Hardly a day goes by without someone apologizing for something
they said or did or someone else demanding that someone issue such
an apology. Political correctness has been stepped up to a
McCarthy-like level with the "guilty" parties finding themselves
ostracized, boycotted, persecuted, and in some once-democratic
countries of Europe, even imprisoned. In this brave new world where
most have sacrificed their freedom of speech on the altar of
political correctness we find that even discourse on many issues is
a thing of the past. What is perhaps most frightening about this
political shift and the frequency of such witch-hunts is the
alarming rate at which we have witnessed our freedoms erode.
One minor example of such political correctness hit the news this
September when Bell Canada, Canada’s largest phone company had to
apologize for their latest billboard advertisement. In an apparent
attempt to appeal to today’s youth, Bell Canada ran a billboard with
a young woman dressed in punk-rock attire. Bell Canada missed the
minor detail that one of the buttons worn by this young lady read,
"Belsen was a Gas." The Bell Canada executives claim that they
couldn’t even read the button in the copy that they reviewed and
that only when the photo was blown up to billboard size was the
phrase evident.
The news media ran with the story relaying Bell’s apology, "we
would never depict such an offensive slogan in our advertising."
Reuter’s explained that the phrase was from a "controversial" song
title by seminal punk rockers, the Sex Pistols. Reuters also felt it
necessary to mention that the billboards appeared in Toronto "which
has a large Jewish community and many Holocaust survivors."

Sex Pistols circa 1978 - from
left: Steve Jones, Ronald Biggs, "Martin Bormann" and Paul Cook.
1.
To better understand the silliness of this latest apology one
needs a little background. The Sex Pistols were certainly a very
controversial band when they broke onto the scene back in 1975. From
their first single, "Anarchy in the UK" in which lead vocalist,
Johnny Rotten shouted, "I am an Anti-Christ" to their banned single,
"God Save the Queen," the Pistols were frequently in the news for
shocking British society. The Pistols were banned from performing in
the UK and were well known for letting the "f-word" fly on national
television. For all the controversy, few will even recall, "Belsen
was a Gas," a song which despite what Reuters claims was not truly
controversial and received little media attention.
"Belsen was a Gas" which refers to the Nazi concentration camp
Bergen-Belsen was the final song written by the band in its
near-original formation. This song was supposedly strongly
influenced by bassist Sid Vicious who would die of a heroin overdose
following the band’s breakup. Throughout the years, the Pistols
toyed with Nazi imagery, not as a political statement (they
certainly never accepted nor advocated any National Socialist
principles), but rather for its shock value. Both lead singer Johnny
Rotten and bassist Sid Vicious were frequently photographed wearing
t-shirts bedecked with swastikas. "Belsen" was written during the
Pistols 1978 USA tour and was not released onto vinyl until the band
was formally split. Two versions of the song appeared on the
posthumous album, "The Great Rock ‘n’ Roll Swindle." Always looking
for ways to create controversy, the reformed Sex Pistols (minus
Rotten and Vicious) needed a new lead singer and a new bassist. They
found a lead singer by making a run to Brazil and finding train
robber Ronald Biggs who was enjoying life from his illegally gained
monies. The Pistols would release a some-what cheesy shocker known
as "Cosh the Driver / No One is Innocent" which boasted the lyrics,
"God save Martin Bormann and Nazis on the run, they wasn’t being
wicked God, it was their idea of fun." What did shock British
society this time was the record’s cover shot which not only showed
Biggs on vocals but made the assertion that Martin Bormann was the
new bassist. The photo showed an elderly man in full Nazi uniform
playing bass (it of course was not Martin Bormann.)
It was around this time that the song "Belsen was a Gas" was
released. Hardly a pro-Nazi song, the rather simplistic lyrics
begin, "Belsen was a Gas I heard the other day, in the open graves
where the Jews all lay." The song ends with the repetition of the
words, "Be a man, kill someone, kill yourself, be a man." Here the
sentiment was clearly anti-Nazi and critical of those who were
responsible for mass killing. Such thinking was largely consistent
with the punk rock movement, which focused generally on
hyper-individualism and less-often on true politics. When the punk
bands did write political songs, they were generally supportive of
the far-left. (This excludes the "Rock against Communism" movement
and singer / song-writers such as Ian Stewart, which although they
adopted the musical style of the punk movement, generally found
themselves left out of even this fringe style.)
The Sex Pistols always intended to offend. In fact, punk rock and
punk attitude intended to do exactly that. It was anti-government,
anti-older generation, and anti-establishment in general. Today, as
mega-corporations attempt to reap financial gain by using this very
movement, which stood opposed to them, it is humorous to see them
get their fingers burned. If Bell Canada were really as "cool" as
the young punker they depicted in their ad, they would have told the
media to "piss off." But, they did not understand what they were
playing with, not culturally, and of course not historically.
1. Link to:
http://www.cookandjones.co.uk/images/cookbiggsborjones.jpg
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