Coke's "America The Beautiful" Commercial
No one is singing this beautiful, uniquely and distinctly american song in other languages. Heck, I'm not sure children even learn it in school anymore.
Coke is an american company who no longer supports the United States, and this is just one more example.
They are agenda driven with crony capitalist arrangements that are anything but american in spirit.
1. that polar bear nonsense and global warming
2. openly supporting Obama
3. During WWII the US paid to build Coke plants all over Europe. Pepsi wasn't given sugar rations during that period-so they had to use molasses. (Pepsi isn't pure-under Nixon got some special deal we paid for to go into China).
Slick and pretty, but no one is singing America the Beautiful in other languages.
Coke is an american company who no longer supports the United States, and this is just one more example.
They are agenda driven with crony capitalist arrangements that are anything but american in spirit.
1. that polar bear nonsense and global warming
2. openly supporting Obama
3. During WWII the US paid to build Coke plants all over Europe. Pepsi wasn't given sugar rations during that period-so they had to use molasses. (Pepsi isn't pure-under Nixon got some special deal we paid for to go into China).
Slick and pretty, but no one is singing America the Beautiful in other languages.
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Nixon was trying to broker a way out of a war we were way too deep into, and in return for China's help, they got Pepsi (and Mao got his Salem CIgarettes). Part of the reason I was a Coke drinker... and (I'm sure) never liked menthols. ;-)
I'm not big on national anthems.we went a long time without needing one.
You know how I loathe Holmes. He probably added the 3rd verse, the bit about traitors.
y'know what? I started my analysis, got about halfway through the song, then came to the realization that I don't give a shit.
Like it. Blind yourself to the collectivist sentiments that dominate it, and the way it confuses the continent with the nation; it sounds pretty (to you) so, wallow in it.
I got more important concerns.
You really want me to dissect the thing here?
Cause if I do, I'll compare it stanza by stanza to the Star Spangled Banner.
Maybe some of you have forgotten that the left has been trying to replace the Star Spangled Banner with this for decades. I haven't.
so picture "continent" and "nation" in italics
"A thoroughfare
for freedom beat "
Go read the poem which, incidentally Bates submitted for publishing in a special July 4 The Congregationalist.
"Thine alabaster cities gleam
undimmed by human tears..."
Sit down son
Hey, can anyone find me the lyrics to the song in C++? That's the language I want to sing it in...
So were the waves of amber grain, and them big ole mountains, and of course there was no sky here til we had a Constitution.
It's a tribute to the CONTINENT, not to the NATION.
After hearing both, I preferred the Japanese version; the English just didn't sound quite right...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xlwSPMwAq...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oPW7BEagn...
Kinda like singing that song in a multitude of tongues.
"They builded a tower to shiver the sky and wrench the stars apart,
Till the Devil grunted behind the bricks: "It's striking, but is it Art?"
The stone was dropped at the quarry-side and the idle derrick swung,
While each man talked of the aims of Art, and each in an alien tongue."
- Kipling 'Conundrum of the Workshops'
http://www.poetryloverspage.com/poets/ki...
To be consistent with that commercial, and Rand's teachings...
Rand said that the smallest minority is the individual; so the ultimate diversity is individuality.
so everyone in that commercial should have sung the tune in his/her own, unique to him/her language.
Oh, wait, that would have resulted in a babble nobody could understand. There would be no communication. So maybe if they all sang it in English... oh, wait, that wouldn't have encouraged diversity...
(there's a reason I used the word 'babble' above)
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