Democracy Now!
May 24, 2011 Continue reading
Bob Dylan
Huffington’s Plunder by Chris Hedges
by Chris Hedges
Featured Writer
Dandelion Salad
Truthdig
February 21, 2011 Continue reading
Bob Dylan’s Concert Last Night. OMG! By Timothy V. Gatto
By Timothy V. Gatto
Featured Writer
Dandelion Salad
liberalpro.blogspot.com
Oct. 19, 2010
Last night Iattended the Bob Dylan Concert at Clemson University is South Carolina. If you were to look at the reviews of his concerts at the various ticket outlets, you may have noticed that the reviews weren’t exactly “stunning”, and if by going with these reviews you decided that maybe it wasn’t worth the price of admission, well, I feel sorry for you. I have only this to say about the concert: OMG!
Bob Dylan Arrested for Walking
James Joyner
http://www.outsidethebeltway.com
Sunday, August 16, 2009
Bob Dylan was on the pavement, thinking about the government. And they arrested him.
[…]
Alex Knapp is less than pleased:
That’s just utterly disgusting to me. A 68 year old man out for a walk shouldn’t have to offer his ID to the police. Was he committing a crime? No. Was he suspected of committing a crime? No. Were there any indications that a crime was going to be committed? No. He was just “suspiciously” enjoying public rights-of-way.
[…]
see
Uighur Protest In Guantánamo: Photos by Andy Worthington + Bob Dylan: Subterranean Homesick Blues
Uighur Protest In Guantánamo: Photos by Andy Worthington + Bob Dylan: Subterranean Homesick Blues
by Andy Worthington
Featured Writer
Dandelion Salad
www.andyworthington.co.uk
6 June 2009
On Monday, just hours after the first war crimes hearing for four months was convened at Guantánamo, and just hours before the Pentagon announced that a sixth prisoner had died, apparently by committing suicide, the small group of reporters — “less than a dozen,” according to Michelle Shephard of the Toronto Star — who had made the trip to watch a military judge commend the Canadian prisoner Omar Khadr for being “well-spoken” and “professional,” while criticizing his lawyers for their infighting, witnessed what Shephard called “a rare unscripted moment on the base,” when two prisoners staged “an impromptu protest.”