YOUTUBE-JBP40- Jeremy On The Decline Of American Music
The author G. Edward Griffin who wrote the overton window moving classic The Creature from Jekyll Island conducted an interview with Soviet defector, KGB propagandist and possible CIA asset Yuri Bezmenov in 1984. In that interview Bezmenov described four stages of the Marxist takeover which he said that as far back in 1984, that some of those stage had already been accomplished. These stage would essentiall serve as a template for how to penetrate western civilization with Marxist idealogy and gradually implode it from within so that the so called revolutionaries could manipulate the crumbs. One of those stages, the first known as demorilization is a process where marxism is indoctrinated into our culture. Especially the schools. But more importantly, and I think this may be the most overlooked. Is the degradation of our musical culture as a voice of individual freedom, a check on morality, and a creative force that knows no equal within western civilization. Musicians in the past could reach other free thinking people with a reflection on societal truths. And by the past I mean about up until right after 9/11. Suddenly the music industry was swallowed up by an illuminati stranglehold and terrestrial radio automation. Where a god given talent like an Eric Gales or Derek Trucks was relegated to the backburner. Their distribution to a wider culture via Billboard charts, terrestrial radio, or the Grammys was tossed in the dustbin of history in favor of brainwashing gangster rap and monotonous sexually suggestive vile pop music focusing on American youth. Here we are 20 years later and I am still stunned by the mental illness driving the zombie hordes of marxism burning down America's cities.
Jeremy is a musician and Twitter friend of the show who is here to talk about the pervasive rot in the American music industry and how that translates into a larger cultural affliction. In the wake of the release of Cardi B's W.A.P., we'll discuss what teens and young adults are exposed to today (while trying not to sound too grumpy and old.) Young people use music, especially popular music to express themselves and help them interpret their emotions and the world around them. With Souncloud mumble rappers and pornographic hip hop seductresses as their musical guides, is there a chance of generation Z leading us out of this rather dark sonic age?