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Jim Hightower
NationofChange / Op-Ed
Published: Wednesday 7 March 2012
Woody Guthrie: “There is just one way to save yourself, and that’s to get together and work and fight for everybody.”

Woody at 100

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Where's Woody when we need him?

In these times of tinkle-down economics — with the money powers thinking that they're the top dogs and that the rest of us are just a bunch of fire hydrants — we need for the hard-hitting (yet uplifting) musical stories, social commentaries and inspired lyrical populism of Woody Guthrie.

This year will mark the 100th anniversary of the birth of this legendary grassroots troubadour, who came out of the Oklahoma dust bowl to rally America's "just plain folks" to fight back against the elites who were knocking them down.

As we know, the elites are back, strutting around cockier than ever with their knocking-down ways — but now comes the good news out of Tulsa, Okla., that Woody, too, is being revived, spiritually speaking. In a national collaboration between the Guthrie family and the George Kaiser Family Foundation, a center is being built in Tulsa to archive, present to the world and celebrate the marvelous songs, books, letters and other materials generated from Guthrie's deeply fertile mind.

To give the center a proper kick-start, four great universities, the Grammy Museum, the Smithsonian Institution and the Kaiser Foundation are teaming up to host a combination of symposiums and concerts (think of them as Woody-Paloozas) throughout this centennial year. They begin this Saturday, March 10 at the University of Tulsa, then they move on down the road to Brooklyn College and on to the University of Southern California and Penn State University.

If Woody himself were to reappear among us, rambling from town to town, he wouldn't need to write any new material. He'd see that the Wall Street banksters who crashed our economy are getting fat bonus checks, while the victims of their greed are still getting pink slips and eviction notices, and he could just pull out this verse from his old song, "Pretty Boy Floyd":

Yes, as through this world I've wandered,

I've seen lots of funny men.

Some will rob you with a six-gun,

And some with a fountain pen.

And as through your life your travel,

Yes, as through your life your roam,

You won't never see an outlaw

Drive a family from their home.

Also, witnessing the downsizing of America's jobs, decimation of the middle class and stark rise in poverty, Guthrie could reprise his classic, "I Ain't Got No Home":

I mined in your mines, and I gathered in your corn.

I been working, mister, since the day I was born.

Now I worry all the time like I never did before,

'Cause I ain't got no home in this world anymore.

Now as I look around, it's mighty plain to see,

This world is such a great and a funny place to be.

Oh, the gamblin' man is rich, an' the workin' man is poor,

And I ain't got no home in this world anymore.

Guthrie unabashedly celebrated America's working class, seeing in it the commitment to the common good that lifts America up.

He drove The Powers That Be crazy (a pretty short ride for many of them back then, just as it is today). So they branded him a unionist, socialist, communist and all sorts of other "ists" — but he withered them with humor that got people laughing at them: "I ain't a communist necessarily, but I have been in the red all my life."

Going down those "ribbons of highway" that he extolled in "This Land Is Your Land," Guthrie found that the only real hope of fairness and justice was in the people themselves: "When you bum around for a year or two and look at all the folks that's down and out, busted, disgusted (but can still be trusted), you wish that somehow or other they could ... pitch in and build this country back up again." He concluded, "There is just one way to save yourself, and that's to get together and work and fight for everybody."

And, indeed, that's exactly what grassroots people are doing all across our country today. From Occupy Wall Street to the ongoing Wisconsin uprising, from battles against the Keystone XL Pipeline to the successful local and state campaigns to repeal the Supreme Court's atrocious Citizens United edict, people are adding their own verses to Woody's musical refrain: "I ain't a-gonna be treated this a-way."

Where's Woody when we need him? He's right there, inside each of us.

Copyright Creators.com


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ABOUT Jim Hightower
National radio commentator, writer, public speaker, and author of the book, Swim Against The Current: Even A Dead Fish Can Go With The Flow, Jim Hightower has spent three decades battling the Powers That Be on behalf of the Powers That Ought To Be - consumers, working families, environmentalists, small businesses, and just-plain-folks.

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16 comments on "Woody at 100"

campaignenglish

March 10, 2012 1:29pm

Woody has long been an inspiration to me. To wit:

job creator, n., title given to the 1% for creating jobs in the jewelry, yachting, and McMansion industries.

campaignenglish.com

Lagibby

March 08, 2012 8:14am

Steve Earle's "Christmas in Washington":
So come back, Woody Guthrie
Come back to us now.
Tear your eyes from paradise
And rise again somehow.
If you run into Jesus
Maybe he can help us out.
Come back Woody Guthrie to us now.

YouTube version: http://video.search.yahoo.com/search/video?p=steve+earle+christmas+in+wa...
(The first verse is about the beginning of Clinton's second term.)

Ludwig1251

March 07, 2012 8:26pm

The Guthrie quote that sticks in my mind -- and my craw -- is "It was a cop killed Christ." As a law enforcement officer, I felt that he might have mentioned one or two GOOD cops, too -- but maybe he never met any.

M Munn

March 07, 2012 8:21pm

I'm sure there is new blood
homeless, in a camp
sticthin' songs together
like some kind of lonely rant:

'this land was your land'
'this land was my land'
until they pawned it
for crap from China
Those Wall Street Hookers
have Liberty snookered
Yeah, this land belonged to you and me'

dmillerfla

March 07, 2012 6:25pm

Trickle down doesn't work because of outsourcing jobs and insourcing of legal and illegal alien instituted by Republicans and Democrats in power - people put there by their respective parties and not by the American people.

Not too long ago when America was a Manufacturing Funded Economy trickle down did work but once jobs were sent offshore there was no more trickle down - only trickle out. You can thank the Republican Leadership who set it up under the Reign of George I and then the Democratic Reign of Clinton who pushed it through.

What did GM do with the Obama touted bailout funds they received – they built factories in China, Mexico and Brazil. And how about ‘Green Energy’ money with 84% going to foreign firms instead of American companies – a true scam to redistribute American money to the rest of the world.

Wake up America - you are being had by Marxist & Corporist and the UN Agenda21.

Phil Balla

March 07, 2012 6:19pm

With Best of Debts to Woody Guthrie,
Creedence Clearwater Revival,
and Country Joe and the Fish

This land doesn’t “belong to you and me,”
but to BP, Wall Street, Blackwater/Xe.
So if you ask, “What are we fighting for?”
think Country Joe and the Fish: “Whoopee . . .

. . . don’t know what for.” And, too, think CCR.
Their “it ain’t me” couldn’t account for war,
though the rich – “senator’s son” – guaranteed
for their ilk we’d always have “more, more, more.”

Ollie Anderson

March 07, 2012 5:14pm

Check out the blues by any African American artist. How about " Big Boss Man" By Muddy Waters. Was Woody from Oklahoma? Here,s one Langston Hughes: Because my mouth/ Is wide with laughter, And my throat Is deep with song, You do not think / I suffer after/ I have held my pain so long. The pot was empty, The cupboard was bare. I said,"Papa What,s the matter here?" "I,m waitin' on Roosevelt,son, Roosevelt, Roosevelt, Waitin' on Roosevelt, son." in the late 1920's

Traveler123

March 07, 2012 3:00pm

His son Arlo did some stuff in the 60s too. "Remember Alice's Restaurant?" Visit Arlo at www.arlo.net. Ask him to turn up the heat. And all members of the Music world.

Riconui

March 07, 2012 2:25pm

Suggesting that Woody needs a "revival" strikes me as odd. I don't think Woody went anywhere. This Land Is My Land is still sung in at least some primary schools even today, (except for that last pesky verse about the sign). Woody's "children" are all over the place still singing in dive bars and folk friendly clubs on most any ribbon of highway you might find. Someone else has to pick the guitar now, but Woody is here just as much as you or me.

enuf

March 08, 2012 9:13pm

Actually it's 2 verses. The other

In the squares of the city - In the shadow of the steeple
Near the relief office - I see my people
And some are grumblin' and some are wonderin'
If this land's still made for you and me.

ncmcpherson

March 07, 2012 2:23pm

His songs are alive through his son Arlo, Grandson Abe and Great Grandson Krishna, out on the roadways of American & the world still performing! If they come to a venue near you...don't miss the opportunity to hear them. They're wonderful!

prettyboy

March 07, 2012 2:20pm

http://blindwillies.bandcamp.com/track/everybodys-looking-for-a-meal

Cibercore Cyber...

March 07, 2012 1:49pm

View this video to educate you further. http://youtu.be/8qHmXMMCrlI

ChetDude

March 07, 2012 1:10pm

I would submit that Woody lives -- his name is Bruce Springsteen now...

He also lives under hundreds of other names you've probably never heard: Chuck Brodsky, David Rovics, Hali Hammer, Roy Zimmerman, Kathleen Williamson, Jon Fromer and many, many others...

Google around, folks...

prettyboy

March 07, 2012 2:21pm

http://blindwillies.bandcamp.com/track/everybodys-looking-for-a-meal

Arachne646

March 07, 2012 9:59am

His songs should be sung everywhere that people gather together to make the world a better place. He was part of the spiritual movement in the United States and Canada at that time that grew towards social justice in the Church as well as spiritual development. The other religious movement's priority was entirely on personal salvation and evangelism. It became today's religious right.

His songs really hit home to me, not because I was active in the 30's, but I was a kid in the 1970's, so folk music is really meaningful. His song about the fact that Jesus' ministry and mission was specifically to the poor and the lowest status people was sung (by whom?) over the credits on "Capitalism--a Love Story":
http://www.woodyguthrie.de/jesus.html