Beginning in the late 1930s, Guthrie decided that the public needed to hear songs about
the hardships of Americans’ minorities in an effort to expose the destructive power of racism.
Some of these lyrics only briefly address the race issue. For example, by creating a highly
ironic narrator in “Talking Meanness” (“Mean Talking Blues”), he offers some amusing blows
against those who would encourage various forms of hate. In particular, he makes a none too
subtle slap against those who would “get colors to fighting one another/friend against
friend/sister against brother” or even “the stripped against the polkadots.”
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