Levi’s urges youth to conquer Native Americans again

Aid Watch: Levi’s urges youth to conquer Native Americans again

Levi’s has a new ad campaign that suggests American liberty is still a work in progress. One of its new videos has a voiceover reciting the Walt Whitman poem “O Pioneers” with youths dancing around a fire wearing Levi’s. [Watch video here: Levi\'s Commercial.] The recitation includes lines like

get your weapons ready;  Have you your pistols? … We, the youthful sinewy races, all the rest on us depend… Fresh and strong the world we seize

Against whom are our weapons supposed to be used? Whose world are we seizing? Any 3rd grader could tell you:  Whitman is referring to the war against Native Americans by westward-bound settlers and the US army. …

…OK, trying to be a little more serious, Levi’s running this ad shows how we still don’t take seriously enough our Euro-American historical crimes. I know many people are tired of this topic. This is also a constant bone of contention between the Left and the Right, with the Right blaming the Left for apologizing too much and overlooking the great accomplishments of Western Civilization, like Individual Rights.

There is a middle ground: those of us of Euro-American heritage would be a lot more convincing on Individual Rights by acknowledging that we have had as much trouble applying them as anybody else. We were pioneers in applying them to our own ethnic group, but we kept handing out free passes to kill other people’s rights. …

Here is the ad:

What do you think?


Comments

4 responses to “Levi’s urges youth to conquer Native Americans again”

  1. I think maybe I just switched to Wranglers?

  2. Does is make any difference to know that the voice in the voice-over is actually Walt Whitman? It’s one of the earliest known recordings still in existence.

  3. I’m skeptical about that. Here’s the only thing I could find:
    http://www.studiajudaica.pl/sj09grin.pdf
    “From USA we have 34 seconds long fragment of Walt Whitman’s America attributed by some specialists, rather incorrectly, to the author himself.”
    It is possible, though. Whitman died in 1892 (about 72) – Edison was making recordings as early as 1888. But the sound quality was quite bad by today’s standards.

  4. I confused this commercial with another one. “Pioneers” is read by an actor, another Levi’s commercial features what is thought to be Walt Whitman reading “America”, which is a far less provocative poem. Sorry about that.

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