John Lennon’s revolution
John Lennon of The Beatles wrote the surprisingly and relatively conservative song “Revolution” in 1968. Compared with the Rolling Stones’ 1968 “Street Fighting Man” written by Mick Jagger, Lennon’s lyrics are tame and earned him the scorn of the New Left. Although Lennon’s political views became increasingly radical, his songwriting partner, Paul McCartney, may have vindicated his more moderate “Revolution” when he defended President Obama last week. If that’s true, we should ask ourselves if McCartney is confirming that we are indeed in the midst of a political revolution and if it’s “gonna be all right.”
Read Jagger’s revolutionary lyrics:
“Ev’rywhere I hear the sound of marching, charging feet, boy. ‘Cause summer’s here [1968] and the time is right for fighting in the street, boy. But what can a poor boy do except to sing for a rock ’n’ roll band ’cause in sleepy London town there’s just no place for a street fighting man. No. Hey! Think the time is right for a palace revolution. ’Cause where I live the game to play is compromise solution. . . . Hey! Said my name is called disturbance. I’ll shout and scream, I’ll kill the king, I’ll rail at all his servants. . . .”
Compare with Lennon:
“You say you want a revolution. Well, you know we all want to change the world. You tell me that it’s evolution, well, you know we all want to change the world. But when you talk about destruction don’t you know that you can count me out. Don’t you know it’s gonna be all right. You say you got a real solution. Well, you know we’d all love to see the plan. You ask me for a contribution, well, you know we’re doing what we can. But when you want money for people with minds that hate all I can tell is brother you have to wait. Don’t you know it’s gonna be all right. . . .”
Both Jagger and Lennon were advocating political revolution. Jagger mused about violent means while Lennon took a more thoughtful, peaceful approach. Because Lennon met a murderous end in 1980, we don’t know what he would think of the Obama administration but we do know that his partner Paul McCartney is supportive. Defending the 44th president last Tuesday prior to receiving the Library of Congress’s Gershwin Award for Popular Song, McCartney said, “I’m a big fan, he’s a great guy. So lay off him, he’s doing great.”
Does McCartney recognize Obama as the leader of the peaceful political revolution that Lennon desired? It’s a question worth contemplating. With a progressive in the White House, we may be making progress toward the goal that many of the 1968 revolutionaries desired: radical egalitarianism blessed by the cultural elite. Is this what McCartney sees taking place in America today? Is this the peaceful path to revolution Lennon sang about? If so, understand that political revolutions are symptomatic of cultural revolutions—throwing off of cultural norms cultivated over centuries by our ancestors.
The street fighting man crashed and burned by 1969. America tired quickly of violent revolution. Forty years later, Paul McCartney’s blessing of President Obama may be symbolic of the dreams of 1968 coming to fruition and the vindication of John Lennon’s peaceful revolution. Is it gonna be all right?

















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back to top21 Comments to “John Lennon’s revolution”
Sorry, but no, it’s not gonna be alright. Look at Greece and you see a microcism of what we’re headed for with this socialist revolution.
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Today’s neo-’com’ revolution runs rather consistently with the 60s opt-out drug culture. The fact that the Lennonists are now in office speaks to what drugs did to the minds of too many Americans.
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Joel – LOL (neo-com, lennonists)!
I actually prefer Mick Jagger’s brand because the cards are on the table, and there’s no obfuscation; everyone knows exactly what he’s up to so he’s less dangerous. Reminds me of the first stanza to Mac the Knife:
Oh the shark has pretty teeth dear
And he shows them pearly white
Just a jack-knife has Mac-heath dear
And he keeps it out of sight
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Apropos of the above, WMB just posted that U.S. debt will overtake GDP soon. This is not the kind of “revolution” that will do us any good.
Remember too that U.S. debt does not count other debt: state, local, personal. Also, much of GDP is stuff like paying divorce lawyers, doctors to heal gunshot wounds, alcohol to feed alcohol addiction, and so on. All that stuff gets counted as part of GDP.
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Lennon like so many who endorse a paternalistic cradle-to-grave state was abandoned by his father. He was then raised by his Aunt Mimi after Julia his mother left the picture (pedestrian car wreck victim?) He grew up in cinder block public housing in Liverpool.
Yet when he and his cohorts escaped Liverpool thru worldwide musical acclaim they embraced capitalism wholeheartedly even as they mouthed all types of trite lefty cliches to appeal to their deluded fans.
As far as I know “if you go carrying pictures of Chairman Mao..” got that tune banned in China
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Hasn’t Paul McCartney lived long enough to know the futility of communism/socialism? (He’s certainly done well under free capitalism!) Or is he getting senile?
History has proven what works best: Reagonomics and Biblical morality create a healthy society with a healthy economy, but they also take power away from ruling elite (politicians and rich singer/songwriters who can afford to be stupid). Thus Obama grabs all he can: banks, health care, car companies, and now big oil.
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Lennon was a utopian and that’s not smart.
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Um, I think someone is reading to much into McCartney’s remark.
Lennon’s song Imagine alwsys seemed to sum up the Left to me. “I hope someday you’ll join us, then the world will live as one.”
YOU people need to join US, because my utopia will not be realized until you see in my way. “Life is very short for fussy and fighting my friends.”
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“Does McCartney recognize Obama as the leader of the peaceful political revolution that Lennon desired? It’s a question worth contemplating.”
Based on what McCartney said last week, why would I care if McCartney sees Obama as anything?
Americans had one thing in mind when they elected Obama, they got something entirely different, and the fact that Paul McCartney and people who think like him don’t see that there’s been no “change” for the better only proves me that they don’t think at all.
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We keep talking about these songs in the context of America of the 1968, but these guys were British. Were they for the overthrow of the crown?
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They were for the overthrow of the Establishment.
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Interesting to read how J. Edgar Hoover tried to deport Lennon.
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The Beatles and the Stones were on two opposite sides of the tracks in England. The Stones were working-class, salt of the earth, tough guys you would find in a smoky, neighborhood pub. The Beatles, on the other hand, were psychedelic flower children that you would find with a yogi or Timothy Leary. Working class vs. intellectual. Beer and pot vs. mushrooms and hallucinogens. Jumpin’ Jack Flash vs. Strawberry Fields Forever. My impression after seeing Jagger on Larry King last week and then hearing about McCartney’s put-down of Bush is that not much has changed. A peoples’ band and singer vs. royalty and the elite.
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The Beatles hailed from Liverpool and families about as working class as it gets.
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I have to agree with NJLawyer at #10.
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Hmmm, why use a 40 year old Lennon song to interpret last week’s McCartney remarks? From a musical/lyrical perspective, and from a political perspective, both were very different.
Political analysis of Beatles lyrics in the context of today’s political environment is kindof a buzzkill. Although “Fixing a Hole” pops into my mind when I see the BP footage. And, I am confident that Mean Mr. Mustard would have voted for Gore – “sleeps in a park, shaves in the dark trying to save paper”. Not sure about his sister Pam though. She seems like she’d probably be a Palin supporter.
Hey Adios, “Life is very short…” is from Paul’s pen, not John’s. But you knew that anyway.
As Mr. Zappa said, writing about music is like dancing about architecture. Think I’ll go queue up Sir Paul’s wonderful bass line on Paperback Writer. It’s always best when Paul’s Hoffner does the talking for him.
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Are the seeds of Lennon’s utopia in the White House? Yes. Is it going to be fully realized? That utopia where men live “as one,” with world peace and “no religion” to muck it up? It depends on God’s timetable. There will be a one-world government in which the world will be (sort of) absolutely united (Daniel 2:41-43), where peace (if you call it peace, where there is no peace) will reign. There will be no bigotry (”Let us throw off their chains…” Ps 2), and no racism. People won’t be judged (unless you’re an Israeli, and we hate you). For those with spiritual leanings, there will be miracles and prophets (see Matt 24:23-25), and the religion of evolution will take its place and bring all questions to an end (like what happens after death and why can I not have a healthy relationship and how could this have all started spontaneously? And is that the best the enlightened mind of man can do?)
We tend to focus on unimportant details, like whether the one-world government will be left-leaning or right-. That’s covered in the final half of Lennon’s “Imagine.” The first half covers Christianity:
Imagine there’s no Heaven
It’s easy if you try
No hell below us
Above us only sky
Imagine all the people
Living for today
Imagine there’s no countries
It isn’t hard to do
Nothing to kill or die for
And no religion too
Imagine all the people
Living life in peace
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Mr. Birkenstock,
I believe Lennon contributed the “Life is very short…” line to We Can Work It Out.
He said as much in the 1980 Playboy interview.
But you knew that anyway, right?
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I do now!
Thanks for the tidbit.
Back then, guess I was only reading Playboy for the pictures.
(well, not totally true – they always had a great annual jazz poll)
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George Harrison was the true Reaganesque Conservative. I’d really like to see Mr. McCartney questioned by Glenn Beck regarding Harrison’s lyrics and whether McCartney’s radical liberal mindset might have contributed to his misjudgement of that greedy harridan he unwisely wedded – - sans a prenup contract. Indeed, I’d ask Mr. McCartney whether he might be able to imagine (sic) the buyer’s remorse rising numbers of Americans are having regarding their President to the buyer’s remorse he cannot but have had for his female nemesis. Anyway, Harrison wasn’t the wooly minded flower child he would later become when he chiselled “Taxman”. Pre-LSD George Harrison > > Reagan/Thatcher Conservative!
One, two, three, four…
Hrmm!
One, two, (one, two, three, four!)
Let me tell you how it will be;
There’s one for you, nineteen for me.
‘Cause I’m the taxman,
Yeah, I’m the taxman.
Should five per cent appear too small,
Be thankful I don’t take it all.
‘Cause I’m the taxman,
Yeah, I’m the taxman.
(if you drive a car, car;) – I’ll tax the street;
(if you try to sit, sit;) – I’ll tax your seat;
(if you get too cold, cold;) – I’ll tax the heat;
(if you take a walk, walk;) – I’ll tax your feet.
Taxman!
‘Cause I’m the taxman,
Yeah, I’m the taxman.
Don’t ask me what I want it for, (ah-ah, mister Wilson)
If you don’t want to pay some more. (ah-ah, mister heath)
‘Cause I’m the taxman,
Yeah, I’m the taxman.
Now my advice for those who die, (taxman)
Declare the pennies on your eyes. (taxman)
‘Cause I’m the taxman,
Yeah, I’m the taxman.
And you’re working for no one but me.
Taxman!
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