
It was a cold, blustery March day in northeast Iowa for No Kings 3. I had returned in time from my 7th Bob Dylan concert with my son, Ben. What keeps us coming back to Bob are the words. Always, the words. What keeps us marching are the lies, always the lies.
Ben discovered Dylan at 14 and reintroduced him to me. Twenty-three years later, we’re aging together, the three of us. I wish I could show you a photo of him on stage in his white hood, but they lock our phones in a soft bag, unlatched as we leave. The main purpose of this phone-free atmosphere is to experience the songs in the moment.
So as to relive later.
Number three on Friday night’s setlist was All Along the Watchtower. Like many of Dylan’s lyrics, it was made famous by another artist. In this case, Jimi Hendrix.
Someone once said the Dylan version is best in the morning, and the Hendrix cover around midnight. The links let you decide, very democratic, like a protest.
As I marched down Decorah’s Water Street in the 3rd iteration of resistance to the lawlessness, corruption, and incompetence of the Trump gang, I thought of these words from the Watchtower that my son repeated on the way home.
There are many among us who feel that life is but a joke
But you and I, we’ve been through that and this is not our fate.
So let us not talk falsely now.
The hour is getting late.
And when I took the photo, the sky reminded me of another poet-songwriter, Leonard Cohen, and of these words from Anthem.
Ring the bells that can ring.
Forget your perfect offering.
There is a crack in everything.
That’s how the light gets in.
Finally, I will leave you with the words from another lyricist popular in this Lutheran community.

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