In the old days, rockers burst at the age of 27 and left behind beautiful corpses, and that was an appropriate age because it allowed us to give moral lessons to the new generations and seriously warn them of the danger of excesses.
The Rolling Stones are a bad example for the youth and Minister Garzón must take urgent action. It’s the Rollings that are so much worse than sugary drinks and big box steaks and you can’t tolerate them bouncing and playing guitar like teenagers. At their age we could at least admit that they went bowling with Paco Ibáñez in a relaxed plan through small provincial theaters, but it is inadmissible that they play in stadiums and move like lizard tails for three hours. Garzón, uncle, do something. We know from Keith Richards that he once sniffed his father’s ashes, that he took the entire catalog of available drugs and that objectively, by all public health reports, he should have been dead for at least fifty years, a victim of cirrhosis, three or four cancers, a heart attack, an overdose, or all of that together.
Back in the day, rockers would crash at the age of 27 and leave behind beautiful corpses, and that was an appropriate age because it allowed us to teach moral lessons to the new generations and gravely warn them of the danger of excesses. But when I was listening to the Rolling recently in Madrid, I didn’t have the guts to tell my son to be good, not to drink or smoke, or even think about drugs. The boy is not stupid and could easily conclude that his father, who goes to mineral water and eats vegetables, is tormented by migraines and lumbago, while Uncle Mick, who is thirty years older and has even sucked the fairy, moves like a feather . And luckily he doesn’t know who Iggy Pop is and hasn’t seen him as an advertising tonic. Tonic, Iggy, you have balls.
Source: La Verdad
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