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Music lost to history: Alice Cooper: Roses on White Lace
Alice Cooper is basically what Marilyn Manson has become. He sang about really taboo subjects at a time
when taboo actually was taboo. This particular tune is one that I began listening to after being dumped by the girl that I was supposed to marry
back in the early nineties. It is actually one of three songs that play back to back on most albums. Those three songs are, if memory serves,
"chop, chop, chop", "Gail" and "Roses on White Lace". I never really appreciated the other two quite as much as this one, but then I have
never hacked anyone to death, so check back later... This song stands alone as being pretty cool just because it states the anger that I was having at the time (back in the '90s). At the same time, it illustrates that Marilyn Manson is following the course of another very successful rocker. While Cooper's songs were not earth-shaking, they were provocative. That single fact is what has led to Manson's success. I have never heard or read Marilyn Manson say that Alice Cooper was an actual influence on his music, but here is an example of it from twenty years ago. Is It Porn? The last entry, Was.com was not porn. Now for a tough one. Breast.com. What do you think, is it porn? No, it is not porn.
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Being that it is the seventh of December, and me being American, I must mention that this is the anniversary of the attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941. This happened
well over thirty years before I was born, mind you, and I know of it only from the shows that I see on television, along with the history that I saw in text books.
The most famous quote of all being from F.D.R.(?) saying that "this will be a day that will live in infamy."
Much like any other historical event, I didn't really have any perspective on the Pearl Harbor attack. History just seems to be all in
black and white, and we don't think about it until it happens again. While the attacks on 9/11 were not the same type of attacks, that is the closest
thing that I have seen to relate to Pearl Harbor. For some reason, the attacks of 9/11 made the attack at Pearl Harbor seem more real to me.
I know that this is all pretty faulty logic. Japan did what they did as a nation declaring war on another nation. The 9/11 attacks were done
by a few random guys, from a small terrorist cell, and can not possibly be compared to an all out strategic war against my/our homeland. This is, of course, just me trying to find a frame
of reference, of course there are none.
Not to mention that I am going nowhere with that train of thought. I just wanted to mention the date, since I remembered long before I saw anything in the news. That is something
that did not happen prior to 9/11.
• Now on to trains of thought that actually lead somewhere (I hope).
When I say that we have a collection of cockatiels, that does not even start to scrape the surface of our cockatiel ownership
over the last few years... It started out rather innocolously, you see. My mother-in-law bought my wife a pair of cockatiels for christmas
a few years ago. They were brother and sister, and subsequently named 'Elvis' and 'Belle'. Unfortunately, Elvis died only a few months after we had
gotten him (I made him a little headstone when I buried him, perhaps I will take a picture of the headstone at a later date). Anyhow, that left the wife with one living bird. The wife was unhappy with just a single living
bird, so we had to get another bird. And, as luck would have it, we got one that was extremely fertile.
Over the next six months, the new male bird and the original bird, Belle, managed to pump out an amazing number of offspring. That number is exactly 12 (I just fact-checked that with the wife).
While our birds may not be the most tame, I bet that they are the most beautiful. The two images that I posted were of some of the offspring of the original
birds (well, not Elvis). The fact that both of those birds are also male makes them a unique investment for breeders. Most cockatiels (of the male persuasian) are just solid grey, no coloring in the face at all. Combining that with the fact that our breeding pair made not only a lot of colors on the little boys, but also produced a
few Lutinos, makes the little guys a virtual gold mine.
If you happen to have a pair of birds that can produce both many-colored males, as well as the coveted 'Lutino female', you have yourself a damn nice (and financially gaining) set of birds. Of course, after all this time, we just want the birds to quit reproducing. We put them into separate cages to try to expedite the 'non-reproducing' agenda.
When they mate it does yield very pretty, pretty birds, but it is also a lot of work. Work that we no longer want to deal with. That is why I showed the pictures that I did today, they are birds that have been sold to a breeder. The line will continue, thankfully, I won't have to be actively involved in it.
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