I always thought that was the name of the song! (Spoiler alert: I was wrong.) The Buffalo Springfield classic that begins with those two haunting chords. It wasn't about anti-war protests. At least (in the wake of the death of the author) you can make it about that if you will. The catalyst for the creation of the song was the Sunset Strip curfew in Los Angeles in late 1966. It has taken me sixty years to learn this. Who knows how much learning is ahead for me? For what it's worth.
I don't know about you, dear reader, but there are some of us who feel some excitement on the morning of 'decision days' in June. The US Supreme Court is typically trying to clear its dockets ahead of its summer break, and this is when the hotly contested cases and the publicly most awaited make their appearance. Hence the fun. "Is today the day they release their birthright citizenship decision? or a re-affirmation of central bank independence? or the weapons-for-the-stoners case?" Last Thursday did turn out to be the day for the weapons-for-stoners case. That came out right, as far as concerns the parties directly involved, though the precedential significance seems to be small. This morning? It is another announced decision day and the excitement is back. Okay, nerdy perpetual law student fun....