Morrissey interview (part 1) on the Swiss music show

Yeah...Talking to Swiss people shouldn't mean you have to spin a yarn like it's cheese fondue and it's your last opportunity before becoming a vegan.
 
An anonymous person writes:

Hello, Morrissey is on the swissmusicshow.blogspot.ch for a long interview in two parts. The first part in published today (Oct 6)
 
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Well done! :clap: Perfect.
 
Well done! :clap: Perfect.

Yes, I know, but thank you. :)
Oh,... you mean, him? Well yes I suppose that a narcissist using the word "objectified" is amusing enough. Here, I'll join you and I'll clap with one finger.

He can't hear you clapping dear, he's in concert. But I can.
Hello?
 
"Slavery was once tradition, as were public executions and segregation and organized torture and child labour and bear-baiting. When the people spoke up and demanded that all of these barbaric amusements were abolished, the Church and governments opposed the people."

Wow. Deep. As in deeply wrong.

The idea "the people" rose up to demand the end of those awful practices is laughable. Some people, perhaps, such as Wilberforce (slavery) or Martin (bear-baiting) were instrumental in the banning of those things, but "the people" were simply not educated or organised enough to demand anything.

The government and the Church, rather than resisting such change, were in fact driving forces.

You'd be forgiven for thinking this Morrissey chap was a blithering idiot.
 
"Slavery was once tradition, as were public executions and segregation and organized torture and child labour and bear-baiting. When the people spoke up and demanded that all of these barbaric amusements were abolished, the Church and governments opposed the people."

Wow. Deep. As in deeply wrong.

The idea "the people" rose up to demand the end of those awful practices is laughable. Some people, perhaps, such as Wilberforce (slavery) or Martin (bear-baiting) were instrumental in the banning of those things, but "the people" were simply not educated or organised enough to demand anything.

The government and the Church, rather than resisting such change, were in fact driving forces.

You'd be forgiven for thinking this Morrissey chap was a blithering idiot.

You're so right. People are just livestock. No one has ever said anything worth saying. God bless the Queen and Parliament.
 
Slavery still takes place to this day.
You can find men, women and children working long hours under terrible conditions for a few grains of rice in sweat-shops making dirt cheap t-shirts and fashion rags.
World slavery is all of our business, please support P E T A (purchase ethical t-shirts always)
Together we can put an end to human cruelty.

Benny-the-British-Butcher
 
'How can animals protest? They can't, and they rely on people such as me to speak up for them.'
Jeez - he really has lost the plot. He's delusional. You gotta love him though...Bless!
 
"Slavery was once tradition, as were public executions and segregation and organized torture and child labour and bear-baiting. When the people spoke up and demanded that all of these barbaric amusements were abolished, the Church and governments opposed the people."

Wow. Deep. As in deeply wrong.

The idea "the people" rose up to demand the end of those awful practices is laughable. Some people, perhaps, such as Wilberforce (slavery) or Martin (bear-baiting) were instrumental in the banning of those things, but "the people" were simply not educated or organised enough to demand anything.

The government and the Church, rather than resisting such change, were in fact driving forces.

You'd be forgiven for thinking this Morrissey chap was a blithering idiot.

Wat Tyler, the Levellers, the Chartists, the suffragette movement....
 
Yes, very nice! Moz knows that wage slavery is exploitation and only the most desperate animal exploiters will work for McDeath.

And now we know Michael Eavis is an animal exploiter trying to censor how meat is produced. Sick and evil!

Moz is so right. The matador is a coward. The first time I heard "Bigmouth Strikes Again" on the radio I thought he sang "big man matador" (instead of "bigmouth la di da".) LOL.

He mentioned Karl Marx in a positive way. :guitar:
 
I like this interview. It is honest, truthful and very very interesting.

Despite what he says about his education and expectations - following
a brutal school experience in Manchester - Morrissey may not have studied A levels,
but he is intelligent and definately very interesting. And thankfully Morrissey did not leave school to work for NASA, nor to work permanently for the civil service.

As "This Charming Man" played over the speakers before the start of the Man Utd v Everton
Football game on Sunday (soccer) I was thinking that it is such a relief, for us, that Morrissey
started to write and then to sing, when he did.

Morrissey saved me from a life of "pop" disco's, which i hated with a vengence,
along with providing musical relief from Tears for Fears, The Human League, Tony Christie, ABC,
Bon Jovi, Chopin, Bach, Julian Bream, Bobby Crush and RAP - I can't thank him enough for that.
OBOE, MOUNTJOY and ISTANBUL are also as good as any Smiths song that I ever heard.

Hazard
England.
 
Good interview:thumb: I look forward to part 2! I think the interviewer took Morrissey very seriously, thought about his questions and didn't rehash the same old shit. I think Moz appreciated that and gave good answers.
 
'How can animals protest? They can't, and they rely on people such as me to speak up for them.'
Jeez - he really has lost the plot. He's delusional. You gotta love him though...Bless!

How exactly is this delusional? It's beautifully said and he's right. Simple as that.
 
World exclusive interview with the Swissmusicshow.blogspot.ch

Morrissey's exclusive interview in English with a Swiss journo is now published on the swissmusicshow.blogspot.ch
Thank you Amy Araya for helping me making it clear in English. David
 

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