By Greg Gutfeld on 10.3.07 @ 12:06AM
"Never Mind the Bollocks, Here's the Sex Pistols" makes a perfect gift for your teenage nephew, if only as a patriotic gesture.
This article appears in the new October 2007 issue of
The American Spectator. To subscribe to our monthly print
edition, click here.
IT'S A REALLY SAD THING when a 14-year-old boy is a head taller
than you, but for me, it's not just sad, it's a reality. My nephew
Garrett, whom I haven't seen in six months, has experienced a
growth spurt that has relegated me to a pudgy Smurf in his
presence. He also has a girlfriend, and listens to "emo." I can
deal with the former, but not the latter. If you're not familiar
with "emo," and as a reader of this magazine, I would be worried if
you were, it's short for "emotional," which really means "crybaby,
self-involved tripe." Nearly all modern pop music lately is awash
in whiny boredom derived from idle luxury. What happens when your
parents get you everything you want? You hate them and get your
nipples pierced.
It's for that reason that when Garrett's birthday approached, I
purchased "Never Mind the Bollocks, Here's the Sex Pistols" as his
gift. I don't think he wanted it, but I don't care. When I got the
Sex Pistols' debut album nearly 30 years ago, I was only 15 or so,
and the LP scared the hell out of me. Johnny Rotten, the lead
singer, seemed a street urchin shot straight out of hell's inner
circle, and the enormously untalented Sid Vicious appeared nothing
more than walking sewage. But that amazing rock record, in a matter
of months, changed the way I looked at the world, the notion of
"phoniness" or more importantly hippies -- the phoniest people on
earth.
I am now walking with my wife Elena along the Santa Cruz
boardwalk in California, and it's a beautiful day. The shore's
amusement park is jammed with happy families, busloads of
rambunctious teens, and -- with an exception of me -- no drunks.
We've decided to walk toward the pier, lined with restaurants and
gift shops, so we head to the street. When we come to a bar on the
corner, we notice there aren't as many families as there were only
a few blocks earlier. And here's why: We are suddenly hit with a
stench so powerful, we start gagging and covering our mouths. It's
as if a cesspool broke wind.
And now I see the culprits -- a group of hippies -- filthy and
wasted dancing to a portable radio. Some of them are pouncing on
tourists for change, while others simply slump on picnic benches,
glaring. Some of the hippies now look a little like punks -- lots
of piercings, tattoos, and shaved heads -- but in my book they are
not punks, they're still scummy hippies. They advocate peace and
love, but these greedy liars just want your money for drugs and,
sadly, never antiperspirant. And they'll rip you off if possible...
something that makes them the most dishonest group of people alive.
At least suicide bombers are truthful about their intentions.
Hippie culture was always the most evil and false kind of lifestyle
-- laziness, selfishness, and emotional violence wrapped up in "why
can't we get along" claptrap. Hippies loved fascists, and would
kill you if possible -- Charles Manson proved it.
Johnny Rotten understood. It's why the Sex Pistols mattered, and
why every song he wrote contained what he calls "value." I am back
in New York, and he's now sitting next to me at a bar, and we're
getting drunk with his buddy Rambo, my wife, and a few of my
co-workers. I had Johnny on my show, Red Eye, and he may
be a far cry from the wild-eyed dervish from the '70s -- the
frontman of the only band (outside maybe the Ramones) to
single-handedly make socialist intelligentsia appear irrelevant and
intolerant -- but he can still intimidate the hell out of you. When
he smiles, his mouth reveals a huge gap. "I spend twenty grand on
these teeth -- and the sad truth is I lost this one on a cherry
pit!"
Johnny and his good friend Rambo are obsessed with American
history, primarily the Civil War and black Confederates. Rambo
lectures me that the war wasn't about slavery, but sovereignty, and
that the South treated blacks far better than the North ever could.
I tried to follow, but I was on my sixth double vodka.
Johnny Rotten might be the most honest person in music --
unafraid of saying things that send the left into epileptic
seizures. Don't get him started on Nelson Mandela, in Rotten's mind
a terrorizing thug romanticized by the ignorant left and glamorized
by a stint in jail. He said as much on a British talk show, and it
got him banned for years, he tells me. To him, Mandela is only
equaled in idiocy by Bono, who Rotten believes has done nothing to
help the poor in Africa -- those starving millions he keeps
soliciting money for. "All I ask is, where is the money! It's a
bloody simple question! Bono has done no good."
ROTTEN HATES EVERYTHING intellectually lazy, from the fat and
stupid editors at Rolling Stone to the Hollywood liberals
he encounters everyday back in his Venice Beach community. "You
wouldn't believe the idiocy," he tells me on his umpteenth beer or
vodka drink. "Imagine me at a parent/teacher conference trying to
explain to them how to speak proper bloody English!"
How can I not admire a man who believes Americans are the most
honest people in the world, and America is the greatest place to
live (I am almost positive he said that, but I was drunk). He's
lived here now for 30 years, and has no intention of leaving. Truly
a Yank -- he prefers Steve Miller over Sting.
And he also believes, like me, that the real cause of terror is
not religion, but lack of fun. These nutty extremists just need a
more active social life. He wanted the Sex Pistols to play in Iraq,
not just to troops, but to the people of Iraq. "I don't care if
they hate us, but we have to do it. But no one would sponsor us.
Not even Rolling Stone." Rotten may be the only rock
legend who understands the threat of Islamofascism and is willing
to go there and face it, without security and not behind a barbed
wire fence. You don't hear Neil Young or Bruce Springsteen
volunteering to do the same. And you never hear your basic
sensitive and outspoken Hollywood celebrity -- the ones mouthing
off about Bush and right-wing religious nuts -- speaking out
against the way gays and women are treated in Islamic countries.
Because they're cowards. Rotten isn't. He wants to change the
world, despite having done a lot of that already.
I am probably nuts -- but I always sort of thought that the punk
movement made Ronald Reagan more than a bit possible. The punks may
have been rude and snotty, but they were just so much more real --
so much less delusional and besotted -- than the hippies were. It's
no secret that the punks happened because the hippies failed. By
killing the silly, bucolic, utopian hippy ethic, the punks allowed
for a sober reassessment of all that '60s crap. And the result was
a restoration of America's faith in itself, a new embrace of
genuine reality and not some Shangri-la over the horizon somewhere.
Like the Ramones and the Sex Pistols, conservatism was realist,
urban, and tough. And that got us Reagan, and ended the Soviet
Union.
I wouldn't be surprised if deep down, some of those musicians
were (or are) conservatives (even if they don't realize or admit
it). Because they had no illusions. If you were to take, say, Jeane
Kirkpatrick, circa 1982, and sit her down with Johnny Rotten -- I'm
pretty sure they would agree on more than they disagree on. You
certainly could not say that about Kirkpatrick and Simon &
Garfunkel or Joan Baez or any of the rest of that unwashed crowd of
dippy boneheads.
In that sense, Johnny Rotten -- the thinking Sex Pistol, as
opposed to the nihilistic Sid Vicious -- is really nothing more
than a louder and more musically talented Reagan. With one less
tooth.
Greg Gutfeld, former editor of Maxim
(UK), Men's Health, and Stuff, is host
of Red Eye on Fox News. This article appears in the
October 2007 issue of The American Spectator. To subscribe
to the monthly print edition, click here.
topics:
Religion, Islam, Hollywood, Iraq, Iran, Africa, Fascism, Conservatism