America 1 wrote:
Great, just have to add a negative spin.
That is "totally unreal."
Thanks for the reply, giving me an opportunity to describe what I really have deep feelings about, such a complicated mixture of pride and remorse is an intellectual challenge that could only be described by someone who rose to every occasion in a dignified manner and created a namesake that will always ring down through the generations of Australians, someone so well provisioned with charisma and pride that he made the Country pause and take note when his life ended with his die site, _ the end of a rope.
Mind you die like a man his mother said, and Ned Kelly replied, such is life.
Woodstock was a CIA Narc operating undercover, we devote our lives to it, Jimmy Hendrix himself had a vague military history that really doesn't make sense if everyone was playing by the rules, I often wondered about Art Linkletter's daughter who went out the window, because I did that myself once, luckily I was grabbed, the guy who didn't grab her was involved in a similar incident later on, so I've heard, the victims were probably thrown like we were thrown under the bus by the culture created at Woodstock, - looking back.
Same as Ned Kelly who was subliminally inspired by emotions that worked our best for the Country and Federation but was a real bad scene for him, Woodstock was bad for the performing artists most of then pumped up by the CIA as a diversion from the real anti war movement, most had rotten short lives.
Even-so it's still the same, Woodstock worked out as a permanent cultural addition to Western expression, Ned Kelly and the Eureka Stockade created the Australian Union of Colonies and a constituent assembly..
On the face of it a difficult metaphor to figure out, but what they both had in common, is that both created something better than what they left behind, one by a lot and the other by not much, sometimes we move forward by leaps and bounds and sometimes by nano increments but in this case the metaphor I make has bants and hearts in common.