Thursday, July 31, 2014

Railroad Music is... the thread in the quilt that is Americana!



Railroad Music is... the thread in the quilt that is Americana!

Buy Something.... ??? CD BABY Link is Here... Or check it out below!





I Offer my music up..in the old folk music fashion! Free.. but I ask that you purchase a download or two please... I offer my music to folks to use for projects and fundraisers.. tell folks about me and let's keep folk music what folk is meant to be.. for the people.. send me an email below...

Get in touch with me here... 


John Paul Wright
Louisville, KY
502-553-0495
USA


Sunday, July 27, 2014

Fellow Workers dot dot dot.


I dedicate this rant to Harold Maier ! MY Shams.. wink wink... not to suggest that i be Rumi.. or some shit like that! 




Fellow Workers:



I have been reading the responses of hundreds of railroaders over the last several days. I love railroaders, yet they know not what they do or why but... The jury is out, NO!!!! but.. the union will sell this agreement and it will most likely pass. The railroad will get it's way. Why.. historically they always have.. we have a serious lack of Union leadership on the railroad. They tell us that THEY don't support this agreement, but from their glass houses they make these statements! Which side do we throw the rocks? Which side are we on? DEBS WAS WRIGHT! he he lol, ROLFL shhhh thats CODE. Let the News Speak! ME die... MEdia! RA! RA! RA! 

The "union" leaders are the ones making the agreements!
They make them while drinking victory coffee and smoking victory cigarettes. Dictating them from a corporate telescreen.. called Labor Relations. The corporate Newspeak for.. Big Brother. AKA CEO... LOVE BIG BROTHER! NLRB NMB...

The workers of the world have two sets of chains shackled to their feet and these shackles are wrapped around their minds! HIS Story Repeats IT's SELF. The Long Memory is endless.. and Revolutionary. Our HISTORY is endless. To er is Human! Tell the Workers the truth.. The Babylon system is the vampire! IWW or WWIII? militarily.... 



To maximize profits; to.. SUCK it out -- to the shareholders: you must eliminate Human factor (errors) .. Behaviors, thoughts and feeling. Breed a culture of fear based anti human agenda derived from the mathematical elimination of truth . Decisions made by machines... This is Madness! That commands your SOUL... Automatic, Push button... Remote Control Operations.... Sick Sigma.. A cult.. OR WELL.. lets call it CORSOC! 

For years Labor has used their brand to become the megaphone for the Democrats, the UAW used to sit down, now they stand up and campaign not for themselves, but for a political party that uses them. The auto industry is saved! While the workers take it on the chin, in the gut and in the pocket book. I will admit that i was tricked by the Democrats.. but never again will i vote for the lessor of two evils again. well... there is an alternative.. a social one. 

CAPITAL VS. LABOR 


The McCarthy era and the rise of Business unions? Compassionate Capitalists, Warren Buffet, and the Bill and Malinda Gates foundation? The rise of corporate education, The fight for the soul of Public education? CORE? The Democrats for Education reform? PEOPLE.. wake up! The war economy, terrorism and HOMEland security?

BIlly Sunday and the continuation of a religious right that drinks the kool aid of a media frenzied Libertarian branded Tea party? Prohibition and Jim Crow anti Democratic Capitalism? WTF really? Privatization is THEFT draped in an American flag that is dripping with blood.. from decades of insane foreign policy decisions made by ex- CEO's? 

Then the children came.. Without their parents and they were hungry.. and we say....send em back! To the cotton fields, to pick coffee and bananas because they ain't got that do re me! BOYS! 

It is the dust bowl all over again.. A dust that covers the eyes and clogs the ears of a people who have become the arm chair quarter backs of their own demise, A monstrous black cloud of pesticidal apathy has spread across our once pastures of plenty. The pastures that are now owned and operated by Monsanto and ADM. They have stolen our food and poisoned our water. Vaccinated us and corralling us in their bills.. and behind their Gates... in a zone of Freedom speech... shhh... 

(It is, what is) and we could rise up against it. yet is not? or is it this question? Have we as a people become so blind not to realize that every day is judgment day? An Examination day!! RA! RA! RA! One Thousand nine hundred and Eight Four more words could come but I think i better get to the POINT! ... Period. ect.ect ... 

This is not a conspiracy theory.. it's called Capitalism. Biblical in proportion. JESUS! GREED.. Violence.. Murder.. Death.. call it what you will... at least tell the truth... 

I am faithful that King was having a vision! We will make it to the promise land.. One day.. We shall overcome.. Someday. I hope.... 

Yours for the ONE big UNION!

FW JP

CC. Jesus, Eugene Victor Debs, The Last Poets, Utah Phillips,Upton Sinclair, Sun RA, George Orwell, and Karen Lewis  

Sunday, July 13, 2014

A letter to a friend in the struggle



I posted Singing to the Choir on the new Rebuild the IBT page and they loved it.. I just wish my union Brothers and Sisters… Especially in the IWW would support my music.. I have given away way more CD’s than I have sold… It really chaps my ass when Tom Morello plays at the Teamster convention and then the Port protests.. I,  a Working Teamster.. never invited.. Not once have any of my Teamsters.. Even at TDU,
 asked me to play anything.. I feel weird complaining about this, but union folks are gonna have to figure it out that they have to support their artists and musicians.. now.. you can’t wait until their dead.. Bring us the flowers now.. We need Bread and Roses too..

I have been waiting for one of our Fellow Workers to figure it out that they have a Fellow Worker who needs some support.. sort of how like Ani Difranco fell in love with Utah Phillips and did recordings with him.. The Folk music business gets on my nerves.. I will have to pay more dues I guess… Like Phillips I just want to make a living not a killing… I guess that is why I am still a working Teamster… HA! But my Railroad work is killing me.. I just want to sing… bring people together with their natural voice.. Music.. Much more powerful than Twitter or Facebook.. people coming together.. I have an Exit strategy from the Railroad.. 

But.. It’s a scary jump from a moving train…

But. Seriously.. I think that is why the Occupy Movement was not very successful.. in some ways they were very successful but,  they did not create a lasting Long Memory though Music, Art maybe, a bit.. but.. Leaderless movements… not sure how much those are going to work.. I really don’t think I’m going to remember Guy Fawkes.

I do Remember or at least have learned much from Eugene Debs,Joe Hill, Paul Robeson, A Phillip Randolph.. Malcom X… The Last Poets.. Jimmie Hendrix.. The Grateful Dead.. Mother Jones… the Occupy Movement made who for us to remember?? .. We are the 99 percent? Twinkle Twinkle.. Mic Check?

I think Two Turn tables and a microphone and The roof, the Roof the Roof is on fire! Were much more long living slogans. An Injury to one is an Injury to all !! or We are the 99 percent?? HA.. I'll take our slogan an Injury.. It's time tested!! 


I guess they might have made Tom Morello.. But Sony made him.. Wink Wink…. I do Appreciate his work.. but.. If he is gonna wear that IWW hat.. I hope he will someday be there for the IWW like the other 99 percent are… HA! Maybe he is.. Maybe He and other high profile IWW members have broke out the bread.. I don’t know.. so being critical is not what I wish to be.. but there is something I have learned in 13 years of railroading.. a Squeaky wheel gets the grease!

This is a weird place to be.. I want to write an Article for the Industrial Worker about supporting our Musicians and Artist.. without making it sound like an advertisement for my music.. but we say buy union and look for the Bug.. I don’t want to bug anyone.. but shouting from the roof top? Getting up on a soapbox.. maybe… Maybe I just wrote the article.. to a friend.. a friend in the struggle... 

 Utah Phillips made a decision.. at a crossroads.. once. Johnny Cash wanted to record some of his songs and he told him no. Bruce was standing at the crossroads. I am not suggesting that Cash was the devil, but Bruce could have made a bunch of money from this decision.. he chose to not let his music into the machine. He wished to stay true to his Credo.. Make a living not a Killing.. so…. I live by a credo that is a mix of two Credos by my two most favorite people.. Eugene V Debs and Paul Robeson.. 

I do this because it make me happy, Folk music belongs to the people, when I see people suffer, I myself suffer. We artists and musicians come from the people and our art is inspired by the people. We must serve the people. I have a heart for others and that is why I am in this work. So when I work to relive others human suffering or memorialize their struggle in song, I am working for myself. I do not consider that I have made any sacrifice whatsoever. No man does.. unless he violates his conscience.

All of what I wrote.. is why i gave that CD to you for free.. Freedom is my work and my gift to you!

 Yours for the One Big Union Grand…


FW JP


Friday, July 4, 2014

Railroad Music - Independence Day

The Launch of a new titled blog...

"Railroad Music is the thread in the quilt that is Americana.." 

Today is Examination Day... Today is Judgement Day! My music can be found here.. 


Becoming a Socialist - Eugene V. Debs 1902

New York Comrade, April, 1902— As I have some doubt about the readers of “The Comrade’ having any curiosity as to “how I became a Socialist’ it may be in order to say that the subject is the editor’s, not my own; and that what is here offered is at his bidding—my only concern being that he shall not have cause to wish that I had remained what I was instead of becoming a Socialist.

On the evening of Febrary 27, 1875, the local lodge of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen was organized at Terre Haute, Ind., by Joshua A. Leach, then grand master, and I was admitted as a charter member and at once chosen secretary. “Old Josh Leach,’ as he was affectionately called, a typical locomotive fireman of his day, was the founder of the brotherhood, and I was instantly attracted by his rugged honesty, simple manner and homely speech. How well I remember felling his large, rough hand on my shoulder, the kindly eye of an elder brother searching my own as he gently said, “My boy, you’re a little young, but I believe you’re in earnest and will make your mark in the brotherhood.’ Of course, I assured him that I would do my best. What he really thought at the time flattered my boyish vanity not a little when I heard of it. He was attending a meeting at St. Louis some months later, and in the course of his remarks said: “I put a tow-headed boy in the brotherhood at Terre Haute not long ago, and some day he will be at the head of it.’
Twenty-seven years, to a day, have played their pranks with “Old Josh’ and the rest of us. When last we met, not long ago, and I pressed his good, right hand, I observed that he was crowned with the front that never melts; and as I think of him now:

“Remembrance wakes, with all her busy train,
Swells at my breast and turns the past to pain.’


My first step was thus taken in organized labor and a new influence fired my ambition and changed the whole current of my career. I was filled with enthusiasm and my blood fairly leaped in my veins. Day and night I worked for the brotherhood. To see its watchfires glow and observe the increase of its sturdy members were the sunshine and shower of my life. To attend the “meeting’ was my supreme joy, and for ten years I was not once absent when the faithful assembled.
At the convention held in Buffalo in 1878 I was chosen associate editor of the magazine, and in 1880 I became grand secretary and treasurer. With all the fire of youth I entered upon the crusade which seemed to fairly glitter with possibilities. For eighteen hours at a stretch I was glued to my desk reeling off the answers to my many correspondents. Day and night were one. Sleep was time wasted and often, when all oblivious of her presence in the still small hours my mother’s hand turned off the light, I went to bed under protest. Oh, what days! And what quenchless zeal and consuming vanity! All the firemen everywhere—and they were all the world—were straining:

“To catch the beat
On my tramping feet.’


My grip was always packed; and I was darting in all directions. To tramp thorugh a railroad yard in the rain, snow or sleet half the night, or till daybreak, to be ordered out of the roundhouse for being an “agitator,’ or put off a train, sometimes passenger, more often freight, while attempting to deadhead over the division, were all in the program, and served to whet the appetite to conquer. One night in midwinter at Elmira, N. Y., a conductor on the Erie kindly dropped me off in a snowbank, and as I clambered to the top I ran into the arms of a policeman, who heard my story and on the spot became my friend.

I rode on the engines over mountain and plain, slept in the cabooses and bunks, and was fed from their pails by the swarthy stokers who still nestle close to my heart, and will until it is cold and still.
Through all these years I was nourished at Fountain Proletaire. I drank deeply of its waters and every particle of my tissue became saturated with the spirit of the working class. I had fired an engine and been stung by the exposure and harship of the rail. I was with the boys in their weary watches, at the broken engine’s side and often helped to bear their bruised and bleeding bodies back to wife and child again. How could I but feel the burden of their wrongs? How the seed of agitation fail to take deep root in my heart?
And so I was spurred on in the work of organizing, not the fireman merely, but the brakemen, switchmen, telegraphers, shopmen, track-hands, all of them in fact, and as I had now become known as an organizer, the calls came from all sides and there are but few trades I have not helped to organize and less still in whose strikes I have not at some time had a hand.

In 1894 the American Railway Union was organized and a braver body of men never fought the battle of the working class.

Up to this time I had heard but little of Socialism, knew practically nothing about the movement, and what little I did know was not calculated to impress me in its favor. I was bent on thorough and complete organization of the railroad men and ultimately the whole working class, and all my time and energy were given to that end. My supreme conviction was that if they were only organized in every branch of the service and all acted together in concert they could redress their wrongs and regulate the conditions of their employment. The stockholders of the corporation acted as one, why not the men? It was such a plain proposition—simply to follow the example set before their eyes by their masters—surely they could not fail to see it, act as one, and solve the problem.

It is useless to say that I had yet to learn the workings of the capitalist system, the resources of its masters and the weakness of its slaves. Indeed, no shadow of a “system’ fell athwart my pathway; no thought of ending wage-misery marred my plans. I was too deeply absorbed in perfecting wage-servitude and making it a 
“thing of beauty and a joy forever.’

It all seems very strange to me now, taking a backward look, that my vision was so focalized on a single objective point that I utterly failed to see what now appears as clear as the noonday sun—so clear that I marvel that any workingman, however dull, uncomprehending, can resist it
.
But perhaps it was better so. I was to be baptized in Socialism in the roar of conflict and I thank the gods for reserving to this fitful occasion the fiat, “Let there be light!’—the light that streams in steady radiance upon the broadway to the Socialist republic.

The skirmish lines of the A. R. U. were well advanced. A series of small battles were fought and won without the loss of a man. A number of concessions were made by the corporations rather than risk an encounter. Then came the fight on the Great Northern, short sharp, and decisive. The victory was complete—the only railroad strike of magnitude ever won by an organization in America
.
Next followed the final shock—the Pullman strike—and the American Railway Union again won, clear and complete. The combined corporations were paralized and helpless. At this juncture there were delivered, from wholly unexpected quarters, a swift succession of blows that blinded me for an instant and then opened wide my eyes—and in the gleam of every bayonet and the flash of every rifle the class struggle was revealed. This was my first practical lesson in Socialism, though wholly unaware that it was called by that name.

An army of detectives, thugs and murderers were equipped with badge and beer and bludgeon and turned loos; old hulks of cars were fired; the alarm bells tolled; the people were terrified; the most startling rumors were set afloat; the press volleyed and thundered, and over all the wires sped the news that Chicago’s white throat was in the clutch of a red mod; injunctions flew thick and fast, arrests followed, and our office and headquarters, the heart of the strike, was sacked, torn out and nailed up by the “lawful’ authorities of the federal government; and when in company with my loyal comrades I found myself in Cook county jail at Chicago with the whole press screaming conspiracy, treason and murder, and by some fateful coincidence I was given the cell occupied just previous to his execution by the assassin of Mayor Carter Harrison, Sr., overlooking the spot, a few feet distant, where anarchists were hanged a few years before, I had another exceedingly practical and impressive lesson in Socialism.

Acting upon the advice of friends we sought to employ John Harlan, son of the Supreme Justice, to assist in our defense—a defense memorable to me chiefly because of the skill and fidelity of our lawyers, among whom were the brilliant Clarence Darrow and the venerable Judge Lyman Trubmull, author of the thirteenth amendment to the constitution, abolishing slavery in the United States.

Mr. Harlan wanted to think of the matter over night; and the next morning gravely informed ust hat he could not afford to be identified with the case, “for,’ said he, “you will be tried upon the same theory as were the anarchists, with probably the same result.’ That day, I remember, the jailer, by way of consolation, I suppose, showed us the blood-stained rope used at the last execution and explained in minutest detail, as he exhibited the gruesome relic, just how the monstrous crime of lawful murder is committed.
But the tempest gradually subsided and with it the bloodthirstiness of the press and “public sentiment.’ We were not sentenced to the gallows, nor ever to the penitentiary—though put on trial for conspiracy—for reasons that will make another story.

The Chicago jail sentences were followed by six months at Woodstock and it was here that Socialism gradually laid hold of me in its own irresistible fashion. Books and pamphlets and letters from socialists came by every mail and I began to read and think and dissect the anatomy of the system in which workingmen, however organized, could be shattered and battered and splintered at a single stroke. The writings of Bellamy and Blanchford early appealed to me. The “Cooperative Commonwealth’ of Gronlund also impressed me, but the writings of Kautsky were so clear and conclusive that I readily grasped, not merely his argument, but also caught the spirit of his socialist utterance—and I thank him and all who helped me out of darkness into light.

It was at this time, when the first glimmerings of Socialism were beginning to penetrate, that Victor L. Berger—and I have loved him ever since—came to Woodstock, as if a providential instrument, and delivered the first impassioned message of Socialism I had ever heard—the very first to set the “wires humming in my system.’ As a souvenir of that visit there is in my library a volume of “Capital,’ by Karl Marx, inscribed with the compliments of Victor L. Berger, which I cherish as a token of priceless value.
The American Railway Union was defeated but not conquered—overwhelmed but not destroyed. It lives and pulsates in the Socialist movement, and its defeat but blazed the way to economic freedom and hastened the dawn of human brotherhood.