Propaghandi Lyrics — by Popularity
| 1 |
And We Thought That Nation-States Were A Bad Idea |
| 2 |
Ordinary People Do Fucked-up Things When Fucked-up Things Become Ordinary |
| 3 |
Fuck Machine |
| 4 |
Purina Hall Of Fame |
| 5 |
The Only Good Fascist Is A Very Dead Fascist |
| 6 |
With Friends Like These, Who The Fuck Needs Cointelpro? |
| 7 |
Showdown (G.E./P.) |
| 8 |
Apparently, I'm A "P.C. Fascist" (Because I Care About Both Human And Non-Human Animals) |
| 9 |
A People's History Of The World |
| 10 |
This Might Be Satire |
| 11 |
Back To The Motor League |
| 12 |
Less Talk, More Rock |
| 13 |
Rio De San Atlanta, Manitoba |
| 14 |
I Was A Pre-Teen McCarthyist |
| 15 |
Mate Ka Moris Ukun Rasik An |
| 16 |
New Homes For Idle Hands |
| 17 |
Resisting Tyrannical Government |
| 18 |
Pigs Will Pay |
| 19 |
Haillie Sellasse, Up Yor Ass |
| 20 |
Head, Chest Or Foot? |
| 21 |
Fine Day |
| 22 |
Ladies' Nite In Loserville |
| 23 |
Nailing Descartes To The Wall/(Liquid) Meat Is Still Murder |
| 24 |
Stick The Fucking Flag Up Your Goddamn Ass, You Sonofabitch |
| 25 |
Anti-Manifesto |
| 26 |
Bullshit Politicians |
| 27 |
Who Will Help Me Bake This Bread? |
| 28 |
Anchorless |
| 29 |
Public Dis-Service Announcement From Shell |
| 30 |
Gamble |
| 31 |
Iteration |
| 32 |
Today's Empires, Tomorrow's Ashes |
| 33 |
March Of The Crabs |
| 34 |
Refusing To Be A Man |
| 35 |
Gifts |
| 36 |
Natural Disasters |
| 37 |
Ego Fum Papa (I Am The Pope) |
| 38 |
The State Lottery |
| 39 |
Hate, Myth, Muscle, Etiquette |
| 40 |
Middle Finger Response |
| 41 |
Showdown |
| 42 |
Albright Monument, Bagdhad |
| 43 |
Ska Sucks |
| 44 |
T. I. Y. |
About Propaghandi
Propaghandi emerged from Portage la Prairie, Manitoba in 1986 as a politically charged punk rock band that never shied away from confronting uncomfortable truths through their music. With provocatively titled tracks like "The Only Good Fascist Is A Very Dead Fascist" and "Ordinary People Do Fucked-up Things When Fucked-up Things Become Ordinary," they've spent nearly four decades delivering razor-sharp social commentary wrapped in aggressive, uncompromising rock. Their willingness to tackle everything from anti-fascism to critiques of nation-states has made them a vital voice in politically conscious punk, proving that music can be both a weapon and a mirror.