Popular Culture Review Vol. 15, No. 1 | Page 109

Stars and Stripes of Corruption 105 of Dead Kennedys, in lyrics and interviews, have asserted that it is more than simply drugs numbing postmodern America—it is the perpetuation of Darwinistic capitalism and the institutions that support it which are at the core of American soullessness. As Biafra commented in a 1982 interview, “Americans as a whole have no soul. .. .There’s certain pride in being from a certain stock and a certain region, and even in being able to do things in a certain way and do them well, that we don’t have in this country” (31). From the perspective of various punk rock critics, the works of Efead Kennedys hinged on trying to raise the consciousness of their young fans, both on record and on stage. Making money was never the raison d'etre o f the band, as evidenced by their skeptical attitude to their newfound fame when their first album, Fresh Fruit for Rotting Vegetables, was released in 1980 and sold tens of thousands of copies in Europe alone. In the face of growing demand for Dead Kennedys records and appearances, the band staked out public positions in opposition to high ticket prices, restriction of minors from clubs, and the massification of punk into “New Wave.” Without such resistance, Biafra felt that their musical expression would turn into a job “you have to do if you’re going to play for Bill Graham on a seven-foot stage for ten bucks a ticket and watch his goon squad beat up fans for dancing” (31). Critique of Religious Hypocrisy in 1980s America An overriding theme of the music of Dead Kennedys is that the Moral Majority of the 1980s experience—that is, the religious right and fundamentalist religion in particular—have engaged in a campaign to censor or curtail the distribution of rock music, art, and literature considered to be blasphemous, sexually explicit, or obscene. In song after song, interviews, and literature distributed by the band, Dead Kennedys, in Nietzschean fashion, hold that religion is the opiate of the masses—that by instilling the fear of the wrath of God, by imposing guilt, and by imparting the fear of eternal damnation, religion is, in effect, not offering the path of salvation, but is utilizing a form of mind control. In the 1981 EP In God We Trust, Inc.—featuring a cover art by Winston Smith depicting Christ nailed to a cross constructed from a dollar bill—two songs especially reflect the band members’ revulsion ever what they perceive as a religious gestapo. In one song, titled “Religious Vomit,” a manic, rage-filled Jello Biafra screams: All religions make me wanna throw up all religions make me sick all religions make me wanna throw up all religions suck. They all claim that they have the truth, that’ll set you free just give