Essay: Worst Liberal Songs

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Song Artist/Band Comments Year Genre
"American Idiot" Green Day Self-explanatory. The song criticizes America, claiming that we are all "racist", "homophobic", brainwashed sheep. Sample lyric: Well maybe I'm the faggot America. / I'm not a part of a redneck agenda. / Now everybody do the propaganda. / And sing along to the age of paranoia. 2004 Punk Rock
"Anaconda" Nicki Minaj The title is a slang sexual term for male genitalia. 2014 Hip-Hop
"Back in the USSR" The Beatles A parody of Beach Boys songs, as well as "Back in the U.S.A." by Chuck Berry.[1] 1968 Pop
"Bad Religion" Frank Ocean A song about homosexual emotional dependency. 2012 R&B
"Beds are Burning" Midnight Oil Calls for an extremely drastic compromise in response to the Aboriginal conflicts; handing back Australia. 1987 Rock
"Bodies" Drowning Pool "Let the bodies hit the floor"; bad coincidental release timeline in conjunction with 9/11. It was also used to break the will of soldiers during the Iraq War, seems to promote violence and bloodshed. Was also used as the theme song for World Wrestling Entertainment's ECW TV show between 2006 and 2008 (due to the extreme violence that ECW featured compared to the other WWE shows). 2001 Nu-Metal
"Born This Way" Lady Gaga A song promoting the fallacy that homosexuality is a legitimate lifestyle into which people are born. 2011 Pop
Candy Shop 50 Cent A song that promotes sex and drugs by disguising it as a "candy shop". 2005 Dirty Rap
"(Don't Fear) The Reaper" Blue Öyster Cult The band's guitarist, Donald "Buck Dharma" Roser, wrote the song. He debunked the idea that it promoted suicide, and said it was about the inevitability of death; some people interpret the lyrics as suggesting a murder-suicide because of the mention of Romeo and Juliet.[2] 1976 Rock
"Dopeman" N.W.A. A drug promoting, song also contains some profanity. 1988 Hip Hop/Rap
"[Censored] tha Police" N.W.A. Anti-police song, even the title of which is censored due to profanity. Also appears to promote illiteracy due to the misspelling of the song's title by the group. 1988 Rap
"[Censored] Donald Trump" YG & Nipsey Hussle The title of the song, which is censored due to profanity is self-explanatory. The bashing and up-most disrespect of mocking our beloved president. 2016 Rap
"Give Peace a Chance" John Lennon The song constantly advocates anti-war themes, and also had implicitly negative views on religion due to them referencing in the second stanza rabbis, bishops, ministers, etc., etc. Was also notorious as being used as a theme song for the anti-war left. 1969 Folk
"God is a Woman" Ariana Grande The title of the song says it all. 2018 Pop
"Goodbye Stranger" Supertramp Has the line "Devil is my savior." 1979 Rock
"Here's to You" Joan Baez (lyrics) and Ennio Morricone (music) The title of the song and its lyrics, performed by leftist folk singer/activist Joan Baez, are a reference to the execution of Sacco and Vanzetti, and was in fact used for the film Sacco e Vanzetti. The song takes the view that the two anarchists were innocent of the crimes they were charged with. 1971 Folk
"Heroin" The Velvet Underground An ode to hard drugs, something liberals would enjoy and relate to. 1967 Rock
"Hungry Heart" Bruce Springsteen About a man who abandons his family ("I've got a wife and kids in Baltimore, Jack/I went for a ride and I never went back"). 1980 Rock
"I Kissed A Girl" Katy Perry A song about a lesbian kiss which has been heavily criticized by conservatives in the media. 2008 Pop
"I Touch Myself" Divinyls Does the title not say it all? The song's disgustingly about [censored]. 1990 Pop rock
"If I Had A Rocket Launcher" Bruce Cockburn A song which denounces regulated borders and the military in general. 1984 Pop Rock
"Imagine" John Lennon A celebratory song of atheism, godlessness, and a world that "will live as one" once God is defeated. 1971 Rock
"The Internationale" Eugène Pottier/Pierre De Geyter A song promoting the abolition of private property and all individual liberty. Acts as an anthem for various left-wing groups, including anarchists, Communists, socialists, democratic socialists, and socialist democrats.[3][4] 1888 Random noise strung together.
"Killing in the Name" Rage Against the Machine Unsubstantiated accusations of "racism" by law enforcement agencies, going as far as to accuse them of supporting the Ku Klux Klan. "Some of those that work forces, are the same that burn crosses". Also contains a repeated profane defiance of the rule of law by lead singer/far-Left activist Zack de la Rocha near the song's end. 1992 Rap Rock
Land of Confusion Genesis/Disturbed Anti-Reagan song, the remake from Disturbed is also Anti-Bush & anti-capitalism, ironic considering their label Warner Bros. Records paid them millions of dollars for the song. 1986 (Genesis) 2006 (Disturbed) Progressive rock/Heavy metal
Little Girls Oingo Boingo Disturbing song that glorifies pedophilia. 1981 New wave
"Lying is The Most Fun A Girl Can Have Without Taking Her Clothes Off" Panic! At the Disco Liberalism at its finest: promoting sexual immorality in young adults. 2010 Pop
"Molly Cyrus" Stitches A vulgar song about sex and drugs 2015 Rap
"Mosh" Eminem A song persuading people to not vote for George W. Bush in the 2004 presidential election. 2004 Rap
"Neon Cathedral" Macklemore A song equating his calling his "church" a bar. 2013 Hip-Hop
"Nothing Else Matters" Metallica If the title wasn't self-referential, the song's about nihilism. 1992 Heavy metal
"Ocean Breathes Salty" Modest Mouse Atheistic propaganda that has the nerve to belittle those who believe in the afterlife. The singer seems to see himself as better than these people. 2004 Indie Rock
"OK2BGAY" Tomboy Another song promoting homosexuality. N/A Pop
"Party Rock Anthem" LMFAO An ode to hedonism that encourages young people to abandon social responsibility: "Party rock is in the house tonight; everybody just have a good time." The song mocks Christianity (“I got that devilish flow -- no halo”) and promotes gambling (“Every day I’m shuffling”). 2011 Dance-pop
"Poker Face" Lady Gaga A song that fantasizes about the life of bisexual women dating men, but desiring to date other women. 2008 Pop
"Roll Me Up and Smoke Me When I Die" Willie Nelson A song about smoking marijuana and getting high (Nelson openly smokes marijuana -- he has been cited for it on numerous occasions -- and is an advocate for its legalization). 2012 Country
"Run the World (Girls)" Beyonce A Feminist song that goes over the top and claims females are "superior" to men. 2011 Electro-pop
"Same Love" Macklemore A song supporting same-sex "marriage" as well as bashing Republicans and Christians. Song also features openly homosexual female artist singing backup as well as a male homosexual couple (Macklemore's uncle and his long-time partner) on the song artwork. 2013 Pop/Hip-hop
Search And Destroy Iggy and the Stooges Anti-Vietnam War song. 1973 Garage rock
Sexy and I Know It LMFAO A very obscene and narcissistic song with an equally bad video. 2011 Dance-pop
Sorry for Party Rocking LMFAO Likely a jab at conservatives for not liking their whole "Party Rock Anthem" song. The apology is very openly insincere. 2011 Dance-pop
Starships Nicki Minaj A song going to the beach and wasting money on drugs, smoking, and alcohol. Basically just getting high and partying. 2012 Pop Dance
"This Charming Man" The Smiths About a man on the road who picks up a male hitchhiker. Implies a homosexual attraction between the two. 1983 Indie Rock
"This Land Is Your Land" Woody Guthrie (also recorded by various liberal/socialist artists) Song attacking the institution of private property, promoting welfare and criticizing the poverty that exists under the capitalist system. 1940 Folk
"War" Edwin Starr A song promoting pacifism and denouncing all wars, including just wars. 1970 Funk
"Weed is my Best Friend" Popcaan A song that celebrates the drug marijuana. 2015 Reggae
When Ya Get Drafted Dead Kennedys Anti-war and somehow getting capitalism involved, the song has liberals' paranoid delusion of Reagan drafting them and sending them to war. The irony is that Democrats created the draft in the first place. 1980 Punk Rock
"Yes We Can" will.i.am A pro-Obama propaganda song. 2008 Hip-Hop
"Young Wild & Free" Snoop Dogg and Wiz Khalifa Basic promotion of drug usage, and encouraging liberal behavior, that smoking, getting drunk and high is what life is all about. 2011 Rap
"You Need to Calm Down" Taylor Swift This heavily pro-LGBT song (and the music video) essentially told people critical or wary of the LGBT+ to shut up. Promotes homosexuality, transgenderism, and the LGBT agenda. Has been criticized by several conservative journalists and political commentators. 2019 Pop
Any song by Marilyn Manson Marilyn Manson is a devil worshipping Christ hater, need we say more?

In addition, these are songs a conservative has to be careful to avoid, as they pretend to have their values at heart, but are deceitfully liberal.

Song Artist/Band Comments Year Genre
"Born in The USA" Bruce Springsteen This is an example of subliminal propaganda. The song seems patriotic, but is in fact anti-American, tricking anybody unfortunate enough to hear the song. Even Ronald Reagan was notoriously tricked by Springsteen into playing the song. Contains a racial slur toward Asians. 1984 Rock
"Green Eyes" Hüsker Dü Pretends to be about love, a universal and conservative subject. However, the song is about a same-sex partner, and that means in support of the homosexual agenda. The band was notorious for writing love songs in the second person to hide this. 1985 Alternative/Indie rock
"The Guns of Brixton" The Clash Some have interpreted it as being against gun control, but the lyrics are blatantly anti-police and has the nerve to suggest that the police are "racist". The Clash were also anti-Thatcher, liberal, and socialist. 1979 Punk rock/Reggae
"Slack Mother******" Superchunk The song seems to be criticizing a slacker who mooches off everyone around him. However, the band is notoriously liberal, as they openly support the homosexual agenda. The song is also very explicit and morally offensive, and the title openly reflects this. 1990 Alternative/Indie rock

See also

References

  1. "I wrote that as a kind of Beach Boys parody. And 'Back in the USA' was a Chuck Berry song, so it kinda took off from there. I just liked the idea of Georgia girls and talking about places like the Ukraine as if they were California, you know? It was also hands across the water, which I'm still conscious of. 'Cuz they like us out there, even though the bosses in the Kremlin may not. The kids do. And that to me is very important for the future of the race." Playboy interview with Paul and Linda McCartney by Joan Goodman, ©1984 Playboy Press retrieved August 16, 2012,
  2. (Don't Fear) The Reaper by Blue Öyster Cult. songfacts.com, retrieved August 16, 2012.
  3. World Book Encyclopedia, 2018 ed., s.v. "Internationale, The"
  4. The International Anarchist Congress, Amsterdam, 1907.