January 2, 2025
Hunter S. Thompson Remembers Jimmy Carter's Captivating Bob Dylan Speech (1974)

51 years in the past, Hunter S. Thomp­son wrote Fear and Loathing at the Cam­paign Path ’72, which “continues to be con­sid­ered one of those bible of polit­i­cal record­ing,” no longer­ed Matt Taib­bi in a fortieth anniver­sary edi­tion of the guide. Concern and Loathing ’72 entered the canon of Amer­i­can polit­i­cal writ­ing for plenty of rea­sons. However in case you’re glance­ing for one bot­tom-line expla­na­tion, it prob­a­bly comes all the way down to this: Says Taib­bi, “Thomp­son stared proper into the flam­ing-hot solar of disgrace­much less lies and cyn­i­cal horse­shit this is our pol­i­tics, and he described actual­ly what he noticed—most definitely at seri­ous price to his personal males­tal well being, however the ben­e­are compatible to us used to be [his leg­endary book].”

Thomp­son could have reached some jour­nal­is­tic apogee along with his cov­er­age of the ’72 Nixon-McGov­ern cam­paign. However his polit­i­cal writ­ing onerous­ly stopped there. The Gonzo jour­nal­ist cov­ered the ’76 elec­tion for Rolling Stone magazine­a­zine. And inevitably he crossed paths with Jim­my Carter (RIP), the even­tu­al win­ner of the elec­tion. Above, Thomp­son remembers the day when Carter first made an impres­sion upon him.

It hap­pened on the Uni­ver­si­ty of Geor­gia Faculty of Regulation on Might 4, 1974. Discuss­ing prior to a gath­er­ing of alum­ni legal professionals, Carter disappointed their cel­e­bra­to­ry occa­sion when he dis­guy­tled the crim­i­nal jus­tice sys­tem they have been so pleased with. And Carter par­tic­u­lar­ly stuck Thomp­son’s atten­tion when he traced his sense of social jus­tice again to a tune writ­ten through Bob Dylan:

The oth­er supply of my below­stand­ing about what’s proper and fallacious on this soci­ety is from a pal of mine, a poet named Bob Dylan. After lis­ten­ing to his data about “The Bal­lad of Hat­tie Automotive­ol” and “Like a Rolling Stone” and “The Occasions, They Are a‑Converting,” I’ve realized to appre­ci­ate the dynamism of exchange in a mod­ern soci­ety.

I grew up as a landown­er’s son. However I don’t suppose I ever actual­ized the prop­er inter­re­l. a.­tion­send between the landown­er and people who labored on a farm till I heard Dylan’s file, “I Ain’t Gonna Paintings on Magazine­gie’s Farm No Extra.” So I come right here discuss­ing to you nowadays about your sub­ject with a base for my infor­ma­tion discovered­ed on Rein­grasp Niebuhr and Bob Dylan.

You’ll learn the total textual content of Carter’s speech right here. It’s additionally price watch­ing a relat­ed clip underneath, the place Thomp­son elab­o­charges on Carter, his well-known speech and his alleged imply streak that put him at the similar airplane as Muham­mad Ali and Son­big apple Barg­er (the god­fa­ther of The Hells Angels).

Word: An ear­li­er ver­sion of this put up first seemed on our website online in 2012. With the move­ing of Pres­i­dent Carter, it gave the impression of a great time to deliver it again.

Relat­ed Con­tent 

The two,000+ Motion pictures Watched through Pres­i­dents Nixon, Carter & Rea­gan within the White Area

Listen the Uncen­sored Orig­i­nal Ver­sion of “Hur­ri­cane,” Bob Dylan’s Protest Tune About Jailed Field­er Rubin “Hur­ri­cane” Carter (1976)

Hunter Thomp­son Explains What Gonzo Jour­nal­ism Is, and How He Writes It (1975)

 


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