ABC told affiliates what to do, and I didn’t

Broadcasting John Lennon’s “Imagine” when ABC says you shouldn’t

In September 2001 I owned a small market radio station in rural Middle Georgia. The majority of what we broadcast was through an ABC radio satellite service I subscribed to. On weekday mornings we got off the satellite feed and did our own programming.

Not too long after it was clear what had happened in New York, at the Pentagon, and in the Pennsylvania countryside, ABC messaged all affiliates and told us we shouldn’t play “Imagine” by John Lennon. I told the people I worked with that we could and should play “Imagine” and anything else we thought was appropriate during and after this horrific tragedy and attack on our country.

“Imagine” John Lennon

When George W Bush launched us into a foolish war with Iraq, the [Dixie] Chicks drew the ire of radio stations, politicians, and music purchasers when Natalie Maines criticized the President during a concert. As it turned out, most of the world criticized W Bush for that war, but it was and is awfully easy to ostracize a woman for not shouting or screaming her opinion, but simply stating it. The Chicks received death threats as a result of having opinions and sharing them.

So where are we now? If you are on Substack reading Heather Cox Richardson, Joyce Vance, or any number of other skilled writers who believe the truth matters, who are willing to do the research, and share what informs their thinking by providing links to the sources they use, this is when you skip two lattes in a coffee shop next week so you can spend less than $10 a month to support their work (maybe they will need security details if they don’t have that already. Ask Joyce Vance, her father-in-law was a judge who was murdered).

Pay attention. Confirm what you think is true before you repeat it. Most importantly, don’t sit in silence.

Customers abandon Whole Foods in lockstep

Earlier this month Whole Foods CEO John Mackey spoke with National Public Radio (NPR) as a book Mackey co-authored, Conscious Capitalism, was released. For years Mackey has said he thinks the healthcare reform laws are a form of socialism, but he took it up a notch and told NPR he thinks, “it’s more like fascism.”

The next day on CBS This Morning the Whole Foods founder tried to dial back his rhetoric and “bad choice of words.” Customer’s weren’t buying it.

Mother Jones followed the NPR and CBS features with a January 18 email interview with Mackey. BAGHe seized the opportunity to set off Whole Foods customers with his comments on Climate Change, which included, “climate change is perfectly natural and not necessarily bad.”

Mackey is pretty egalitarian in his ability to alienate customers who know they are paying premium prices to shop at Whole Foods (also called “Whole Paycheck” by customers).

My friend Karen Bonnell sent this email to Whole Foods, which she is allowing me to reprint here:

Dear Whole Foods Market,

I am writing to tell you I must end our love affair. Your (CEO’s) recent comments that Obamacare is “like fascism” and now, saying that Climate change “is not necessarily bad” shows me beyond any shadow of doubt that you don’t have a clue about things most important to me. So, it is adios, and I and my pocketbook will shop elsewhere.

I bet the lines are shorter at Whole Foods these days. That’s the way conscious capitalist consumers behave.

Rural and Progressive

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