popular musical form including a seemingly infinite number of bands with the name Sheik in them, going back to the early 20th century itself a part of the roots revival guys like Josh were in thrall to), and many others sharpened up their acts there. The other documentary, No Regrets (title taken from one of his most famous songs) which Josh reviewed for one of the blogs, The American Folk Minute, to which he has contributed to over the years is a biopic centered on the fifty plus years in folk music of Tom Rush. Both those visual references got Josh thinking about how that folk scene, or better, the Harvard Square coffeehouse scene kept Josh from going off the rails, although that was a close thing.        

      Like about a billion kids before and after Josh in his coming of age in the early 1960s went through the usual bouts of teenage angst and alienation aided and abetted by growing up “from hunger” among the very lowest rung of the working poor with all the pathologies associated with survival down at the base of society where the bonds of human solidarity are often times very attenuated. All of this “wisdom” complete with appropriate “learned” jargon, of course figured out, told about, made many mistakes to gain, came later, much later because at the time Josh was just feeling rotten about his life and how the hell he got placed in a world which he had not created (re-enforced when questioned by one Delores Breslin with Prescott Breslin as a behind-the scenes back-up about his various doings) and no likely possibilities of having a say what with the world stacked against him, his place in the sun (and not that “safe” white collar civil service job that Delores saw as the epitome of upward mobility for her brood), and how he didn’t have a say in what was going on. Then through one source or another mainly by the accident of tuning in his life-saver transistor radio, which for once he successfully badgered to get from Delores and Prescott one Christmas by threatening murder and mayhem if he didn’t when all his corner boys at Jimmy Jack’s Diner had them, on one Sunday night to listen to a favorite rock and roll DJ that he could receive on that night from Chicago he found a folk music program that sounded interesting (it turned out to be the Dick Summer show on WBZ, a DJ who is featured in the Tom Rush documentary) and he was hooked by the different songs played, some mountain music, some jug, some country blues, some protest songs.

      Each week Dick Summer would announce who was playing where for the week and he kept mentioning various locations, including the Club 47, in Harvard Square. Josh was intrigued, wanted to go if only he could find a kindred for a date and if he could scratch up some dough. Neither easy tasks for a guy in high teen alienation mode.           

      One Saturday afternoon Josh made connections to get to a Red Line subway stop which was the quickest way for him to get to Harvard Square (and was also the last stop on that line then) and walked around the Square looking into the various clubs and coffeehouses that had been mentioned by Summer and a few more as well. You could hardly walk a block without running into one or the other. Of course during the day all people were doing was sitting around drinking coffee and reading, maybe playing chess, or as he found out later huddled in small group corners working on their music (or poetry which also still had some sway as a tail end of the “beat” scene) so he didn’t that day get the full sense of what was going on. A few weeks later, having been “hipped” to the way things worked, meaning that as long as you had coffee or something in front of you in most places you were cool Josh always chronically low on funds took a date, a cheap date naturally, to the Club Blue where you did not pay admission but where Eric Von Schmidt was to play. Josh had heard his Joshua Gone Barbados covered by Tom Rush on Dick Summer’s show and he had flipped out so he was eager to hear him. So for the price of, Josh thought, two coffees each, a stretched-out shared brownie and two subway fares they had a good time, an excellent time (although that particular young woman and Josh would not go on much beyond that first date since she was looking for a guy who had more dough to spend on her, and maybe a “boss” car too).

      Josh would go over to Harvard Square many weekend nights in those days, including sneaking out of the house a few time late at night and heading over since in those days the Red Line subway ran all night. That was his home away from home not only for cheap date nights depending on the girl he was interested in but when the storms gathered at the house about his doing, or not doing, this or that, stuff like that when his mother pulled the hammer down. If Josh had a few dollars make by caddying for the Mayfair swells at the Carver Country Club, a private club a few miles from his house he would pony up the admission, or two admissions if he was lucky, to hear Joan Baez or her sister Mimi with her husband Richard Farina, maybe Eric Von Schmidt, Tom Paxton when he was in town at the 47. If he was broke he would do his alternative, take the subway but rather than go to a club he would hang out all night at the famous Harvard Square Hayes-Bickford just up the steps from the subway stop exit. That was a wild scene made up of winos, grifters, con men, guys and gals working off barroom drunks, crazies, and… almost every time out there would be folk-singers or poets, some known to him, others from cheap street who soon faded into the dust, in little clusters, coffee mugs filled, singing or speaking low, keeping the folk tradition alive, keeping the faith that a new wind was coming across the land and they, Josh, wanted to catch it. Wasn’t that a time.          


       

      From The "Abraham Lincoln Brigade Archives" Website- The Alba Blog

      Click on the headline to link to the Abraham Lincoln Brigade Archive blog page for all kinds of interesting information about that important historic grouping.

      Markin comment:

      This blog had gotten my attention for two reasons: those rank and filers who fought to defend democracy, fight the fascists and fight for socialism in Spain for the most part, political opponents or not, were kindred spirits; and, those with first-hand knowledge of those times over seventy years ago are dwindling down to a precious few and so we had better listen to their stories while they are around to tell it. More, later.