LeBron James Publicly Endorses Anti-ICE Song by Grammy Award Winner Echoing National Fury After Minneapolis Fatal Shootings
The Trump administration rejected Bruce Springsteen’s claims in the protest song, emphasizing efforts to remove dangerous criminal illegal aliens, White House said.
- On Jan 30 the White House publicly dismissed Bruce Springsteen's protest song as irrelevant and inaccurate, with Abigail Jackson issuing the response to Variety and Entertainment Weekly.
- Springsteen said he wrote the song on Saturday and recorded it on Tuesday, creating it in response to the 'state terror being visited on the city of Minneapolis.'
- Just this morning, Springsteen released a lyric video directed by Thom Zimny, mixing studio shots with on-the-ground footage and crediting Pam Springsteen for production footage.
- The White House framed the exchange by urging media to report that `The media should cover how Democrats have refused to work with the Administration, and instead, opted to provide sanctuary for these criminal illegals,` emphasizing cooperation with federal law enforcement.
- Amid broader unrest, American singer-songwriters and the Singing Resistance have protested ICE enforcement, as at least 32 people died in ICE custody in 2025.
12 Articles
12 Articles
Springsteen's new anti-ICE protest song is so hilariously bad, it makes Bon Jovi's vaccine hug anthem sound like a masterpiece
Bruce Springsteen recently released a stand-alone protest single titled "Streets of Minneapolis,” which strongly criticizes Immigration and Customs Enforcement and the Trump administration's immigration enforcement tactics.In the song, the washed-up has-been condemns what he dubs "state terror" in Minneapolis, memorializes Renee Good and Alex Pretti (two anti-ICE agitators who were killed by law enforcement), and condemns "King Trump,” Deputy Ch…
US singer-songwriters revive protest music to condemn Trump and ICE after Minneapolis killings
WASHINGTON, Jan 30 — American singer-songwriters are taking up the protest torch like their forebears Woody Guthrie, Pete Seeger and Joan Baez, releasing tracks featuring searing criticism of Donald Trump and homage to Minneapolis residents killed this month by federal immigration agents.Eighty years after folk icon Guthrie scrawled This Machine Kills Fascists on his guitar, his musical heirs are savaging President Donald Trump on his immigrati…
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