Various - Who Is The Enemy? (An Anti War Protest) album flac
Performer: VariousTitle: Who Is The Enemy? (An Anti War Protest)
Style: Hardcore, Punk
Released: 1983
MP3 album: 1346 mb
FLAC album: 1819 mb
Rating: 4.1
Other formats: MP3 AA VOC MP2 AAC AC3 AHX
Genre: Rock
An anti-war movement (also antiwar) is a social movement, usually in opposition to a particular nation's decision to start or carry on an armed conflict, unconditional of a maybe-existing just cause. The term anti-war can also refer to pacifism, which is the opposition to all use of military force during conflicts, or to anti-war books, paintings, and other works of art. Many activists distinguish between anti-war movements and peace movements.
Some anti-war songs lament some aspects of war, while others satirize war. Most promote peace in some form, while others sing out against specific armed conflicts. Still others depict the physical and psychological destruction that warfare causes to soldiers, innocent civilians, and humanity as a whole. Many of these songs are considered protest songs, and some have been embraced by war-weary people, various peace movements, and peace activists.
The Vietnam War protests started on college campuses and became a massive antiwar movement that helped shape public opinion and government policy. That spring, a small protest movement developed, mainly among college students. Protests against the war continued at various locations around the country. On the evening of June 8, 1965, a crowd of 17,000 paid to attend an antiwar rally held at Madison Square Garden in New York City. Speakers included Senator Wayne Morse, a Democrat from Oregon who had become a sharp critic of the Johnson Administration.
The day anti-Vietnam War protesters tried to levitate the Pentagon. And by dawn the next day, nearly 700 had been arrested for various acts of civil disobedience, including trying to get inside the building. This is not an attempt to repeat what happened in 1967, said Terry Provance, a VPCC staffer who helped organize the weekend’s festivities. Though you never know, he joked. If somebody acts on their own, they act on their own. Military police face screaming anti-Vietnam War demonstrators at the Pentagon in Washington on Oct. 21, 1967.
In March 1966, 50,000 anti-war protesters took part in a rally in one of America’s most famous cities – New York. With a population that ran into millions, it could be argued that they represented a very small minority of the city. In 1967, 100,000 took part in a protest rally in Washington DC. In 1971, 300,000 took part in an anti-war demonstration in the same city. This particular protest involved many veterans from the war. When they publicly threw away their medals and medal ribbons, many in America were shocked that those who had worn the uniform of the US military had come to think that.
It’s an anti-war film and obviously, staunchly so. Eastwood’s genius is that he crafted a movie that achieves its anti-war message without becoming preachy or overbearing. Meeting between brothers. For me, it’s hard to imagine a film that opens with the death of a child, even one cast as an enemy combatant, as anything but anti-war. Fortunately, Eastwood talked to students at the Loyola Marymount University School of Film and Television.
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Anti-war demonstrators carry a coffin to protest against the continuing war in Vietnam. Pictured: An anti-war demonstrator at the University of California, Berkeley throws a tear gas canister at police. 36 of 40. The Pentagon Papers Leak.
Learn more about the rich history of protest music in American folk, with this list of essential protest songs. I've got the weakness woes, I can't touch my toes, I can hardly reach my knees, and when the enemy gets close to me I'll probably start to sneeze. Give Peace a Chance" - John Lennon. At the end of his week-long "bed-in" in 1969 with his new wife Yoko Ono, John Lennon had recording equipment brought into the hotel room. There, along with Timothy Leary, members of the Canadian Radha Krishna Temple, and a roomful of others, John recorded this song . This song takes the voice of a young soldier who is refusing to fight in any more wars, after having seen and participated in so many killings at war.
Anatomy Of Your Enemy. 10 easy steps to create an enemy and start a war: Listen closely because we will all see this weapon used in our lives It can be used on a society of the most ignorant to the most highly educated We need to see these tactics as a weapon against humanity and not as truth. Fourth step: Have the media broadcast only the ruling party's information This can be done through state run media Remember, in times of conflict all for-profit media repeats the ruling party's information, therefore all for-profit media is state-run.
Tracklist
| A1 | –Instigators | Who's The Enemy? |
| A2 | –Passion Killers | I Wont Fight Your Wars |
| A3 | –Wartoys | Ignorance |
| A4 | –Political Asylum | Winter Of Discontent |
| A5 | –Rodney Relax | This Enemy, This Threat |
| A6 | –Alternative | Another Subversive Peace Song |
| A7 | –Sanction | Plastic Bullets |
| A8 | –Edible | What Do You Say |
| A9 | –Anarka + Poppy* | If It Dies, We Die |
| B1 | –No Class | Ban The Bomb |
| B2 | –Andy T.* | Phallic Metallic |
| B3 | –Direct Action | Disarm Or Die |
| B4 | –Abuse | Our Song |
| B5 | –Direct Action | Who's War Not Ours |
| B6 | –The Committee | Edwailun Xmas |
| B7 | –Yr Anhrefn* | A Statement |
| B8 | –Dougie Mkl | Mutual Fear |
| B9 | –Reality Control | Tears Of Blood |









