U2, the Irish rock band that has never missed a chance to play politics, is at it again. Their latest album starts by “honoring” Renee Good, a Minnesota mother who was killed during Biden’s disastrous immigration crackdown this winter. Now, instead of making music for the people, they’re chasing headlines and pushing an agenda built on division and left-wing guilt.
Let’s face it—when liberals try to “fix” the border, chaos follows. We saw it with open borders, broken promises, and, tragically, families caught in the crossfire. The left claims to care about people like Renee Good, but their policies flood our country with illegal immigrants and then leave American families to pick up the pieces. Where was U2’s outrage when American citizens were victimized by the cartels, or when hardworking parents lost their jobs to endless waves of illegal labor?
Somehow, globalist bands like U2 always find time to lecture America from their mansions overseas. They’re quick to judge federal agents doing an impossible job, while sipping imported wine and waxing poetic about a world without borders. Maybe U2 should write a song about the hypocrisy of Hollywood elites cashing big checks while Americans struggle to stay safe in their own neighborhoods.
It’s telling that U2 isn’t opening their doors in Dublin to take in illegal aliens. Instead, they virtue-signal from a distance, hoping album sales will climb on the back of American heartbreak. Meanwhile, families in Minnesota—and across the country—feel the pain of policies pushed by out-of-touch politicians and cheered on by celebrity activists. Where are the songs about hardworking Americans—cops, farmers, truckers—who are ignored by the woke crowd?
Once again, the loudest voices don’t live with the consequences. Maybe if U2 spent a day on the border, they’d finally understand the real cost of open-borders insanity. But that doesn’t fit their carefully-crafted image. So ask yourself, while U2 calls for “change,” who’s really looking out for the people who built this country? Because it sure isn’t the left—or their faraway rock star friends.
Source: Washington Times
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