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#bismarck events arena
cassie-moore · 5 months
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Michelle just called…shes gonna be running events at Gas South Arena she had lunch w CEO other day - ATL IS HEAR TO PLAY…
Movin on up to Phillips or Mercedes
So fucking excited still cant even announce to her what meetings we hadd. And our 25 years of friendship-shes like arent u glad we’re both in music and u let me play on your old beach in palm beach with your Coniglio neighbors while u were in Vegas
😭has me laughing bc thats when Bismarck and i were in vegas for Gerald. So fucking funny how all this connects
ATLANTA SHOWS. CHECK.
So many more cities to goooooooo LFG
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Remembering
Today would have been your birthday. I wish I could give you a call, wish you a happy birthday and then drift into conversation. You have been on my mind a lot recently. When you passed...I don't know, I feel like I didn't actually process it, like it wasn't something that registered in my mind as actually having happened. I was out of it dude, life had gotten the best of me and I was shutting down and going through the motions of living. Now that I am here and I am beginning to live again, the stark realization that you are gone has hit me like a ton of bricks.
There is so much I regret. I wish I had been stronger at the time and been able to process things and reach out to your family and let them know how saddened the news of your passing made me and to let them know how much your friendship meant to me over the years. Given my state of mobility I wouldn't have been able to attend your service either way, but at least I could have talked with people and let them know, but I didn't and that is probably going to stick with me for the rest of my life. I don't know why we drifted and stop keeping in touch. I do know that so many times over those years I wanted to pick up the phone and call you and say hello but for whatever reason I couldn't. I thought you wouldn't want to hear from me and then time just kept on passing and it gets harder and harder as that time passes to pick up that phone...so I didn't. You were one of my best friends, maybe even my very best friend and I didn't even know your children. I hope they are doing well in life. I am truly sorry that I let the years go by and didn't contact you and let us stay out of touch. I am sorry I wasn't there at the end.
I remember the first time we hung out. You called me up and asked if I wanted to "take in a flick" as only you could. You were new to our school as a freshman and you definitely walked to the beat of your own drum, but there was something that drew me to you and made me want to be your friend. We went to see Dirty Dancing that night, and although that was not my first pick of movie to see as a freshmen in HS with your buddy, it was still a good time and I knew from the day on we would be friends.
i remember many Saturday nights spent in your basement watching WWE and Saturday Nights Main Event. We went to so many of the AWA shows at the auditorium and the few WWE shows that came to Minot. The Ultimate Warrior at the All Seasons Arena. Hulk Hogan at the State Fair. I will never watch wrestling without thinking of you as that was kind of our thing for a while and we had some great times.
The concerts we went to. Damn Yankees and Bad Company in Bismarck. Def Leppard in Bismarck when they did there tour "in the round." You were always up for a good time and fun.
Our junior year of college. My year started out with so much chaos as to where I was actually going to be living and then things finally got settled and I had my own room and to celebrate that finally being resolved and also your birthday, we went to the races and stopped by the grocery store and got cake. We went back to my room and just chilled the rest of the evening and ate cake, cake is very important. I know that sounds like something so small and trivial, but after the start to the year I had it was just nice to be settled and in my own room...and I had my friend there with me.
When I would take my trips to visit the "Reds" in Minneapolis, I knew I always had a place in Fargo to stay on the way there and back if I so chose to.
The good times the 4 of us had together. The day with the video camera, the prank calls made from the coaches office during study hall, the photo session. We always had a good time and I am so glad to have been a part of those times and they are memories I will never forget because the the 3 of you were great friends and people that meant/mean a lot to me.
I remember the time we were in study hall...no, not the time you jabbed a pencil in Barb's leg, but, and I am not sure why, if it was just something you felt like doing or if there was a specific something behind it, but you passed me a note and on that note were the lyrics to the song "Thank you for being a friend."
You were unique, I can definitely say that for sure, but not in a bad way. You marched to the beat of your own drum and you were happy doing so. I know you grew to hate it, but I always loved the fake laugh and I know others that will back me up. You were a loyal friend and I knew I could always count on you.
Rest in Peace my friend and if you see my grandma in heaven give her a fake laugh, she probably won't know what to do with it, but that is ok...and ask her for some zucchini bars as well :) Thank you for your years of friendship and I am sorry that I played my part in letting us drift apart over the years.
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brokehorrorfan · 6 years
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The madness returns when Rob Zombie and Marilyn Manson join forces once again for the Twins of Evil: Hell Never Dies Tour. The shock rockers previously toured together in 2012 and 2018.
The tour finds Zombie and Manson co-headlining concerts across North America this summer. Pre-sale tickets will be available tomorrow at 10am with the password SKELTER. General on sale begins this Friday, February 22.
Dates and venues can be found below.
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Rob Zombie and Marilyn Manson tour dates:
July 9 - Baltimore, MD - Royal Farms Arena
July 10 - Allentown, PA - PPL Center
July 12 - Huntington, WV - Big Sandy Superstore Arena
July 13 - Cincinnati, OH - Riverbend Music Center
July 14 - Evansville, IN - Ford Center
July 16 - Rockford, IL - BMO Harris Bank Center
July 17 - Bonner Springs, KS - Providence Medical Center Amphitheater
July 21 - Council Bluffs, IA - WestFair Amphitheatre
July 23 - Sioux Falls, SD - Denny Sanford Premier Center
July 24 - Bismarck, ND - Bismarck Event Center
July 25 - Billings, MT - Rimrock Auto Arena
Aug 4 - Vancouver, BC - Rogers Arena
Aug 6 - Saskatoon, SK - SaskTel Center
Aug 7 - Winnipeg, MB - Bell MTS Place
Aug 9 - Fargo, ND - Fargodome
Aug 10 - Cedar Rapids, IA - US Cellular Center
Aug 11 - Fort Wayne, IN - Allen County Coliseum
Aug 13 - Grand Rapids, MI - Van Andel Arena
Aug 14 - London, ON - Budweiser Gardens
Aug 16 - Ottawa, ON - Richcraft Live at Canadian Tire Centre
Aug 17 - Quebec, QC - Videotron Centre
Aug 18 - Gilford, NH - Bank of New Hampshire Pavilion
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mysticzombiellama · 6 years
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THE MADNESS RETURNS!
marilyn manson and rob zombie are hitting the road this summer with TWINS OF EVIL: HELL NEVER DIES TOUR 2019
Presale begins tomorrow feb 20th @ 10am local time (presale password: SKELTER) until feb 21st @ 10pm local.
general tickets on sale fri feb 22nd @ 10am local
exclusive VIP packages will be available and announced soon! check
for updates
TWINS OF EVIL: HELL NEVER DIES TOUR 2019
july 9 - baltimore, MD - royal farms arena
july 10 - allentown, PA - PPL center
july 12 - huntington, WV - big sandy superstore arena
july 13 - cincinnati, OH - riverbend music center
july 14 - evansville, IN - ford center
july 16 - rockford, IL - BMO harris bank center
july 17 - bonner springs, KS - providence medical center amphitheater
july 21 - council bluffs, IA - WestFair amphitheatre
July 23 - Sioux Falls, SD - Denny Sanford Premier Center
July 24 - Bismarck, ND - Bismarck Event Center
July 25 - Billings, MT - Rimrock Auto Arena
Aug 4 - Vancouver, BC - Rogers Arena
Aug 6 - Saskatoon, SK - SaskTel Center
Aug 7 - Winnipeg, MB - Bell MTS Place
Aug 9 - Fargo, ND - Fargodome
Aug 10 - Cedar Rapids, IA - US Cellular Center
Aug 11 - Fort Wayne, IN - Allen County Coliseum
Aug 13 - Grand Rapids, MI - Van Andel Arena
Aug 14 - London, ON - Budweiser Gardens
Aug 16 - Ottawa, ON - Richcraft Live at Canadian Tire Centre
Aug 17 - Quebec, QC - Videotron Centre
Aug 18 - Gilford, NH - Bank of New Hampshire Pavilion
Visit
for more info and ticket links!
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rockrevoltmagazine · 5 years
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Papa Roach Releases Heartfelt Music Video for Mental Health Awareness Track "Come Around"
PAPA ROACH RELEASE HEARTFELT VIDEO MESSAGE AND FAN-FOCUSED MUSIC VIDEO FOR MENTAL HEALTH AWARENESS TRACK “COME AROUND” Wrap U.S. Headline Summer Tour and Join Shinedown for 23-Date Attention! Attention! World Tour
Photo credit: Darren Craig
“Personally, it’s my life experience of being on both sides of the song: being the person that needed help,and being the person that has reached out and given somebody help. I feel that in those times we can find who we really are.” – vocalist Jacoby Shaddix Today, Papa Roach share their “Come Around” music video, from their tenth studio album, Who Do You Trust?, shot in New York from their Who Do You Trust? U.S. tour, their largest headlining tour to date. WATCH/SHARE the “Come Around” video below.
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The video features footage from their August 11 performance in New York, NY, featuring longtime fan Mark Moreno, who has followed the band since 2000. It begins with Jacoby saying, “This music gives me a connection to something bigger than myself. This music connects me with people. This music gives me purpose.” Director Bryson Roatch visually tells the story of both the band and Mark, in their journey to do what they love most, sharing emotional moments on the way. One particularly touching moment is Mark visiting the gravesite of his sister, Elizabeth Santana Mercado, whom he lost to colon cancer in 2016. “She was my control switch. She could change my mood real quickly,” he explains. The video’s caption notes that thanks to music and a good support system (Mark is shown with family and friends), you can overcome anything. At Mark’s 57th Papa Roach concert, Jacoby presented him with a gift — a platinum Papa Roach plaque in honor of Elizabeth – and thanked him for his support by giving him two golden Papa Roach “Por Vida” (“For Life”) passes, good for tickets to any Papa Roach show, anywhere in the world, for free, for life. 
“We knew ‘Come Around’ was one of those special songs when we got done with it. We walked away from the track and kept humming the melody to it, and it’s just one of those things that gets stuck in your head. Lyrically, this track’s about sticking with your friend through thick and thin, or your loved one, as they’re spiraling out.” – vocalist Jacoby Shaddix
Who Do You Trust? marks a paradigm career shift for the 26-year band. Singles “Who Do You Trust?” and “Elevate” have steadily remained in the Top 10 at Active Rock Radio, marking 14 Top 5 hits and six #1 hit singles in their career. The band recently wrapped their Who Do You Trust? summer tour through 25 major markets, featuring all-new production and a stellar career-spanning set list, and now connect with Shinedown and Asking Alexandria starting in Roanoke, VA, on September 17, until October 19 in Boise, ID. They will play at Slipknot’s Knotfest on November 30 in Mexico. For tickets and more information, visit www.paparoach.com.
PAPA ROACH’S ATTENTION! ATTENTION! TOUR DATES
w/ Shinedown, Asking Alexandria & Savage After Midnight^ w/ Shinedown and Asking Alexandria*
September 17 – Roanoke, VA – Berglund Center^ September 19 – Bristow, VA – Jiffy Lube Live^ September 20 – Albany, NY – Times Union Center^ September 21 – Atlantic City, NJ – Mark G Etess Arena* September 24 – Laval, Canada – Place Bell^ September 25 – Québec, Canada – Videotron Center^ September 27 – Buffalo, NY – KeyBank Center^ September 28 – University Park, PA – Bryce Jordan Center^ September 29 – Toledo, OH – Huntington Center^ October 1 – Grand Rapids, MI – Van Andel Arena^ October 2 – La Crosse, WI – La Crosse Center^ October 4 – Evansville, IN – Ford Center Martin Luther King^ October 5 – Springfield, MO – JQH Arena^ October 6 – Mankato, MN – Mankato Civic Center^ October 8 – Bismarck, ND – Bismarck Event Center^ October 9 – Winnipeg, Canada – Bell MTS Place^ October 11 – Edmonton, Canada – Edmonton Convention Centre^ October 12 – Dawson Creek, Canada – Encana Events Centre^ October 13 – Calgary, Canada – Stampede Corral Arena^ October 15 – Penticton, Canada – South Okanagan Events Centre^ October 16 – Abbotsford, Canada – Abbotsford Centre^ October 18 – Kennewick, WA – Toyota Center^ October 19 – Boise, ID – Taco Bell Arena^
2019 FESTIVALS November 30 – Mexico City, Mexico – Knotfest Mexico
CONNECT WITH PAPA ROACH: Website | Facebook | Instagram | Twitter | YouTube
Papa Roach Releases Heartfelt Music Video for Mental Health Awareness Track “Come Around” was originally published on RockRevolt Mag
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hauntedwhispers · 6 years
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Watch Ex-FLYLEAF Singer LACEY STURM Perform With SKILLET In Saginaw
Former FLYLEAF singer and current Christian rock solo artist Lacey Sturm is filling in for SKILLET drummer and female vocalist Jen Ledger on five dates during the latter band's tour with BREAKING BENJAMIN. Lacey is not playing drums at these shows, but is lending her vocals to the group in Jen's absence.
Video footage of Sturm's first concert with SKILLET, which took place last night (Friday, March 15) at Dow Event Center in Saginaw, Michigan, can be seen below.
Ledger is forced to miss the SKILLET concerts because they overlap with the "Winter Jam Tour Spectacular", on which Ledger is a featured artist this year.
This isn't the first time Sturm has collaborated with SKILLET. She sang on the group's recent single "Breaking Free", which appeared on the deluxe version of SKILLET's latest album, "Unleashed Beyond".
Ledger released her first solo EP, titled "Ledger", in April 2018 through Hear It Loud, a label imprint launched by SKILLET frontman John Cooper and his wife, SKILLET keyboardist Korey Cooper.
Jen told Audio Ink Radio about her debut solo EP: "It was six years ago when I felt drawn to write my own songs and start expressing myself that way, and I've kind of been under an apprenticeship with the Coopers. They've really taken me under their wings and have been training me and teaching me how to write, so it's been a six-year journey now. It's been such a journey, because to start, I can't believe I've gotten to play drums in a band for 10 years."
Sturm will appear with SKILLET on the following dates:
March 21 - Milwaukee, WI. @ Eagles Ballroom March 23 - La Crosse, WI. @ La Crosse Center Arena March 29 - Mankato, MN @ Verizon Center March 31 - Bismarck, ND @ Bismarck Event Center
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chadsavage · 6 years
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Sinister Font sighting "Ghoulish" (collab with @ghoulishgary Pullin) #Repost @marilynmanson • • • • • THE MADNESS RETURNS! Marilyn Manson and Rob Zombie are hitting the road this summer with TWINS OF EVIL: HELL NEVER DIES TOUR 2019 Presale begins tomorrow Feb 20th @ 10am local time (presale password: SKELTER) until Feb 21st @ 10pm local. General tickets on sale Fri Feb 22nd @ 10am local Exclusive VIP packages will be available and announced soon! Check http://future-beat.com for updates TWINS OF EVIL: HELL NEVER DIES TOUR 2019 July 9 - Baltimore, MD - Royal Farms Arena July 10 - Allentown, PA - PPL Center July 12 - Huntington, WV - Big Sandy Superstore Arena July 13 - Cincinnati, OH - Riverbend Music Center July 14 - Evansville, IN - Ford Center July 16 - Rockford, IL - BMO Harris Bank Center July 17 - Bonner Springs, KS - Providence Medical Center Amphitheater July 21 - Council Bluffs, IA - WestFair Amphitheatre July 23 - Sioux Falls, SD - Denny Sanford Premier Center July 24 - Bismarck, ND - Bismarck Event Center July 25 - Billings, MT - Rimrock Auto Arena Aug 4 - Vancouver, BC - Rogers Arena Aug 6 - Saskatoon, SK - SaskTel Center Aug 7 - Winnipeg, MB - Bell MTS Place Aug 9 - Fargo, ND - Fargodome Aug 10 - Cedar Rapids, IA - US Cellular Center Aug 11 - Fort Wayne, IN - Allen County Coliseum Aug 13 - Grand Rapids, MI - Van Andel Arena Aug 14 - London, ON - Budweiser Gardens Aug 16 - Ottawa, ON - Richcraft Live at Canadian Tire Centre Aug 17 - Quebec, QC - Videotron Centre Aug 18 - Gilford, NH - Bank of New Hampshire Pavilion Visit http://www.marilynmanson.com for more info and ticket links! [Original Post: https://www.instagram.com/p/BuEm9gllDl1/]
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uneminuteparseconde · 7 years
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Des concerts à Paris et autour
Mars 05. Sef III + Muyassar Kurdi + Ronxshka & Jzerhard + Boris Allenou (aka Cathode) – Treize 05. Ritual Extra + Mhönos + Alahuta + Pisitakun – Pointe Lafayette 05. IAMX – La Machine 07. Les Troupes de l'imaginaire (fest. Sonic Protest) – Médiathèque musicale (gratuit) 07. Franck Vigroux & Antoine Schmitt : "Chronostasis" + Alexander Schubert : "Codec Error" – Centre Pompidou ||COMPLET|| 07/08. Ryuchi Sakamoto & Shiro Takatani (Dumb Type) : "Dis.Play" – Maison de la Culture du Japon ||COMPLET|| 08. Cheval scintillantes + Delphine Dora – Le Zorba (gratuit) 08. Molecule – Elysée Montmartre 08. Regina Demina & Eggplant + Léon Septavaux : "Haters" – Palais de Tokyo 08. Trevor Wishart + Davide Tidoni + Pancrace (fest. Sonic Protest) – Théâtre de Vanves 08. Léonie Pernet – O Gib (Montreuil) 09. Bretzel Göring + Kollektiv Barner 16 + Mohamed Lamouri (fest. Sonic Protest) – Centre Barbara-FGO 09. Elliott Murphy – Mona Bismarck American Center 09. Extrawelt + Ben Men + Präri – Rex Club 09. Adam X + Perc + Pulse One + Parfait – tba 10. ARP TARK (Aymeric Hainaux) – Centre national de la Danse (Pantin) (gratuit) 10. Julien Desprez – Centre national de la Danse (Pantin)   10. Wild Classical Music Ensemble + Dolly Rambo + DNA,AND feat. Ogrob (fest. Sonic Protest) – Centre Barbara-FGO 10. Uriel Barthélémi & Tarek Atoui – Silencio 10. Anaconda + Casio judiciaire + 2035 – Le Jardin d'Alice (Montreuil) 10. Radioactive Man + AZF + Erika b2b Noncompliant + Powder – Concrete 10. Deena Abdelwahed (dj) + Sundae (dj) – Centre national de la Danse (Pantin) (gratuit sur résa) ||COMPLET|| 13. Luminous Bodies + Klarinetthor + Enob – Espace B 14. Balmorhea + Martyn Heyne – Point FMR 14. I Hate Model + Marc.Andrea + Sina – Rex Club 15. Arto Lindsay + Seijiro Murayama & Thomas Brinkmann + Masami Kawaguchi (fest. Sonic Protest) – Eglise Sant-Merry 15. Mathias Delplanque + Club Cactus – Espace B 15. Esmerine – Point FMR 15. C.A.R. – Badaboum 15. Regina Demina & Eggplant + Léon Septavaux : "Haters" – Palais de Tokyo 15. Octave Courtin + Emmanuelle Gibello + Frédéric Mathevet + Hélène Singer + Alexandra Spence + Jean-Charles François & Nicolas Sidoroff + Kwangrae Kim – Le Cube (Issy-lès-Moulineaux) 15. Maud Geffray & Lavinia Meijer jouent Philip Glass (fest. Paris Music) – Eglise Saint-Eustache ||COMPLET|| 16. The Altered Hours – Supersonic (gratuit) 16. Morton Subotnick, Alec Empire & Lillevan + Kevin Drumm (fest. Sonic Protest) – Eglise Saint-Merry 16. Panico Panico + The Absolute Never + Thharm – Pointe Lafayette 16. Koki Nakano & Vincent Ségal – Le Bal 16. Virginie Despentes & Zëro + Dream Wife + The Pack AD + La Pietà + Léonie Pernet (fest. Les femmes s'en mêlent) – La Machine 16. Minimal Syndicat + Illnurse + Murd + The DJ Producer – Glazart 16. Pär Grindvik + SHXCXCHCXSH + Nozen – Nuits fauves 17. Hélène Breschand & Wilfried Wendling : "Imaginarium" – La Muse en circuit (Alfortville) (gratuit) 17. Vox Low – La Station 17. Arnaud Rebotini + Etienne Jaumet (dj)... (fest. Paris Music) – L'Aérosol 17. Maher Shalal Hash Baz + Mick Harris aka Fret + Russell Haswell + ZB Aids + Paddy Steer + Thomas Tilly + Terrine + Satan (fest. Sonic Protest) – L'Echangeur (Bagnolet) 17. British Murder Boys + Lucy + Dasha Rush + Anetha – Terminal 7 17. Chloé + Curses – Nuits fauves 19. Koban – Supersonic (gratuit) 19. Fever Ray – Olympia 20. Hackedepicciotto – Walrus (gratuit) 20. Les Tambours du Bronx + Acyl – La Machine 21. Hackedepicciotto + Phoenician Drive + Maninkari – Supersonic (gratuit) 21. Egopusher – Centre culturel suisse 22. Jean-Philippe Renoult & Dinah Bird : musique pour "Absynth" de HeHe (Biennale Nemo) – WIP 22. Goran Bregovic & l'orchestre des mariages et des enterrements – Salle Pleyel 22. Petra pied de biche – Pointe Lafayette 23. PurForm + TRDLX (Biennale Nemo) – Grande Halle de La Villette 23. Pierre Henry (diff.) + Anabelle Playe + John Chantler + Bill Orcutt + Anthony Child (Présences électronique) (Présences électronique) – Maison de la radio|Studio 104 23. Hey Colossus + Grey Hairs – Espace B 23. Delacave – Supersonic 23. Zombie Zombie – Le Plan (Ris-Orangis) 23. Paula Temple + Tommy Four Seven + Umfang – Nuits fauves 24. Alva Noto & Anne-James Chaton : "Alphabet" (Biennale Nemo) – Grande Halle de La Villette 24. Else Marie Pade + :such: + Bellows + Phonophani + The Caretaker (Présences électronique) – Maison de la radio|Studio 104 24. Youth Code + Carpenter Brut – Olympia 24. Jessica93 + JC Satàn – La Clef (Saint-Germain-en-Laye) 25. Jacques Lejeune + Chris Corsano + Ben Vida & Marina Rosenfeld + Mads Emil Nielsen + Gravetemple (Présences électronique) – Maison de la radio|Studio 104 29. Chicaloyoh + KosmoSuna – Le Zorba (gratuit) 29. Bleib Modern – Supersonic (gratuit) 29. Drame + Le Réveil des tropiques – Centre Barbara-FGO 29. Angry Skeletons + Laurence Wasser – Pointe Lafayette 29. Laurent Garnier + Scan X – Rex club 30. Orval Carlos Sibelius + Domotic – Le Zorba (gratuit) 30. Polar Inertia + Shlømo + Luigi Tozzi + Twin Peaks – Concrete 31. Schlaasss + Petosaure + Enfance de merde – Supersonic (gratuit) 31. Maulwürfe (fest. Artdanthé) – Théâtre de Vanves 31. The Noise Consort (fest. Artdanthé) – Théâtre de Vanves 31. L'émeute philharmonique de SEC + Kouma + Polar Polar Polar Polar + Stratocastors + Joujou – La Parole errante (Montreuil) 31. 14anger – tba 31. Arnaud Rebotini – Nuits fauves
Avril 04. Suuns – Elysée Montmartre 05. Michaela Antalova + Amundsen + On lâche les chiens – Le Zorba (gratuit) 05. UUUU – Espace B 05. Dance with the Dead + Christine + Mlada Fronta + Confrontational + Midnight Danger – Gibus 06. Le Prince Harry + Whispering Sons + The Guru Guru + It It Anita + Empereur – Supersonic 06. Le singe blanc + Nohaybanda! + Casse gueule – Cirque électrique 06. NSI (Tobias & Max Loderbauer) + Sendai Soundsystem (Peter Van Hoesen & Yves De Mey) + ENA + Izabel – Concrete 07. Nozomi Misawa & Marion Bataille (fest. Raccords) – Bibliothèque Françoise-Sagan (gratuit sur résa) 07. Terminal Cheesecake + GuiliGuiliGoulag + Sweet Williams + Futuroscope – Espace B 10. Jamie Stewart joue Xiu Xiu – Olympic café 10. Structure + Walking Idiots + Oktober Lieber – Le Klub 10. John Olson + Nate Young + Regression + Henry & Hazel Slaughter + Stare Case + Wolf Eyes + Evil Moisture – Instants chavirés (Montreuil) 11. JC Satàn + Cockpit – La Maroquinerie 12. The Ex + Anarchist Republic of Bzzz (fest. Banlieues bleues) – La Dynamo (Pantin) 13. Amusement Parks on Fire + Ulster Page + Misty Coast – Supersonic (gratuit) 13. DJ Krush – La Bellevilloise 13. La secte du futur – La Station 14. Dominique a + My Brightest Diamond – Salle Pierre Boulez|Philharmonie 14. Infecticide + Exo_C + Randy x Marsh + Mauvaise foi + Forge (Monospace fest.) – Petit Bain 14. Techno Thriller – La Station 14. Badbad – 2, rue Paul-Eluard (Montreuil) 14. Function + Shifted – La Machine 14. Lil Louis + Josh Wink + Ellen Allien + Levon Vincent + Acid Arab + Paranoid London + Wlderz + Thomas Delacroix – Paris Event Center 15. Dominique a + Adrian Crowley – Cité de la musique|Philharmonie ||COMPLET|| 18. Chrysta Bell – La Maroquinerie 19. Christian Death + Punish Yourself + Volker – La Machine 19. Peter Kernel – Point FMR 19. Carole Robinson, Buno Martinez & Charles Curtis : "Naldjorlak I, II et III" d'Éliane Radigue – La Marbrerie (Montreuil) 20. Idles + Lice – Trabendo 20. Die Selektion – Supersonic 21. Igorrr + Niveau Zero – Trabendo 21. Yan Wagner + Tristesse contemporaine (fest. Clap Your Hands) – Café de la danse 22. The Body + Fange – Olympic café 24>26. Franck Vigroux & Kurt d'Haeseleer – La Pop 26. Ought + Foammm – La Maroquinerie 26. Wrekmeister Harmonies – Espace B 26. A Place To Bury Strangers – Trabendo 27. Popsimonova + Sleep Loan Sharks – Le Klub 28. She Past Away + Lebanon Hanover + Selofan – La Machine 28. Arcade Fire – Bercy Arena 28. Rhys Chatham + Krikor Kouchian + Chloé & Vassilena Serafimova – Centre Pompidou 30. Koudlam + Bajram Bili + Pointe du lac – La Maroquinerie 30. Iron Fist of The Sun + Am Not + Kevlar + Kontinent – Les Voûtes
Mai 07. Iceage + Pardans – Petit Bain 10. Derya Yildirim & Grup Simsek + Stranded Horse (Le Beau fest.) – La Petite Halle 11. And Also the Trees + Tropic of Cancer + Better Person + En attendant Ana + Magic Island (Le Beau fest.) – Trabendo 12. Deerhoof + Ulrika Spacek + First Hate + Good Morning + Pantin plage (Le Beau fest.) – Trabendo 13. God is an Astronaut – Trabendo 14. Bryan's Magic Tears + Le Villejuif Underground + VVVV – La Maroquinerie (gratuit sur résa) 19. Yo La Tengo – Cabaret sauvage 19. Deux boules vanille (fest. Switch) – Théâtre de Vanves 20. Biscuit Mouth + Melkbelly + Storm{o} + BadBad – Espace B 20. SNTS (Marvellous Island fest.) – Ile de loisirs (Vaires-Torcy) 23. Otomo Yoshihide + Kaze – Instants chavirés (Montreuil) 24. Otomo Yoshihide & Chris Pitsiokos + Ikuro Takahashi – Instants chavirés (Montreuil) 24. HMLTD + Faire (dj) – Petit Bain 25. Mogwai + Jon Hopkins + James Holden & The Animal Spirits (Villette sonique) – Grande Halle de La Villette 26. Car Seat Headrest + Naked Giants (Villette sonique) – Trabendo 26. Marquis de Sade + Anna Von Hausswolff + Exploded View (Villette sonique) – Grande Halle de La Villette 29. The Damned – Petit Bain 29. Deerhunter + Midnight Sister (Villette sonique) – Cabaret sauvage 30. John Maus + Flat Worms + Kate NV (Villette sonique) – Trabendo 30. Klimperei – tba 30. Igorrr + Ni – Les Cuizines (Chelles)
Juin 02. Penguin Café – Fondation Cartier 02/03. Björk + Beck + Jamie XX + King Krule + Father John Misty + Migos... (fest. We Love Green) – Bois de Vincennes 09. Trisomie 21 – La Maroquinerie 11. Preoccupations – La Maroquinerie 12. Damo Suzuki's Network – Espace B 13. L7 – La Cigale 14. Ty Segall & The Freedom Band + Mike Donovan – Bataclan 15/16. Ryoji Ikeda : "Formula - c4i - Datamatics" – Centre Pompidou 22. Modern Life Is War + Cro Mags – Petit Bain 25. Nine Inch Nails – Olympia ||COMPLET|| 27. The Jesus & Mary Chain – Le Trianon 29>01.07. Motor City Drum Ensemble + Antal + Golden Dawn Archestra + Tin Man + A Deep Groove + Josey Rebelle + Toshio Matsuura + Cotonete + Zaltan + Lomboy + Ceephax Acid Crew + Nick V + Saint DX (Macki Music fest.) – parc de la mairie (Carrières/Seine) 30. Echo Collective joue "Amnesiac" de Radiohead (fest. Days Off) – Le Studio|Philharmonie 30. Nils Frahm (fest. Days Off) – Salle Pierre-Boulez|Philharmonie
Juillet 03. David Byrne (fest. Days Off) – Salle Pierre-Boulez|Philharmonie 04. MGMT (fest. Days Off) – Salle Pierre-Boulez|Philharmonie 06. Trami Nguyen et Laurent Durupt jouent "Piano Phase" de Steve Reich + Bruce Brubaker + Laake + Fabrizio Rat + Murcof & Vanessa Wagner + Tom Rogerson + Grandbrothers (fest. Days Off) – Cité de la musique|Philharmonie 06. Amelie Lens + Daniel Avery + Floating Points + Folamour + Jeff Mills + Laurent Garnier + Kink b2b Gerd Janson + Not Waving + Solomun... (The Peacock Society) – Parc floral (Vincennes) 07. Richie Hawtin + Tale of Us + Charlotte de Witte + Chloé + Maetrik + Mano Le Tough + Octo Octa + Joy Orbison b2b Kornel Kovacs (The Peacock Society) – Parc floral (Vincennes) 08. Maulwürfe – La Gaîté lyrique 09. Eels – Olympia
Septembre 22. The Wedding Present – Point FMR
Novembre Michael Nyman : "War Work: 8 Songs with Film" – Salle Pleyel
Décembre 01. Deux boules vanille (fest. Marathon!) – La Gaîté lyrique
en gras : les derniers ajouts / in bold: the last news
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ATTENTION ATTENTION TOUR Shinedown, Papa Roach, Asking Alexandria and Savage After Midnight
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September 17 Roanoke, VA @ The Berglund Center September 19 Bristow, VA @ Jiffy Lube Live September 20 Albany, NY @ Times Union Center September 24 Laval, QC @ Place Bell September 25 Quebec City, QC @ VideoTron Center September 27 Buffalo, NY @ KeyBank Center September 28 State College, PA @ Bryce Jordan Center October 1 Grand Rapids, MI @ Van Andel Arena October 2 La Crosse, WI @ La Crosse Center October 4 Evansville, IN @ Ford Center October 6 Mankato, MN @ Mankato Civic Center October 8 Bismarck, ND @ Bismarck Event Center October 9 Winnipeg, MB @ Bell MTS Place October 11 Edmonton, AB @ Edmonton Convention Centre October 12 Dawson Creek, BC @ Encana Events Centre October 13 Calgary, AB @ Stampede Corral October 15 Penticton, BC @ South Okanagan Events Centre October 16 Abbotsford, BC @ Abbotsford Centre October 18 Kennewick, WA @ Toyota Center October 19 Boise, ID @ Taco Bell Arena
Tickets and info - askingalexandria.com 
VIP Packages merch.alexandriaplace.com
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rockrageradio · 5 years
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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
April 5, 2019
BEASTO BLANCO RETURN WITH NEW ALBUM WE ARE SLATED FOR RELEASE ON MAY 24th
Beasto Blanco; the band comprised of Chuck Garric (long time Alice Cooper bassist) on guitars and vocals, Calico Cooper on vocals, Brother Latham on guitars, Jan LeGrow on bass and Sean Sellers on drums, will release their 3rd studio album 'We Are' on May 24, 2019. We Are is the follow up album to their highly successful 2016 self-titled sophomore release Beasto Blanco and is produced by Ryan Greene.
Regarding the new album Chuck Garric comments, “We spent a lot of time channeling, dissecting and arranging the songs from our new album. The idea was, “Let’s make 'our' record - not necessarily what’s popular now or what we think other people will like. We said, let’s make a record for us and our fans. Our fans are loyal and our sound is our sound."
Beasto Blanco will be touring U.S and Canada in support of We Are opening for Halestorm and Palaye Royale. The tour begins April 18th at the Verizon Center in Mankato, MN and takes the band through spring with additional headlining shows, as well as an appearance at this years Rocklahoma.
Facebook
https://www.facebook.com/BeastoBlanco/
Twitter
https://twitter.com/BeastoBlanco
Instagram
https://www.instagram.com/beastoblanco
TOUR DATES
APR 18 Mankato, MN Verizon Wireless Center*
APR 20 Billings, MT Shrine Auditorium*
APR 21 Denver, CO Moe’s Original BBQ
APR 22 Salt Lake City, UT The Union*
APR 23 Garden City, ID Revolution Concert House*
APR 25 Kennewick, WA Toyota Center*
APR 26 Vancouver, BC Chan Centre*
APR 28 Edmonton, AB Norther Jubilee Auditorium*
APR 29 Calgary, AB MacEwan Ballroom*
MAY 01 Winnipeg, MB Burton Cummings Theatre*
MAY 05 Bismarck, ND Bismarck Event Center*
MAY 07 Rapid City, SD Barnett Arena*
MAY 08 Sioux Falls, SD Bigs Bar
MAY 09 Cedar Rapids, IA US Cellular Center*
MAY 10 Council Bluffs, IA West Fair Amphitheater*
MAY 11 Indianapolis, IN Kiss Expo
MAY 12 London, ON London Music Hall*
MAY 13 Toronto, ON Danforth Music Hall*
MAY 14 Ottawa, ON The Brass Monkey
MAY 15 Montreal, QC MTelus*
MAY 16 Quebec City, QC La Source de la Martinière
MAY 17 Brooklyn, NY Knitting Factory
MAY 19 Clifton, NJ Dingbatz
MAY 20 Pittsburgh, PA Hard Rock Cafe
MAY 22 Memphis, TN Hi Tone Cafe
MAY 23 St Louis, MO Fubar
MAY 25 Pryor, OK Rocklahoma
MAY 26 Dallas, TX Gas Monkey Live
MAY 27 Austin, TX Come & Take It Live
MAY 28 Houston, TX Warehouse
MAY 31 Jacksonville, FL Jack Rabbits
JUN 01 Nashville, TN The Basement East
(*with Halestorm)
#soundcheckwithgentry #beastoblanco #rockmusic #rocknroll #rock #hardrock #metal #rockrageradio #rockisNOTdead
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itsjustascarecrow · 7 years
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so. today marks a pretty special occasion for me. today officially marks the 5-year anniversary of the first LA Kings/hockey game i’ve ever been to. on Thursday, April 4th, 2013, my dad and i went to the Kings v. Wild game and saw Justin Williams score one minute and twenty nine seconds into the first period for what would eventually be the game-winning goal, as former Kings backup goaltender Jonathan Bernier posted a shutout.
so i’m making a post to sort of commemorate this achievement(? i guess you can call it that)--5 awesome years of being a hockey fan, and all the amazing games and events and players i’ve seen in these past 5 years.
first i’ll start w/ some totals (that do not include the game i’m going to tonight):
Games:
NHL: LAK (46); SJS (9); COL (5); STL (4); CBJ DAL (3); ANA ARI BOS CHI EDM MIN PIT (2); CAR CGY FLA NSH NYR PHI TBL TOR WSH WPG (1)
2012-13: 6 total (2 regular season, 4 playoff) 2013-14: 9 total (6 regular, 3 playoff) 2014-15: 8 total (all regular) 2015-16: 12 total (1 preseason, 10 regular, 1 playoff) 2016-17: 12 total (2 preseason, 10 regular)*’**
*2017 NHL All-Star Game (not included in total) **includes a non-LAK game (CBJ @ ANA)
AHL: ONT (6); BAK (2); CLE IWA SAR SDG (1)
2015-16: 4 total (2 regular, 2 playoff) 2016-17: 2 total (all regular)
NWHL: BOS NYR (1)
2016-17: 1 (regular)
Goals Scored:
NHL: -Kings: total - 127 by season:  2012-13: 18  2013-14: 28 2014-15: 24 2015-16: 30 2016-17: 27
-Opponent: total - 109 by season: 2012-13: 10 2013-14: 26 2014-15: 16 2015-16: 26 2016-17: 31
**CBJ @ ANA: 4-0 CBJ final score (not included in any above totals)
AHL: -Reign: total - 13 by season: 2015-16: 8 2016-17: 5
-Opponent: total - 9 by season: 2015-16: 8 2016-17: 1
NWHL: -Pride: total - 4 -Riveters: total - 3
largest amount of goals scored by a single team: 6 (Kings x3, Stars x1) number of shutouts: 9 (includes all leagues: Kings x4, Sharks x1, Penguins x1, Blue Jackets x1, Condors x1, Reign x1)
Wins vs. Losses:
NHL: Kings: 26 Opponent: 20 by season: 2012-13: 5-1 2013-14: 5-4 2014-15: 5-3 2015-16: 7-5 2016-17: 4-7**
**does not include CBJ @ ANA
AHL: Reign: 4 Opponent: 2 by season: 2015-16: 2-2 2016-17: 2-0
NWHL: Pride: 1 Opponent: 0
there’s probably a hell of a lot more info number-wise i could put on here, like which individuals we’ve seen score the most for and against each team, etc., but honestly idk if i have the patience to figure that out, lmao. also i’m sure there’s plenty of games we’ve been to where so-and-so or what’s-his-face got a milestone goal/point/game career total but again, can’t be bothered to go back and look it up. for those who may want more info tho, here’s a post i made a while ago that i update regularly w/ all the games i’ve been to w/ a final score and the goal-scorers.
for real tho like. i don’t wanna get all sappy and shit and suddenly turn this post all emotional (just watch me do so anyway) but i honestly cannot express how much this sport means to me. like insert tragic backstory(tm) here and how hockey was what saved me and all that jazz but shit like. i mean yeah this shit’s got it’s ups and downs but at least whenever i get frustrating about personal stuff, i can distract myself w/ a game. or if the game’s pissing me off, at least i’m not focusing on all the shit going on in my personal life. b/c before i started watching, i really.. didn’t have much, kinda?? 
basically i went through a major bought of depression throughout 2012 which sorta peaked in early 2013 w/ stuff i’d rather not discuss here, but if my dad hadn’t taken me to that game 5 years ago, i honestly don’t know if i’d still be around today. i felt like i’d lost a lot. nothing interested me anymore. my favorite band at the time broke up when i felt like i’d already hit rock bottom. i had like no outlet for what little strong emotion i did feel at the time b/c otherwise i just felt empty. but when Justin Williams scored that goal a minute and twenty nine freaking seconds into that game, i knew that was it. that’s what sealed the deal for me. 
i had zero idea what to expect, even w/ my dad giving me a basic rundown of the roster and some basic rules about the game. like we watched the wild warm up (b/c that’s where our seats were) and my dad kept pointing out Zach Parise to me damn-near every time he skated past us b/c he’s a former UND alumni, as is like half my family on my dad’s side, but after a while it was like “okay dad, i get it. Zach Parise. UND. pretty cool,” lmao. and then the game starts and it was so quiet. like i’ve been to like a million high school football games, a good number of pro baseball games, and one pro basketball game, but all of them were.. well a hell of a lot louder, for one. like people were watching the game, but at the same time they weren’t. people in and out of their seats all the time, tons of idle chit-chat, etc. but when that first puck dropped, people sat down and shut up. they watched, like. really watched. and when Williams scored, the utter elation of the entire building (save the wild fans of course), the horn, the “hey hey hey!” chant complete w/ fist-pumping--it was just. i honestly can’t even describe it properly. but what i can say was that it was the first time in a looong time i felt genuinely happy. 
and here i am exactly 5 years later. going back to Staples for my 47th Kings game. and i like to think i’ve seen some pretty wild shit in these past five years. league rule changes that ultimately changed the entire ASG format, amazing players both leaving and joining the league (i.e. Teemu Selanne, Auston Matthews), the 2014 Olympics, a few All-Star games, and a World Cup, the first paid pro women’s league and the U.S. women’s team fight for equitable wages, the first transgender athlete to play pro hockey (i.e. the amazing and inspirational Harrison Browne), a freaking expansion team in Vegas. 
and speaking of Vegas, i went to the first ever hockey games held in the new arena, and while it wasn’t the result we wanted, at least i got to spent two nights in a row in the coolest new arena in town, plus i got to see 3 native players on the ice in one game on the second night vs. the Avalanche, which is probably more than any other team/match-up in this league could boast. and i could not have been more proud.
i was there for Andy Andreoff’s NHL debut where he got into a fight w/ Matt Hendricks in his first shift on the ice. 
i accidentally met Matt Greene’s parents b/c his mom happened to notice my dad was wearing his jersey and asked for a picture. 
i ran into Bob Miller outside Staples and he let me see his 2014 Stanley Cup Championship ring, the same night they raised the banner. 
the first time i saw my next favorite team, the Avalanche, was three years ago on the 2-year anniversary of my first Kings game, and i took @gofredthefish​ along for the ride. 
i stood and cheered and cried for Mike Richards and Justin Williams on their return to LA after both had signed w/ the Capitals. 
i was there to see Jonathan Quick’s epic scorpion kick save against Winnipeg three seasons ago (the night before we drove down to San Deigo so i could catch an Of Mice & Men concern, then drive back to LA the following day so i could catch a flight to Bismarck, ND to visit family for senior year spring break).
i jokingly put a “native curse” San Jose’s bench before warmups back in 2014 during the first round of the playoffs, the night the Kings started their reverse sweep (as well as it being Tyler Toffoli’s 22nd birthday).
the first shootout i ever saw went to the Blues, courtesy of Troy Brouwer’s goal in the 7th round.
sent our 2014 Olympians off on a high note w/ a 2-1 overtime win against the Blue Jackets where Robyn Regehr scored the gwg from right in front of where i was sitting.
went to my first game in Honda Center and the Ducks were gloriously shut out. (i was also one of maybe ten Blue Jackets fans in the entire building.)
saw Dwight King score on Marty Brodeur from the blue line, Alec Martinez score on the Avs twice on the same play, Milan Lucic’s first game in Staples Center as a King, got a video of the signature Nick Foligno/Sergei Bobrovsky Hug(tm)--twice, since they shut out the Ducks that one time, saw the home team get a 3-0 shutout in both my first NHL and AHL games, was there for the Luc Robitaille statue unveiling outside Staples, and stood less than 10 feet away from Cam Atkinson outside Staples before the 2017 ASG. 
i went to a Reign game where they knocked the San Diego Gulls out of the playoffs just a couple of weeks after i was released from the hospital after falling into a diabetic-induced coma (also i had a cold but i’ll be damned if i wasn’t gonna persevere).
i went to two separate You Can Play-sponsored LGBT+ Pride Nights for both the NHL and NWHL--and speaking of which, that particular NWHL Pride Night was my first ever women’s hockey game ever. and Boston kept their “undefeated since last january” record alive and well.
and the one moment that still makes me cry every time i think about it was when i saw Matt Duchene score his first goal of the season in 2015-16 in what would eventually be his first 30-goal season. i was sat in the second row right in front of where he threw himself into the glass in celebration, so i like to think we kinda celly’d together.
but best of all, i got to meet @hockeyacegrace earlier this season on Native American Heritage Night, and took @kylorenedict to the Kings’ opening night against the Flyers to kick off the 50-year anniversary of the First Expansion. and not to mention the many other wonderful friends i’ve made in this fandom, who also include (but are not limited to) @brandoncarlo, @jodrouin27, @sadchihuahua, @elzaechelon, @marianyossa, and @dominic-turgeon​. 
basically just. here’s to 5 gods damned years of selling my soul to this hell on ice. and gods damn it, here’s to 5 more.
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crank11news-blog · 6 years
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Catch Breaking Benjamin Live in Concert
Catch Breaking Benjamin Live in Concert
Catch Breaking Benjamin Live
Experience Breaking Benjamin in concert at one of the locations listed below. With hits like The Diary of Jane, Breath and So Cold Breaking Benjamin has made a mark since their formation in 1999. (more…)
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ustribunenews-blog · 6 years
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Breaking Benjamin Is Ready To Play Live
Breaking Benjamin Is Ready To Play Live
Breaking Benjamin Events
Breaking Benjamin is touring and will be playing at multiple locations (see below for a full list). With hits like The Diary of Jane, Breath and So Cold Breaking Benjamin has made a mark since their formation in 1999. (more…)
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mastcomm · 5 years
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As World Economy Shifts Gears, Trade Growth Slows
As the global business and political elite gather at Davos this year, the question remains open: Is the trade war on? Or is it off again?
As far as China and the United States are concerned, a tenuous truce seems to have been declared. Phase 1, signed last week, eases some Trump administration sanctions on China in return for Beijing’s vow to step up its purchases of American farm products and other goods.
But cheer not. Few experts believe that this opens a path to Phase 2 and beyond.
The ongoing trade challenges lie not only with China. In an election year, the Europeans, with their trade surpluses in autos and luxury goods, could also be a tempting target for President Trump.
Adding to the uncertainty is the administration’s decision to block the World Trade Organization from adding members to its appellate court, crippling the organization’s ability to rule in trade disputes.
If South Korea and Japan, or Brazil and the European Union, have a trade conflict, they no longer have anywhere to take it.
Long-term investment and elaborate supply chains depend on a degree of predictability. Dependable good-faith trade agreements backed by World Trade Organization arbitration were ways of ensuring that.
But beyond the immediate political environment — and whether or not Mr. Trump is re-elected — larger trends are standing in the way of any return to the golden age of globalization so beloved by those who attend Davos.
The extraordinary growth in global trade that occurred between the 1970s and 2008 was fueled in large part by the profusion of enormous bulk carriers, the widespread adoption of shipping containers and the movement of hundreds of millions of Asian workers from the countryside to factories serving the world market.
It was a one-off shift, which explains why growth in global trade is now slowing. But it also left a legacy of social and political tensions.
Swing voters in the Rust Belt helped put Mr. Trump in the White House. Those states are reeling from a half-century of traumatic structural change: domestic deindustrialization compounded by the way global trade has shifted manufacturing jobs to places like China and Mexico from places like the Midwest.
This is not just an American story. There are also rusting industrial plants and dilapidated company towns all across Europe and Asia.
But in few places has the collapse of the old model of industrialism left scars deeper than in the United States. The failure of America’s policymakers to deal with these structural changes over the last half-century leaves large parts of the country’s population uncertain and angry.
It is a recipe for backlash, and Mr. Trump has capitalized on it. But even before America unleashed its campaign against the W.T.O., the multilateral trading system was in trouble.
The Doha Rounds of W.T.O. talks, intended to improve trading prospects for developing countries, have been dead since at least 2008. Few people who know the workings of the W.T.O. and its appellate body would sing their praises. Their creaky, slow-moving procedures are a thin reed on which to hang the future of the world economic order.
Furthermore, when officials like Robert Lighthizer, the United States trade representative, declare that the system must be changed because it was not designed to deal with the ascent of China, they have a point.
China’s scale and pace of development, its no-holds-barred approach to competition and the authoritarian regime that backs it fundamentally put in question the liberal model of globalism and win-win trade relations.
It is barely an exaggeration to say that the history of economic development, played out according to Western rules — the narrative that began with Adam Smith’s doctrine of free markets in the 18th century — starts to look like only a preface to an age of competition between large economic blocs.
The Europeans increasingly look like the last man standing when it comes to free trade. The United States, with its long history of protectionism, was always a somewhat reluctant recruit to the camp of free trade. In the 21st century, with the emergence of China and India, the United States has company on the global stage.
China, under its current rulers, is a resurgent and assertive nation-state that poses a fundamental challenge to the power position America built in Asia during the Cold War. What is at stake is more than trade. It is geopolitics.
This was made explicit by the Obama administration and its talk of an “Asia pivot,” with Mr. Obama focusing more on the rise of Asia and less on the Middle East. Superpower competition reduces Mr. Trump’s Phase 1 trade deal with its discussions about soy beans to a sideshow. What matters is the intersection of military and industrial policy in the tech arena — 5G and A.I., not steel and agriculture, will shape the future balance of power.
This new competition brings to mind the Cold War.
China is ruled by a Communist Party that pays lip service to the cult of Mao. America’s positions in Korea, Japan, Taiwan and the South China Sea are legacies of that era. But in the Cold War with the Soviet Union there was never the depth of economic, technological and cultural interconnection that the West has forged with China since the 1980s.
As an alternative historical analogy, some are tempted to invoke the rise of Imperial Germany before 1914 with which the British Empire entertained a similar mixture of rivalry and cooperation. But that comparison belittles the significance of China’s re-emergence.
What we are witnessing is a world event of a different order from Bismarck’s accomplishments. And the global conditions under which this competition takes place are far more pressing.
The first Cold War gave us a vision of global apocalypse centered on nuclear weapons. By the 1980s, we were terrifying ourselves with talk of nuclear winter. That was a nightmare that would be triggered by miscalculation.
The climate challenge that we currently face arises not from a nuclear standoff gone wrong, but from our economic system. The huge expansion and relocation of industrial production that have driven the expansion in trade in the last half-century have also blown out the global carbon budget.
On the day after the presidential election this November, the Trump administration has said it will remove the country from the Paris climate accord. That agreement, for all its inadequacy, is humanity’s best effort to encompass the scale of the planetary challenge we face.
If we are serious about decarbonization, we need to take an enveloping approach not only to domestic emissions but also to trade in carbon-intensive goods. If labor costs and migrant workers were the trade policy issues of the 20th century, carbon border taxes are the frontier of trade policy in the 21st.
The push to decarbonize the great centers of global industrial production must be negotiated between the major trading powers.
The United States is already sidelined at gatherings like the Group of 20. It is no longer the world’s most important emitter of carbon dioxide or the No. 1 trading partner for much of the world.
Mr. Trump’s actions and policies put the onus more firmly on the Europeans and the Chinese to find a way of shaping the new environmental politics of trade — if necessary, without the United States.
Adam Tooze directs the European Institute at Columbia University. He attended the World Economic Forum in Davos in 2019 and is to return this year.
from WordPress https://mastcomm.com/business/as-world-economy-shifts-gears-trade-growth-slows/
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newsnigeria · 6 years
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Check out New Post published on Ọmọ Oòduà
New Post has been published on http://ooduarere.com/news-from-nigeria/world-news/the-waves-of-time/
The Waves of Time
by Jimmie Moglia
That all the world is a stage and all men and women merely players is a familiar and generally accepted proposition. But many, prompted by curiosity and helped by new information previously unknown or uneasily available, would like to know more about the play they are the unwitting players thereof.
Which transforms the frame of mind of the curious into that of a historian. In turn, this exposes him to the immediate problem of interpretation. Interpretation of the historical facts themselves, often accompanied by a likely change of his worldview, following the discovery of new facts. For historians themselves can modify their views, when forced by the train of circumstances.
Here is an example. Friedrich Meinecke was an eminent German historian, with an unusually long life span, during which a series of revolutionary and extraordinary changes affected the fortunes of Germany. His books reflect four different Meinecke(s), each the spokesman of different times, and each speaking through one of his major works.
In his first, “World Citizenship and the Nation State,” published in 1907, Meinecke sees the embodiment of German national ideals in Bismarck’s Reich. And like many 19th and 20th century thinkers, he identifies nationalism with the highest form of universalism.
Here is dramatic evidence of the revolution of the times. In the parlance of current Western European & American elites, nationalism, rather than a higher form of universalism, is labeled as ‘fascism’ or ‘racism’. And since the characterization is ludicrous, a new word has been coined, ‘populism’, to demean and disgrace the idea.
In his second book, “The Idea of the Raison d’Etat,” (published in 1925), Meinecke speaks with the divided and bewildered mind of an observer of the Weimar Republic – where the world of politics has become an arena of unresolved conflict between the reason-of-state and morality. Morality, of itself, seems external to politics, but in the last resort it affects the life and security of any state. For morality is written in the human heart, even of those who hold it in contempt.
To frame the issues in today’s terms, since the end, in the 1950s, of the “Legion of Decency” act in American Cinema,” Hollywood’s productions have set the standard, planted the roots and sowed the of seeds of shame and iniquity, in just about all domains of collective and personal behavior.
In the Weimar Republic, as we know, it was the state of universal degradation, promoted, inculcated and imposed upon Germany after her defeat in WW1, that prompted the birth and growth of National Socialism.
In his “Development of Historicism” (published in 1936), Meinecke laments the idea of a certain view of history, which seems to recognize that whatever is, is right.
In our days, examples of this ‘historicism’ are many, from the totally unbelievable official explanation of 9/11, to the physical destruction of the Middle East, the ongoing farce in Ukraine, the grotesque Russophobia, the idea that Western European and North-American states can exist without borders, and so on.
Finally, in 1946, after seeing his country defeated and leveled to the ground, he published “The German Catastrophe,” where he exposes the belief that history is at the mercy of blind and inexorable forces.
That the times we live-in weigh on our thoughts and judgment is as obvious as saying that a great cause of the night is lack of the sun. Nevertheless, our individual evolving point of view also influences the selection of the facts needed to produce an acceptable explanation of causes and effects, or of causes and defects as the case may be.
That is, the historian and the facts of history are necessary to one another. For a historian without his facts is futile; and facts without a historian are dead and meaningless.
Finally – and I hope the strenuous reader will forgive the long preamble, though I hope there is method in the meandering – not all facts are historical. History begins when the historian selects certain facts and declares them endowed with historical value.
But the distinction between historical and unhistorical facts is not rigid or constant. Any fact may become historical, once its relevance and significance is recognized. If so, that fact generates its own historical wave, whose effects may be felt after a long time and with enormous power, unimaginable when the fact occurred.
In nature an analogy is the tsunami, where, at the point of origin, the waves are only about 3 feet high. But travelling at incredible speed across incredible distances, they finally release their apocalyptic energy on touching land.
As someone ‘curious about history’ and not a professional historian, I experienced a change of outlook on historical events when the United States declared war on Iraq and destroyed it. For I knew the country well and I could personally attest that all that was said about Iraq by the organs of mass persuasion, was false. And while accepting the inherent murkiness of politics, I could not reconcile myself to the idea that the two Bushes, one of whom is dead, could be some of the lyingest knaves in Christendom.
As it is universally accepted, the US destroyed Iraq to satisfy Israel’s ambitions. And given that curiosity is the mother of explanation, I took up the doubtful challenge of locating the original historical fact, the trigger and the source of the wave-of-time, which eventually led to the Iraqi Armageddon and beyond.
In this and similar instances, opinion reigns supreme. Other ‘curious about history’ may choose another episode or fact, and with good reason. But sometimes, lesser-known events, singularly representative of the reality and culture of an era, can offer a perspective different from the conventional and usual narratives.
In the instance, I pinpoint the source of the topic wave-of-time in Napoleon’s emancipation of the Jews in France, following the French Revolution.
Actually, already in 1791, in the midst of the Revolution, the National Assembly had granted Jews full citizenship. It was hoped that, by so doing, Jews would stop acting like a separate nation within France. But soon there were complaints that the Jews were stuck in their old ways, particularly in Alsace and Lorraine, where their majority lived. Their ‘old ways’ referred to usury, or, as we would say today ‘financial engineering’, or ‘banking shenanigans’.
The situation remained fluid and uncertain till Napoleon, converted from a servant of the Republic into an Emperor, convened, in 1807, what he called the Great Sanhedrin, to resolve the controversial issues arisen from the emancipation. The Great Sanhedrin refers to the governing body of the Jewish community, notably during the Roman Empire.
To a council of 71 Jewish leaders and rabbis, Napoleon posed 12 questions about their laws and customs. Some questions were amusing – for example, were Jews allowed to have more than one wife? The main issue, however, was whether Jews born in France, and now treated by law as citizens, would regard France as their country. They answered that there was nothing inherent in their religion preventing the full integration of the Jewish community into French life. This was enough to confirm their full recognition and emancipation, along with an obligation to take up French names.
Perhaps Napoleon ignored that if a rose by any other name would smell as sweet, a Shylock, by any other name would still call for his pound of flesh.
In fact, there was immediate widespread opposition to the move, in French-ruled Europe and in France itself. Even one of Napoleon’s famous generals, Francois Christophe de Kellerman, whose name is inscribed in the Arc de Triomphe, recommended strongly that the Jews be prohibited from dealing in commerce.
With easy hindsight, Napoleon, like all who like to anticipate futurity and exalt possibility to certainty, might or should have avoided this adventure, so linked to chance. For, in this and other similar instances, disappointment must always be proportionate to the breath of the original hopes.
The pressure became so intense that soon Napoleon restricted the terms of emancipation, via the so-called “Infamous Decree” of 1808. The decree annulled, reduced or postponed all debts with Jews, and imposed a ten-year ban on any kind of Jewish money-lending activity.
As an aside, the official public face of a notable politician or ruler, often conflicts with his private persona, as seen in his diaries or confidential papers. In a letter to his brother Jérome Napoleon, dated 6 March 1808, Napoleon writes, “I have undertaken to reform the Jews, but I have not endeavored to draw more of them into my realm. Far from that, I have avoided doing anything which could show any esteem for the most despicable of mankind.”
“Give me ten thousand eyes, and I will fill them with prophetic tears” – said Cassandra predicting the fall of Troy. The most Cassandra-like admonition given to Napoleon came from his uncle, Cardinal Fesh, who told him, “Sire, by giving the Jews equality as Catholics, you wish for the end of the world to come.”
But the onrush of events, including Napoleon’s defeat at Waterloo, inaugurated a new era. When an atheistic ideology, molded in the Age of Enlightenment, and strengthened by the impact of the French Revolution, took hold and spread at large throughout Europe.
For the 19th century saw an upsurge of anti-clerical movements and ideologies in the Western world. This is not a wholesale defense of organized religion. Nevertheless, religion also acts as a bulwark of the moral law. And irrespective of specific customs or ceremonies, religion – without disrespect – is metaphysics for the people, an intelligible intimation of eternity, an unthreatening glimpse of the infinity, a psychological safeguard from the despair of mortality.
In this context, it is not accidental that the rebirth of Russia, earlier ravaged, debased and plundered by the dissolvers of the Soviet Union, has seen the resurgence of her religion, which was dormant but never died.
Compare this with America, with her enforced and compulsive secularization, the banning of religion in schools and the prohibition of public display of religious symbols.
But I digress. Let’s return to the subject at hand. After 1815, Jewish supremacy, especially in the banking field, asserted itself in Europe, spearheaded by the ubiquitous House of the Rothschilds. In the second part of the century, England even had a Jewish Prime Minister, Disraeli.
During that time, with a pronouncement that today seems impossible, the Vatican declared that any country that abolishes the Christian religion will be run by Jews.
It’s worth transcribing an extract from a 1890 issue of “Civilta’ Cattolica,” the key media organ of the Jesuits and the Vatican,
“The XIXth century will end, in Europe, leaving her in the throngs of a very sad issue, of which the XXth century will feel consequences so calamitous, as to induce her (Europe) to drastically deal with it. We refer to the improperly-called “Semitic Question,” that more accurately should be called “Judaic Question” – which is connected via an intimate link, to the economic, moral, political and religious conditions of Europe.
How fervid at present and how much this question perturbs the major nations, is manifest by the common cry against the invasion by Jews in all spheres of public and social life; by the leagues formed to slow its advance in France, Austria, Germany, Italy, Russia, Rumania and elsewhere. By the calls for action in various Parliaments – by the large number of newspaper articles, books and pamphlets that are constantly printed, all showing the need to stem the growth of this plague, and to combat it, showing evidence of its very pernicious consequences….
Naively, some try to show that the ”Judaic Question” is the result of a (Christian) hatred of the (Judaic) religion or sect. Mosaism (read ‘religion inspired by Moses) in itself could not be an argument for hatred…. for it was the antecedent of Christianity… But for centuries Judaism has turned its back on Mosaism, exchanging it with the Talmud, quintessence of that pharisaism, many times blasted by Christ…. And although Talmudism is an integral element of the Jewish question, we cannot say that (Talmudism) is all that relevant to it (Judaic question). For in Talmudism the Christian nations detest not so much the theological part, almost reduced to insignificance, but the moral one, that contradicts the elementary principles of natural ethics…. “
Incidentally, and as another aside, it is customary to describe the roots of European culture as “Judeo-Christian.” Many contend that a better description would be the “Greek-Christian” tradition, as certain important tenets of Christianity are actually derived from Plato. For example, he suggested that a trinity of forces shapes the cosmos and he struggled with the idea of a Being, purely incorporeal, executing a perfect model of the universe and molding with his hand what was but a rude chaos of random forces.
As an explanation, or at least a theory, Plato considered the divine nature of the universe under three modifications. There was indeed a first cause, the Reason or Logos, the soul of the universe, along with three subdivisions.
Readers may recall the beginning of St. John’s Gospel, “In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God.” where ‘word’ is an imperfect and narrow translation of the Greek ‘logos.’ For one of the meanings of ‘logos’ is indeed ‘word’, but not with sense that we usually attribute to it. A better translation could possibly be, “In the beginning was the Reason of the Universe.”
Plato conceived of 3 original principles, incorporated in the Logos, different, but linked to each other by a mysterious generation.
The important point is that the mystical and mysterious concept of the Trinity is the Christian rendering of Plato’s idea. The Trinity may still remain mysterious, but at least the mind can understand a Father, a Son, and a Holy Spirit, better than Plato’s more symbolic rendering.
Back to the main subject. During the early XXth century three events, distinct but important affected the wave-of-time begun with Napoleon.
One was the establishment of the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) in 1913 – at first in America but now practically extended and enforced worldwide.
In fairness to its founders and all subsequent members, it should really have been called the ‘Jewish Anti Defamation League.’ Though by astutely avoiding the qualifying adjective, ‘ADL’ suggests impartiality, thus evading suspicion among the majority of the gentiles, who rarely or superficially follow the details of political events and institutions.
The actual purpose of the now ubiquitous and wealthy ADL was and is to aggressively prevent any criticism of Zionism and Israel, by crushing the critics, destroying their career, often depriving them of a livelihood and even removing them from the Congress or the Senate.
Observers may have noticed that when the Prime Minister of Israel addresses a US joint session of Senate and Congress, he routinely receives a record number of standing ovations. And, after an ovation, no one wants to be the first to sit down – presumably but also probably – for fear of being suspected of weaker Pro-Zionist sentiments.
Readers familiar with the Communist world will easily detect the stunning similarities between the new-speak of Communist Eastern Europe and ADL’s new-speak and thought-crime – in America but also in Europe and the English-speaking world at large.
As an example, in December 2018, the owner of a pleasant yet unostentatious house in the Italian provincial city of Aosta, installed a metal gate at the end of his driveway. The gate carried a decorative wrought-iron winged eagle, reminiscent of a National Socialist emblem, though without a swastika or other disturbing symbols.
But it was enough for a rabbi in Turin, 100 km away (and presumably a member of a local ADL chapter), to have a judge issue a search warrant and dispatch the Italian police to execute it against the shocked, bewildered and disbelieving house-dweller.
The police carried a thorough search of the premises, removed his computer, various personal effects and books from his library. In the end all the ‘incriminating’ evidence they found – besides the eagle on the gate – consisted of some books about the history of WW2.
Curiously, the event leading to the founding of the ADL had nothing to do with defamation and all to do with the sexual assault and murder of Mary Phagan, a 13-year old girl in Atlanta, Georgia. Mary worked for the National Pencil Company, and in May 1913 went to her place of work to collect her $1.20 earnings from the company superintendent Leo Frank. She was never seen again. Her body was later found in the basement of the company, mutilated, bruised and with her undergarments torn off. She had been strangled and Frank was the most likely suspect.
At the trial, Frank pleaded innocent and declared himself a victim of hate. But after a thorough investigation, Frank was found guilty. That is when Adolf Kraus, president of the Jewish-American order of B’nai B’rith founded the Anti-Defamation League of B’nai B’rith. Its charter reads:
“The immediate object of the league is to stop, by appeals to reason and conscience and, if necessary, by appeals to law, the defamation of the Jewish people. Its ultimate purpose is to secure justice and fair treatment to all citizens alike and to put an end forever to unjust and unfair discrimination and ridicule of any sect or body of citizens.”
Sometime later the outgoing governor of Georgia commuted the sentence from death by hanging to life imprisonment. But the leaders of the town were enraged by what they rated a corruption of justice. They dragged Frank from the courthouse and hanged him.
Ever since, Leo Frank is viewed by the ADL as a kind of patron saint; a man whose death serves as a reminder of the depths of depravity to which men can sink when in the grip of xenophobic hatred.
Today, as universally acknowledged, the ADL is the lay arm of the Zionist inquisition and a patently obvious instrument for censorship and the abolition of free speech.
The second momentous event I referred to was the publishing of the so-called Scofield Reference Bible. Which is a Bible annotated by Cyrus Scofield, a man of questionable background though an able manipulator of souls and money.
Scofield and his Bible are responsible for the birth and expansion of Christian Zionism. If there was ever a contradiction in terms, Christian Zionism is one. It created a class of unpaid and obedient political eunuchs at the service of the Zionist state.
Specific and central to Christian Zionist belief is Skofield’s comment on Genesis 12:3 (the words in Italics are the comment). ‘I will bless them that bless thee.’ In fulfillment closely related to the next clause, ‘And curse him that curseth thee.’ Wonderfully fulfilled in the history of the dispersion. It has invariably fared ill with the people who have persecuted the Jew—well with those who have protected him. The future will still more remarkably prove this principle.”
Though a struggling born-again preacher, Scofield became a member of the exclusive New York ‘s Lotus Club, where he was befriended by the Wall Street lawyer Samuel Untermeyer. Untermeyer was instrumental in having Scofield’s annotated bible published.
In Scofield’s biography, written by Joseph Canfield, we read that Scofield’s theology was “most helpful in getting Fundamentalist Christians to back the international interest in one of Untermeyer’s projects—the Zionist Movement.”
Israel holds the Christian Zionists in utter contempt. The Talmud considers Christ a heretic boiling in excrement for eternity, and his mother a whore. Jehovah allows goys to exist so as to be like donkeys in the service of the chosen people.
But according to Fundamentalist preaching, at some unspecified time in the future, there will be what they call a ‘rapture,’ during which the Messiah will return to earth and all Jews will convert to Christianity.
If Fundamentalism were played on a stage it would be condemned as improbable fiction. Even Greek-Roman paganism contains more truth than Fundamentalism and its absurd ‘dispensations,’ as they define their ranting.
For the extravagance of the Grecian mythology proclaimed clearly that the inquirer, instead of being scandalized or satisfied with the literal sense, should diligently explore the occult wisdom, which had been disguised, by the prudence of antiquity, under the mask of myth and the display of follies practiced by the quizzical dynasty of the Olympian Gods.
The Fundamentalists are a large congregation. Israel supplies their leaders with money, endowments and private planes, while feeding and securing their lavish lifestyle.
The third event, whose momentousness and importance is gradually being recognized, was Richard Coudenhove-Kalergi’s launching of the plan for the creation of the European Union, with extraordinary, new and revolutionary characteristics.
He was the son of the Austrian Ambassador to Japan, Heinrich Coudenhove-Kalergi, who was also a great friend of Theodore Herzl, the founder of modern Zionism.
In the 1920s Heinrich’s son, Richard Kalergi, published a few books, the most important of which is “Praktischer Idealismus,” never, as far as I know, printed in English. The book is important because what Kalergi prophesied, promoted and predicted about the fate of Europe is occurring under our own eyes.
Kalergi envisioned a unified Europe, invaded by Africans, who would miscegenate with Europeans, creating a new negroid population, similar in appearance to the characters depicted on the inside walls of Egyptians pyramids and tombs. Ruling over them would be a class of “the best of the Jews” some of whom would intermarry with the best of the European nobility.
In his autobiography Kalergi states that when his book was printed, it came to the attention of the Jewish banker Schiff, who along with the American Jewish banker Warburg generously financed him to carry out his plan. From then on Kalergi would undertake a massive lobbying operation, which – temporarily halted during WW2 – was restarted immediately afterwards.
An Italian history professor, Matteo Simonetti, has published a very interesting book, titled “Kalergi, La Prossima Scomparsa Degli Europei” (Kalergi, The Forthcoming Disappearance of the Europeans) – available at Amazon. In his book, Prof. Simonetti included the most critical pages of Praktischer Idealismus translated from the German. What transpires is even worse than the disappearance of the Europeans.
I quote directly from the translation. At pages 21-22-23 of Praktischer Idealismus we find that “the future race, negroid-caucasian will be composed by people without character, without scruples, weak in their will, without respect (for one another) and untrustworthy. The new race will replace the multiplicity of people with a multiplicity of individuals.”
As for the ruling Jews, Kalergi describes them as “close in blood”, whose “strength of character and sharpness of spirit” predestines them to become “the race of (the new) Europe’s spiritual leaders,“ the “carriers of the nobility of spirit,”…. endowed of superior intelligence, a race of lords (Herrenrasse)… the chosen people (pages 28, 33, 49-51 in the original German book).
But it gets worse. The only free marital union will apply to “the most noble of men and women.” Inferior men and women will mate with their societal equivalent. The “erotic style” of the lower classes will be casual mating. Only the upper classes will enjoy the free formation of families.
The new cultivated nobility of the future will emerge from the divine laws of erotic eugenics. “It is here, in social eugenism, where the new nobility will achieve its historical mission of excellence” (pages 55-57).
The new miscegenated race of the lower classes will live in “factory-cities,” where the factory will be the new “cathedral of work”, the center and object of devotion of the new race of miscegenated goys (page 110).
As for the elimination of genders, Kalergi hints at the formation of a Brave-New-World society. “Today men of both sexes (sic) command political and economic power. The emancipation of woman is but the triumph of the feminine man over the real feminine woman. With the emancipation, the feminine sex is mobilized for a technical war and regimented into the army of labor.” (page 119)
As for democracy, Kalergi says it is an instrument to be discarded, as soon as the new Jewish nobility will be established and in charge. (page 36).
In summary, there we have it – the predicted apocalyptic end of the tsunami – helped and driven by the ADL (at work to criminalize free speech), the fundamentalists (a docile army of spiritual eunuchs in the service of Israel), and the Kalergi Plan (a Europe of Negroids ruled over by Jews).
As universally acknowledged, Jewish elites and politicians are at the forefront of the push for illegal immigration and the abolition of borders, worldwide.
And the Left, deprived of its reference class, the proletariat, has made of the migrants a sort of fig leaf to prove that they still side with the weak. Indeed, migrants are the new proletariat, because their identity (or consciousness thereof) is not here, but elsewhere. But the original inhabitants of the poorer districts of Europe and elsewhere have the right not to be uprooted from their customs by a culturally heterogeneous immigration. The migrants do not reside in London’s Chelsea, New York’s Upper East Side or the posh districts of other cities. Nor they steal the jobs of bank managers and corporate directors.
The chosen elites have decided that people are ugly, dirty, bad and xenophobic because they do not want to accept migrants by the millions. But it is the people who bear the weight of immigration and the loss of manual work.
During the latter years of neo-liberalism and turbo-capitalism, the cultural devaluation of labor has been possible thanks to the reserve army made up of migrants. It is logical that the chosen elites favor immigration. It frees them from relocating in the cesspits of despair, by bringing cesspits and despair to the ugly and xenophobic locals, along with the prospect of a Kalergi-type future.
We cannot know precisely how far the wave-of-time, traced back to Napoleon, has travelled towards its end. For the laws of probability, true in general, fail in the details. But given the essentially unchallenged progress of the wave, I doubt whether the collective consciousness of the European peoples will wake up and prompt them to react effectively in self-defense.
Until historically recently, the Catholic Church provided protection. It preached and prohibited violence against the chosen people, but expected them not to corrupt the culture of the host nation. And she gave them the option of conversion. By converting to Christianity, all true or pretended forms of discrimination would be instantly removed.
But the Catholic Church has lost power and unity. In recent Catholic pronouncements, it is even stated that Jews no longer need to convert to be “saved.” And in current religious ceremonies the brethren are invited to “pray for our elder brothers in the Abrahamic religion.”
Therefore, given that time comes stealing by night and day, I must reluctantly observe that the very shortness of time and the failure of hope will tinge with a deeper shade of brown the evening of our current historical times, and the last act of the play performed on the current historical stage.
The Waves of Time
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bthenoise · 6 years
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Underoath Is Going On Tour With Breaking Benjamin, Skillet, Asking Alexandria and More
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With just a few tour dates remaining on their headlining Erase Me Tour, Underoath has just announced a handful of tour dates for 2019 with Breaking Benjamin, Skillet and more. 
“We’ll try anything once, it’s the Underoath way!” says the band about their upcoming 13-date tour. “Going to go rip some faces this spring in places we’ve never been with Breaking Benjamin, Skillet, Asking Alexandria, Fight the Fury and Diamante.”
To check out tour dates and locations as well as exact support acts for each show, be sure to look below. For tickets, head here.    
With Breaking Benjamin, Skillet and Fight The Fury:
03/15 Saginaw, MI – Dow Event Center 03/18 Evansville, IN – Ford Center 03/20 Moline, IL – TaxSlayer Center 03/21 Milwaukee, WI – Eagles Ballroom 03/23 La Crosse, WI – La Crosse Center Arena 03/25 Madison, WI – The Sylvee 03/27 Sioux City, IA – Tyson Events Center 03/29 Mankato, MN – Verizon Center 03/31 Bismarck, ND – Bismarck Event Center 04/02 Rapid City, SD – Barnett Arena
With Breaking Benjamin and Diamante:
04/05 Broomfield, CO – 1STBANK Center
With Breaking Benjamin, Asking Alexandria & Diamante:
04/07 Casper, WY – Casper Events Center 04/08 Billings, MT – Rimrock Auto Arena
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