Border Patrol Chief Promises to Arrest Ilhan Omar
Miranda Devine Hammers Dems Over Latest Slimy Attempt to Make It Look Like...
David Frum Explains Why DOJ's Use of 'Franklin' Parody Is a Form of...
Pelley Wanna Crack-Up? 60 Minutes Host Says Guests Won’t Appear on Show Due...
NBC 'News' Breaks Story on Trump's Racist Font War
Get on the Jet Ski, Gavvy Pooh: Nicki Minaj Just Destroyed Gavin Newsom...
Amanda Seyfried Says Socialism Is a Gorgeous Idea Because She’ll Never Actually Have...
Mollie Hemingway's Wake-Up Call: Ilhan Omar's Alleged Brother-Marriage and Fraud Must Be I...
Sorry, but Your Early Retirement Isn’t My Emergency: The Subsidy Cliff Truth Bomb
Chickens Roost at Aisle 7: Jill Filipovic Stunned to Learn Soft-on-Crime Policies Have...
Obama’s ‘Most Transparent Ever’ Scam: No Library, Just a Private ‘Center’ to Hide...
Socialist LA Councilwoman Rakes in $240K to Oversee Fentanyl Hellhole: No-Shows Debates As...
Minnesota Journo: If Brother-Marriage Claim Is Libel, Ilhan Omar Should Sue and Cash...
Walking Schtick: Cane-Waving Al Green’s Trump Impeachment Stunt Fails (Again) but Other De...
Governor Tim Walz Is Asked About Responsibility for Somali Fraud Scandal and Pivots...

Los Angles Times: It's time to cancel the likely racist 'Star-Spangled Banner' with its 'ornate and Anglophile' lyrics, replace it with 'Lean on Me'

Back when Shaun “Talcum X” King insisted every column he wrote for the New York Daily News was one of the most important things he’d written in his entire life, he tried to cancel “The Star-Spangled Banner” by blowing the lid of its racist third verse, which included the line, “No refuge could save the hireling and slave.” Plenty of people stepped up, though, and explained that “slave” in that context referred to the kidnapping of American seamen who were then forced into service on British ships. Not too much later, a statue of Francis Scott Key in Cincinnatti was splattered with red paint and vandalized with the words, “Racist anthem.”

Advertisement

Oh, and the California chapter of the NAACP passed a resolution at its state conference in 2017 pushing for the removal of “The Star-Spangled Banner” as the national anthem, calling it “one of the most racist, pro-slavery, anti-black songs in the American lexicon.”

And one more thing: The NFL has said it will play the black national anthem “Lift Every Voice and Sing” before “The Star-Spangled Banner” before games the first week of the season.

We’ve already heard John Lennon’s communist manifesto set to music, aka “Imagine,” suggested as a replacement for the national anthem, but Jody Rosen has another idea: Bill Withers’ “Lean on Me.”

So what’s wrong with “The Star-Spangled Banner,” besides it being racist? Rosen writes:

… there are also arguments against “The Star-Spangled Banner” on aesthetic grounds, criticisms that have dogged the anthem for decades. For one thing, it’s not an especially American song. Its lyrics are ornate and Anglophile, with syntax that frustrates the efforts of normal human Americans to follow along — to deduce who or what, exactly, is gleaming and streaming.

A song with words few people understand, which fewer can sing, whose sound and spirit bear no relation to our catchy, witty, unpretentious homegrown musical forms: Is this really what we want to hear when we “rise to honor America”?

Advertisement

Yes. And saying it has lyrics “few people understand” really is as condescending as you can get. So why “Lean on Me” and not “Imagine”? “It is a song that holds its gaze steady at the level of everyday life. It says: What’s important is the stuff happening down here. The dramatis personae are you, me, all of us. We the people,” Rosen writes.

“Imagine” is definitely out of the question, and “Lean on Me?” Just no.

Advertisement

No, progressives only want statues of Confederates taken down. That’s it. OK, and maybe Mount Rushmore.

Advertisement

Good.


Related:

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Twitchy Videos