socalhol (Seattle) | | Posted: May 13, 2010 - 14:23 | |
qstaa wrote:"....come together, right now, over me...."
".....helter skelter, helter skelter...." |
|
crockydile (Outer Spiral Arm, Milky Way) | | Posted: May 13, 2010 - 14:20 | |
Hate this kind of song. The lyrics are sooo cute. Reminds me of later Aerosmith lyrics. She and Steve Tyler could do a great duet featuring lots of words that sound cute together and mean nothing.  |
|
mandolin (...drifting...) | | Posted: May 13, 2010 - 14:19 | |
...i hear a bit of ball of confusion...
|
|
jagdriver (Just a nod and a wink south of Paradise) | | Posted: May 13, 2010 - 14:19 | |
dmax wrote:CAT FOOD
CAT FOOD
CAT FOOD
again
Funny.... that's exactly what I thought! KC ought to sue! |
|
V12Silly (It's not about the bike, it's about the basket that carries the beer.) | | Posted: Mar 11, 2010 - 04:53 | |
OldFrenchie wrote:pure shit :(
go away potty mouth |
|
OldFrenchie (Frozen wastes of Winnipeg, Manitoba Canada) | | Posted: Dec 06, 2009 - 21:02 | |
|
(former member) (Infinity and Beyond) | | Posted: Dec 06, 2009 - 21:01 | |
CAT FOOD
CAT FOOD
CAT FOOD
again
|
|
shawshank (Maryland) | | Posted: Nov 05, 2009 - 11:44 | |
I am digging the groove....  |
|
jbunniii (San Jose, CA) | | Posted: Oct 04, 2009 - 22:28 | |
This is completely insufferable.
|
|
Mandible
| | Posted: Sep 03, 2009 - 10:26 | |
Should have followed this one with Taxman by the Beatles |
|
daigoro
| | Posted: Aug 02, 2009 - 21:59 | |
Most political songs suck, and this one is no exception. Take out the dopey lyrics and you have a seriously bad song.
|
|
vit
| | Posted: May 31, 2009 - 08:40 | |
RedGuitar wrote: - In large cities, Americans are photographed on the average of 20 times a day.
Following regards Great Britain, not the U.S., but according to This is London: On the wall outside his former residence - flat number 27B - where Orwell lived until his death in 1950, an historical plaque commemorates the anti-authoritarian author. And within 200 yards of the flat, there are 32 CCTV cameras, scanning every move. Link.
|
|
lmic (Narrow Minded Couch Potato) | | Posted: Apr 29, 2009 - 16:08 | |
RedGuitar wrote:Did you Know? - In large cities, Americans are photographed on the average of 20 times a day.
I'm just not getting that privacy is a huge concern of the Facebook/YouTube generation.  |
|
RedGuitar (Iowa, USA) | | Posted: Feb 25, 2009 - 14:51 | |
crazy wrote: you can run but you got no place to hide anymore..............big brother is ...watching, and waiting...4 U
Did you Know? - In large cities, Americans are photographed on the average of 20 times a day.
- Everything you charge is in a database that police, among others, can look at.
- Supermarkets track what you purchase and sell the information to direct-mail marketing firms.
- Your employer is allowed to read your E-Mail, and if you use your company's health insurance to purchase drugs, your employer has access to that information.
- Government computers scan your E-Mail for subversive language.
- Your cell phone calls can be intercepted, and your access numbers can be cribbed by eavesdroppers with police scanners.
- You register your whereabouts every time you use an ATM, credit card, or use EZ PASS at a toll booth.
- You are often being watched when you visit web sites. Servers know what you're looking at, what you download, and how long you stay on a page.
- A political candidate found his career destroyed by a newspaper that published a list of all the videos he had ever rented.
- Most "baby monitors" can be intercepted 100 feet outside the home.
- Intelligence agencies now have "micro-bots" — tiny, remote control, electronic "bugs" that literally can fly into your home and look around without your noticing.
- Anyone with $100 can tap your phone.
- a new technology called TEMPEST can intercept what you are typing on your keypad (from 100 feet away through a cement wall.)
- the National Security Agency has a submarine that can intercept and decipher digital communications from the RF emissions of underwater phone cables.
|
|
vit
| | Posted: Feb 25, 2009 - 14:44 | |
... hate this song? Just kidding I didn't even hear anything but the end and that sounded cool.
|
|
fredriley (Nottingham, UK) | | Posted: Dec 24, 2008 - 09:54 | |
spacemoose wrote: More entertainingly, grippingly and disturbingly, read Cory Doctorow's recent novel " Little Brother" (link to Amazon via RP), which also has a very useful afterword with lots of useful civil liberties-related pointers, tips and tricks. |
|
crazy (yew nork, upstate) | | Posted: Nov 22, 2008 - 19:48 | |
Geecheeboy wrote:More like, God and the IRS. MUCH more sinister. You can hide from the FBI but not the IRS. you can run but you got no place to hide anymore..............big brother is ...watching, and waiting...4 U |
|
Welly (Lotusland) | | Posted: Nov 22, 2008 - 19:46 | |
Cool track. I had no idea she was still recording. |
|
spacemoose
| | Posted: Aug 20, 2008 - 02:06 | |
|
spacemoose
| | Posted: Aug 20, 2008 - 01:58 | |
ruthless wrote:Oh my, I agree with PG!!!
Stopped clock, twice a day... Alternate exp: PG might just be an @sshole when it comes to talking about music, and reasonable in other circumstances. But people who call themselves a genius tend to be @sses, so I'm going to lean with the stopped clock exp. |
|
Papernapkin (Mountain View, CA) | | Posted: Jul 19, 2008 - 10:17 | |
Doesn't Sheryl Crow have a song like this?
|
|
Geecheeboy (under a crescent moon and palmetto tree) | | Posted: May 17, 2008 - 11:15 | |
More like, God and the IRS. MUCH more sinister. You can hide from the FBI but not the IRS.
|
|
ScottishWillie (The Scottish Lowlands) | | Posted: Jan 12, 2008 - 12:48 | |
babyjuice wrote:thought it was Joni Mitchell So did I.
|
|
babyjuice (NYC) | | Posted: Jan 12, 2008 - 12:47 | |
thought it was Joni Mitchell
|
|
andiman (Germany, Duisburg) | | Posted: Dec 12, 2007 - 02:52 | |
Stes wrote:The way she sings reminds me the slow version of Dylan's Subterranean homesick blues
Yeees, right. But nice song |
|
Stes (Krakow - Poland) | | Posted: Dec 12, 2007 - 02:50 | |
The way she sings reminds me the slow version of Dylan's Subterranean homesick blues
|
|
musikalia (Somewhere (over the rainbow)) | | Posted: Dec 12, 2007 - 02:49 | |
AlienRelic wrote:Yeah, you STILL don't need a weatherman to tell which way the wind blows.
HA! Good one!! |
|
ruthless (Midtown Memphis) | | Posted: Oct 10, 2007 - 06:57 | |
physicsgenius wrote:
The person who you are quoting didn't say we are in a police state, they said the Bush Admin was turning it into a police state. And that's inarguably true. Are we closer to a police state now or 10 years ago? When the government can (secretly!) ask for your library records, the answer is clear.
Oh my, I agree with PG!!! |
|
jennybean42 (Rhode Island) | | Posted: Mar 06, 2006 - 08:59 | |
tripacer wrote:I see Bush Derangement Syndrome has reached RP.
This album came out in early 2000-- meaning, I believe, that she probably wrote it before Bush came into office.
Anyway, someone left it in an apartment when they left and I was working as the "tourguide" for the complex. It was the only thing in my cd player in the office for the year, just because I wasn't supposed to bring cds to work.
Whicch made it pretty sweet, but also now it's kinda sour because I hated that job and it brings back crappy memories.
It is a good album.
|
|
physicsgenius
| | Posted: Mar 06, 2006 - 08:55 | |
Baby_M wrote:
You've obviously never lived in a real police state. Neither have I, but I have two good friends who did. One spent a year in prison and came out with permanent physical impairments from the beatings.
The person who you are quoting didn't say we are in a police state, they said the Bush Admin was turning it into a police state. And that's inarguably true. Are we closer to a police state now or 10 years ago? When the government can (secretly!) ask for your library records, the answer is clear. |
|