<HTML><FONT FACE=arial,helvetica><FONT SIZE=2>Justin:
<BR><< This one's stolen. I was at the Solidarity youth section meeting in Ann <BR>Arbor in, I think 1994, when this one, slightly different, was made up by <BR>Masha Alexander and several other drunken young comrades. >>
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<BR>Much earlier than 1994 [I was no longer active in DSA by that point], <BR>probably circa 1984, I attended a DSA Youth Section where this version of the <BR>song, among others, was sung. The reference to Gramsci is a dead give away, <BR>because he was the theoretical patron saint of the NAM side, from whence I <BR>came myself, of the DSOC-NAM marriage that made DSA, and that version of the <BR>song would have been made up pretty much immediately post-merger [1982].
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<BR>I wouldn't claim DSA authorship, however. These songs are a kind of oral <BR>tradition, passed down from conference to conference, generation to <BR>generation, and modified along the way. I wouldn't not be in slightest bit <BR>surprised if this version was a reworking of an earlier version. In <BR>particular, those of us who live in the nether world between mainstream <BR>politics and left sectarian politics have a way of creating and passing on <BR>this tongue in cheek self-parody, which accounts for the particular style <BR>here.
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<BR>The tradition of these songs goes back at least as far as the 1960s, if not <BR>before. They seem to be a 'baby boomer' phenomenon. Witness the following <BR>song, sung to the tune of the Mickey Mouse Club anthem.
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<BR>M - A - O [Overthrow the state]
<BR>T - S - E [Expropriate the expropriator]
<BR>T - U - N - G
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<BR>Mao Tse Tung [Lin Pao]
<BR>Mao Tse Tung [Lin Pao]
<BR>Forever wave your red banners high!!!
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<BR>The use of the old pinyin Chinese spelling, plus the invocation of Lin Pao, <BR>clearly mark this version as Weatherman vintage. Another Weatherman classic <BR>was sung to the tune of "Maria" from the "West Side Story."
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<BR>Kim Il Sung, Kim Il Sung
<BR>I just met a great Marxist-Leninist named Kim Il Sung
<BR>And suddenly his line
<BR>Seemed so correct and fine
<BR>to me
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<BR>Korea:
<BR>say it soft and the Pueblo's taken
<BR>say it loud and the imperialists are quaking
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<BR>And so on.
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<BR>The element of conscious parody here, the equation of Mickey Mouse and Mao <BR>Zedong, suggests that even in the midst of this rather putrid embrace of the <BR>worst authoritarian elements of Marxism-Leninism, there was an awareness of <BR>the insanity -- if not the moral corruption -- of it all.
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<BR>Leo Casey
<BR>United Federation of Teachers
<BR>260 Park Avenue South
<BR>New York, New York 10010-7272 (212-598-6869)
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<BR>Power concedes nothing without a demand.
<BR>It never has, and it never will.
<BR>If there is no struggle, there is no progress.
<BR>Those who profess to favor freedom, and yet deprecate agitation are men who <BR>want crops without plowing the ground. They want rain without thunder and <BR>lightning. They want the ocean without the awful roar of its waters.
<BR><P ALIGN=CENTER>-- Frederick Douglass --
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