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"DIXIE" Played Harsh ~ Fife & Drum ~ { . . . Away Down South in DIXIE.} ~ FREEDOM Ain't No Joke
AMERICA.
By Americans.
FOR Americans! For those who WANT to be here.
If you don't like the concept of America: get the hell out.
Go; somewhere else. You must have better things to do than remake/destroy my country.
Get your ugly visage the fuck off of my territory.
Don't hate America because our "leaders" are dog shit.
We know they are. They're total dog shit: just like in every country that's ever existed since the beginning of recorded history.
Politicians are not our leaders. Americans are us: WE, the PEOPLE.
We live here. We were born here. We grew up here. We have no power, and our Constitution is dead, but we don't want to disappear, thank you very much.
We don't want our land to die.
C'mon & lend a hand, or don't come here in the first place . . . looking for hand-outs & gimmes; welfare & gibs.
And don't come here looking to game the system by making millions off of government contracts, living in gated communities in Calabasas & Bel Air & Washington, never using the English language in public, & giving me shit in line at the local coffee shop, shit-for-brains.
If you wanna be HERE: Awesome!
If not: leave.
Get your foreign-allegiance gated-community non-assimilating government-welfare-sucking scowling non-trying ass the hell outta here.
That's rude behavior.
FIFE & DRUM:
"During the Civil War, there were three musical instruments that were a part of the battlefield, and others used in camp. Some regiments had full bands for use in parades and as entertainment away from the battlefield.
[The instruments: fife, drum, & bugle.]
The fife was an old instrument, basically a flute with a limited range of notes, and useful on the battlefield because it was pitched so high that its sound carried over many of the sounds of battle. By the time of the Civil War, the larger battles made more noise, and so the fife was being rendered obsolete for its original purpose, but was still used on marches.
Due to the demands of both training and lung power, buglers and fife players were normally grown men, but tradition held that a drummer could be a younger boy. By law, a drummer in the U.S. army had to be at least thirteen years old. Some were younger, including the famous Johnny Clem, who became the inspiration for a Disney film, The Drummer Boy of Shiloh. Local veteran John McDonald lied about his age, and joined his regiment at the age of twelve.
Thus, drummers were typically five or more years younger than the men around them in battle, at least at the start of the war. Thus, they were often the youngest veterans of their regiments, if they survived. In some cases, they were also the youngest casualties and were exposed to the horrors of war when their peers at home were not yet in high school.
Of the veterans who came to Pasadena, [California; (just northeast of downtown Los Angeles); in the decades following the Civil War] quite a few were musicians during the war. In the 1890s, some of the members of the Godfrey Post of the Grand Army of the Republic said “let’s put the band back together” and formed a fife and drum unit for parades. For the next thirty years they marched or rode in events. In fact, they mostly marched until the late 1920s, when they finally had to admit to themselves that they were all in their late seventies or older, and that marching in parades while playing instruments had become a little strenuous.
In the 1927 Rose Parade, though, there were still several active members of the group.
John McDonald (110th Pennsylvania), J. C. Lawrence (86th New York), W. H. Mershon (30th Indiana), O. C. Stevens (17th Illinois Cavalry) and W. I. Howard (1st New York Light Artillery) all played the drums as they rode along the parade route. M. P. Winterburn (33rd Ohio Infantry), S. M. French (12th Iowa Infantry), and George W. Wolf (14th Illinois Cavalry) all played the fife on the float.
They continued to play at events into the 1930s, at Memorial Day and other ceremonies. Their largest surviving drum is part of the museum’s permanent collection." ---Nick Smith; writing for the Pasadena Museum of History; 2015
{nick*nackTRUTHattack PlayLists are here: click: https://www.bitchute.com/profile/MeV2H1QmPkYQ/ & scroll down a little . . .}
~~~ "I really look with commiseration over the great body of my fellow citizens, who---reading newspapers---live and die in the belief that They have known something of what has been passing in the world in their time." ---THOMAS JEFFERSON; 1807
~~~ "Every man has the right to utter what he thinks TRUTH, and every other man has the right to knock him down for It. Martyrdom is the Test." ---SAMUEL JOHNSON; 1780
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Category | Music |
Sensitivity | Normal - Content that is suitable for ages 16 and over |
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