Steven Hale
1 min readAug 9, 2024

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When you're talking about statutory rape (unless the guy is close to the same age), you're talking about power not sex or lust. Typically, the youth of the would-be victim represents an innocence that the would-be rapist feels he has lost, and out of jealousy or anger he feels that he has to possess and destroy it. Although in theory anyone can do anything, I can't imagine you ever using power to the detriment of someone else, no matter what the motive.

Not a guitar lead off, but an "end the guitar" comment in the middle of the fake George Harrison solo in this Bonzo Dog parody ("Come on George, snap out of it"):

https://youtu.be/q7Lq06uwkC8?si=dW1ykHUtAdcTxWfZ

Many other elements of Beatles parody here. It's a brilliant hodgepodge.

The album title is a counterpoint to the theme of this article ("Let's Make Up and Be Friends"--ironic because the Bonzos created this album primarily to satisfy contractual requirements).

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Steven Hale
Steven Hale

Written by Steven Hale

Music: Discovering the lost and forgotten. Politics: Exposing injustice. Screenwriting: Emotional storytelling.

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