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Happy Xmas (War Is Over) doesn’t sound like a protest song and that’s exactly the point.
In this episode of The Last Mixed Tape, we explore how John Lennon used Christmas, tradition, and familiarity to deliver one of the most quietly radical political messages in popular music.
Set against the backdrop of the Vietnam War, this episode traces Lennon’s shift from confrontation to persuasion — from the bed-ins for peace and Give Peace a Chance, to Imagine, Yoko Ono’s influence, and the belief that political ideas endure best when they’re delivered “with a little honey.”
More than a seasonal standard, Happy Xmas (War Is Over) is a protest song designed to be lived with — not argued against — and its legacy reveals how music can change culture without raising its voice.
By The Last Mixed TapeHappy Xmas (War Is Over) doesn’t sound like a protest song and that’s exactly the point.
In this episode of The Last Mixed Tape, we explore how John Lennon used Christmas, tradition, and familiarity to deliver one of the most quietly radical political messages in popular music.
Set against the backdrop of the Vietnam War, this episode traces Lennon’s shift from confrontation to persuasion — from the bed-ins for peace and Give Peace a Chance, to Imagine, Yoko Ono’s influence, and the belief that political ideas endure best when they’re delivered “with a little honey.”
More than a seasonal standard, Happy Xmas (War Is Over) is a protest song designed to be lived with — not argued against — and its legacy reveals how music can change culture without raising its voice.

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