Bob Dylan - Rough and Rowdy Ways Tour - Oakland, Fox Theater, June 11, 2022
As usual I splatter my thoughts in no particular order: The whole darn show, recorded from within someone’s phone lock bag: https://youtu.be/nwK8kAVNrrI Better recording here: https://youtu.be/wrrPZU_-jjA (this one appears to have been removed) A recording of the previous night: https://youtu.be/P-yNR855s3g I loved the show. My attention was fixed the whole time. Oh my God they ended with a cover of Grateful Dead's "Friend of the Devil" which was amazing. (Better recording: https://youtu.be/YZj3pjskjPU Bootleg recording, from same source as above: https://youtu.be/TmNBhpQtqz8 ) From my post on Expecting Rain : Oh My God, they closed with "Friend of the Devil" on the June 11th Oakland show! Crowd went berserk! The version was absolutely beautiful, one of the best sounding songs of the evening. I was stunned. I was expecting "Every Grain of Sand" (and now I want to hear that live), because I'd read the set lists and I knew...
Comments
First off, did they actually check a several-times-opened jar of peanut butter to see if there was microscopic life in it? We think there would be. And if they did check, did they then do a scientific analysis to see if that life was related to life as we know it or was a new form of life all together?
Second, are they proposing that exposing a vacuum-packed, sealed jar of peanut butter to the atmosphere and the energy from a light bulb, then keeping that jar closed for a few days or weeks until the peanut butter is eaten, is the equivalent of lightning and meteors striking an entire, open air planet over a period of millions or billions of years?
Third, if new life did spontaneously appear in that jar, are they saying it would be superior to already existing life, so that the already existing life wouldn't just eat it?
Fourth, are they aware that abiogenesis, which unlike evolution deals with life coming from non-life, replaced Aristotle's concept of spontaneous generation? This is the idea that maggots spontaneously generate from rotting meat, fleas from putrid matter, etc. Are they aware that the Christian church viewed Aristotle as the authority on such matters, and that it was the Christian church that for centuries promoted the idea that life spontaneously came from non-life?
Fifth, do they truly believe that planet Earth is a jar of peanut butter?