Bob Dylan - With God on Our Side (Live on BBC, 1964) [HD FOOTAGE] This is one of the very few surviving television broadcasts from Bob's early days. He recorded this in early May 1964, and it was ...
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Fifty-nine years ago, Bob Dylan recorded "With God on Our Side." You probably haven't heard it on the radio for a very long time, if ever, but right now you could listen to it as his most evergreen of topical songs:
I've learned to hate the Russians
All through my whole life
If another war comes
It's them we must fight
To hate them and fear them
To run and to hide
And accept it all bravely
With God on my side
In recent days, media coverage of a possible summit between Joe Biden and Vladimir Putin has taken on almost wistful qualities, as though the horsemen of the apocalypse are already out of the barn.
Fatalism is easy for the laptop warriors and blow-dried studio pundits who keep insisting on the need to get tough with "the Russians," by which they mean the Russian government. Actual people who suffer and die in war easily become faraway abstractions. "And you never ask questions / When God's on your side."
During the last six decades, the religiosity of U.S. militarism has faded into a more generalized set of assumptions -- shared, in the current crisis, across traditional political spectrums. Ignorance about NATO's history feeds into the good vs. evil bromides that are so easy to ingest and internalize.
On Capitol Hill, it's hard to find a single member of Congress willing to call NATO what it has long been: an alliance for war (Kosovo, Afghanistan, Libya) with virtually nothing to do with "defense" other than the defense of vast weapons sales and, at times, even fantasies of regime change in Russia.
The reverence and adulation gushing from the Capitol and corporate media (including NPR and PBS) toward NATO and its U.S. leadership are wonders of thinly veiled jingoism. About other societies, reviled ones, we would hear labels like "propaganda." Here the supposed truisms are laundered and flat-ironed as common sense.
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