We reported earlier this month that the band “Rage Against the Machine” delivered an anti-Supreme Court message on stage at the start of their new tour.
It appears that the guitarist for the group, Tom Morello, had a bad day yesterday as security accidentally tackled him instead of a fan who crashed the stage.
The incident took place at a show in Toronto and a video was uploaded to YouTube.
After avoiding the security guard who tackled Morello, the stage crashing fan attempted to jump back over the barrier into the crowd, to no avail as other security guards were able to detain him and presumably eject him from the arena.
Singer Zack de la Rocha stopped the group’s performance of the song “Killing in the name of,” which ironically is one of their main so-called anti-establishment songs.
After about a minute, the performance resumed as Morello did his best to appear unfazed by the incident.
As we previously reported, in typical Democrat fashion, the ruling party cries victim yet again.
This time it’s the band “Rage Against the Machine”.
Even with a Democrat majority voting base thanks to California and New York, a Democrat president, House, and Senate, CNN recently posted an article gushing about the band being “against authority”.
This comes despite Rage’s being pro-Democrat, quite literally supporting the authority in most terms. In the 1990s, alternative rock, punk, and grunge bands were mostly seen as apolitical, and simply bands that played music that expressed how their fan base felt in many ways.
More so, we are painting a broader picture of our perspective of the industry. But back to Rage. The band recently did their first concert in 11 years. They spoke out dangerously on the angst many leftists have towards the conservative members of the U.S. Supreme Court.
- Kat Timpf Updates Fans After Successful Double Mastectomy with Lighthearted Joke Post - March 20, 2025
- Pam Bondi Drops the Hammer, Announces Charges Against Three Tesla Arsonists With a Minimum Five Year Sentence - March 20, 2025
- Mike Johnson Is Re-elected as House Speaker After Two Republicans Flip Their Votes During First Round of Voting - January 3, 2025