I saw Gogol Bordello tear it up live on Friday at Lupo’s in Providence. Incredible show. Everything you’ve heard is true. Bawdy, sweaty, shirtless, unpredictable and engulfing. They played for a little over an hour, but when we called them out for an encore they played for another 30 minutes. Nobody had any energy left by the time it was over.
Equally impressive was the opening band, a group I hadn’t heard before–Flobots–who pwned the stage. The viola was haunting, the bass and drums were rock-solid, the lyricism was sharp and the band’s presence was a cross between The Roots, Rage Against The Machine and an Obama rally.
Flobots’ performance of Handlebars was intense and moving, and their cover of Happy Together was just plain fun. They carry a political message: organize, work for change, support peace, make the world a better place, vote Democrat. But they carry it without the heavy-handedness or patronizing tone so often heard in “political music”.
Messages of peace and renewal sell pretty well to the 18+ crowd in Providence. It doesn’t seem they sell as well to Russia right now.
This mess in South Ossetia was a long way coming, but somehow still surprised people. A friend pointed out to me that the US media would rather talk about terrorist fist jabs than cover international news, so most Americans probably didn’t realize there was a war brewing until there were massive casualties.
He also wondered, isn’t starting a war during the opening ceremony of the Olympics sort of a global party foul? Probably. But what’s a kegger without the guy who pees in the kitchen trash?
I’ve listened to a lot of hand-wringing on the radio about what America should have done differently to avoid this. In the end, our contribution to this conflict was one of mismanaged expectations. We’ve sent such a strong message of support to Georgia–if only because they are a fledgling democracy–that their President failed to understand the limits of our actual support.
Given the Kremlin’s rhetoric over the last several months, nobody should have expected Russia to respond with anything less than overwhelming force. We even gave them the precedent when we backed Kosovo’s independence.
In love with the notion of supporting global democracy, wherever it might be found, America’s leaders seem oblivious to the realities of Russian influence. For just a couple thousand Georgian troops in Iraq, Bush suggested NATO membership. Condoleeza Rice and Dick Cheney seem genuinely surprised that this should irk Moscow, even as they extend with their 1980s-style missile defense network.
Our leaders have needlessly provoked a resurgent adversary and misled a friendly nation into thinking the mere offer of NATO membership equated a defense pact.
Maybe in another world, where we do not need Russia’s cooperation–on oil, gas, Iran, North Korea, nuclear proliferation, global warming and human trafficking–we could insist on putting Western peacekeepers into the conflict zone. Even that is a gamble, because the possibility of a destabilizing escalation that pulls in the entire region (or continent) is a hard pill to swallow.
But it’s not going to happen, and–because our President has valued the politics of ideology over developing solid international policy–nothing America can do now will keep Russia from pushing this as far as the Kremlin sees fit.
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