Posted on 05/30/2026 9:54:40 AM PDT by Red Badger
The departing performers all reached for the same script. Martina McBride claimed she had been assured the gathering was nonpartisan. Bret Michaels said he understood the event as a celebration of the country through music, a way to honor hardworking Americans, before declaring that it had supposedly “evolved into something much more divisive.” Rapper Young MC insisted he knew nothing of any political involvement and hoped to perform in Washington someday at something less “politically charged.” Morris Day & The Time, for their part, claimed they were never confirmed at all.
None of these excuses survives a moment’s scrutiny. Nobody expects pop stars to be paragons of courage or patriotism, but even by the low bar of celebrity behavior, this was a striking exhibition of both cowardice and confusion. The performers did not flee a politicized event. They politicized it by fleeing.
Here is the part the entertainers missed entirely: the concert was always going to carry political weight, and their cowardice only added more. Had McBride, Michaels, and the rest simply taken the stage, they would have modeled something Americans desperately need to see, the idea that love of country can sit apart from partisan combat. By bailing, they deepened the very division they pretended to mourn. It was a self-inflicted embarrassment.
Partisanship Is Neither Shameful Nor Un-American Start here, because it is the unspoken assumption underneath the whole spectacle. The acts were thrilled to sing on the Mall right up until the press and Democrat operatives rebranded the event as “Trump’s concert.” The genuine objection, of course, is that they would rather not be photographed anywhere near the man. But admitting that sounds petty, so instead they reach for the loftier-sounding word: nonpartisan.
People adore that word, and it makes them sound foolish every time. You cannot wade into politics and somehow emerge nonpartisan. Bipartisan is a real and worthy thing, people of opposing parties cooperating toward a common end. But nonpartisan, in any matter touching public life, is a fantasy.
This is not merely a lament about our fractured moment, though pretending to stand above the fray has certainly grown harder over the past decade. Partisanship is woven into the nation’s founding fabric. The Constitution emerged from ferocious political combat. Washington, D.C. became the capital through a backroom bargain struck between rival factions.
Even George Washington’s Farewell Address, the very text where he warned against “the enterprises of faction,” was itself a partisan instrument. Alexander Hamilton drafted those words with Thomas Jefferson and James Madison’s fledgling Republican faction squarely in view. Washington was not condemning political parties in the abstract. He was telling his countrymen they ought all to be Federalists.
So a celebration tied to a particular party or politician is not thereby corrupted. And here is the irony for our skittish lineup: this event was not even that.
There Is Nothing “Partisan” About a Concert on the Mall Donald Trump is both divisive and partisan, and the two are not the same. The first is a matter of perception. If Democrats could manage to see him as the opposition rather than a mortal enemy, the temperature would drop considerably. The second is plain fact. He holds elected office and leads the Republican Party, which makes him partisan by definition.
But Trump is more than a party leader. He is the President of the United States, and the presidency contains multitudes. The partisan role is real, yet it is only one piece. The larger duty, the one that actually matters, is leading the whole nation, and that is precisely what a birthday concert for the republic embodies.
Marking 250 years of American independence with music and spectacle is exactly right. John Adams himself imagined the occasion celebrated with “pomp and parade, shows, games, sports, guns, bells, bonfires and illuminations.”
Will Trump deliver some political jabs from the stage? Almost certainly. Would it be better if he stuck to patriotic uplift and skipped the swipes at his opponents? Sure. But that is not his temperament, and it is not the temperature of our politics anyway. Even so, a few presidential barbs cannot drown out what the gathering represents. The republic is bigger than the squabbling of any given week, and it will still be standing long after today’s grievances are forgotten.
This is, in a sense, the entire premise of live music. Conservatives long ago accepted that many of their favorite performers despise them, and they buy the tickets anyway. You sit through a meandering Springsteen sermon about tyranny because you want to hear “Tenth Avenue Freeze Out” roar to life. Liberals, having enjoyed cultural dominance for so long, can scarcely imagine such grace. And so a roster of artists, none of them famous enough to be turning down a national stage, decided that staying home beat sharing an afternoon with the president. That is unpatriotic and foolish. It is also, frankly, lame.
Scripture has a name for this kind of pride dressed up as principle. “Pride goeth before destruction, and an haughty spirit before a fall.” The performers thought they were preserving their dignity. They were forfeiting it.
Learn to Enjoy the Good Things Granting that partisanship is not inherently wicked does not mean every partisan impulse is healthy. One of its ugliest forms appears when people allow political tribalism to blind them to plainly good things, a habit on constant display wherever politics meets entertainment.
Before the musical acts began their retreat, the chatter was about the upcoming UFC bout planned for the White House lawn. Construction on the Octagon began this week, and liberals predictably flooded social media to call it an assault on democracy.
If these critics were arguing honestly, one might counter that a bare-knuckle brawl on the White House lawn is about the most fitting tribute to American democracy imaginable. But honesty is not the motive. If keeping the grounds free of spectacle were really the concern, the same voices would have erupted when the previous administration handed the lawn over to a parade of half-naked activists. The actual objection is to anything bearing even a faint association with Trump.
A cage fight on the South Lawn, a concert on the Mall, these are remarkable spectacles, and the president’s involvement makes them more so, not less. It would be cool under a Democrat. It would be cool under a different Republican.
Some things are simply too enjoyable to surrender to politics. It is why there are conservative Grateful Dead fans and progressives glued to “Yellowstone.” It is why McBride herself did not protest when Americans transformed her song “Independence Day,” written about a woman escaping an abusive home, into a patriotic anthem after September 11.
The song’s writer, Gretchen Peters, has groused about that second life, pointedly noting she donated her royalties from Sean Hannity’s program, which used the song as its theme, to Planned Parenthood. McBride took the opposite path. She performed it flanked by two towering American flags at Farm Aid in 2001, in the raw aftermath of the attacks on the World Trade Center.
She later admitted to “mixed feelings” about that night, not wanting to obscure the song’s original meaning. But she was candid about why she embraced the patriotic reading when she did. The country was reeling, she explained, straining for solidarity, and when she realized the chorus’s plea to “let freedom ring” echoed what the whole nation was feeling, she made her choice.
Some things really are bigger than politics. Americans grasp this instinctively. The president grasps it. There was a time when Martina McBride grasped it too. It is a shame she and her fellow performers managed to forget. Then again, the night is young. Perhaps Trump can ring up Morgan Wallen or Ella Langley instead.
Dear FRiends,
We need your continuing support to keep FR funded. Your donations are our sole source of funding. No sugar daddies, no advertisers, no paid memberships, no commercial sales, no gimmicks, no tax subsidies. No spam, no pop-ups, no ad trackers.
If you enjoy using FR and agree it's a worthwhile endeavor, please consider making a contribution today:
Click here: to donate by Credit Card
Or here: to donate by PayPal
Or by mail to: Free Republic, LLC - PO Box 9771 - Fresno, CA 93794
Thank you very much and God bless you,
Jim
Who the hell chose these clowns? Is this the best they could do? It’s probably a good idea that they pulled out. The boos will really screw up the concert. Silli Vanilli? What the heck?
It’s actually more narcissistic.
As I wrote elsewhere, there is a popular theoretical question - "would you have killed Hitler in the 1930s if you knew what was to come?" Many people answer "yes."
True, we haven't perfected time travel. But then 2020 came along.
I believe many on the left feel the same way about Trump - AND have a hyper (and delusional) elevated sense of their self. Lacking a time machine, the 2020-equivalent question was "would you steal the election by whatever means, to remove Trump from office? Because, ya know, he's Hitler."
We have seen their "yes" for 8 years, culminating in many ways with the assassination attempt.
2020 was a de facto going back in time to kill Hitler. They high-fived each other and BELIEVED they were The Resistance incarnate.
This new dogma - "anything goes if we are morally justified" is an extension of this article:
.... What (liberals) really want is liberal Sharia law, a secular theocracy. The minimum wage, gender equality, nationalized health care, and global warming—whatever their practical virtues—are not just expedient policy prescriptions. They are essential aspects of the liberal fatwa. Feminism, deconstruction, and gender theory are not just academic abstractions up for discussion among liberal academics: They are articles of their religious creed. Question them and you are not just wrong—you are a heretic.
...for them, politics is the means to secular salvation...political failure is not just a setback on the road to a more stable society—it is a blow to their very worldview. Opposition to their program is not just wrong-headed, but evil.
Yes, they are barking mad, but functionally so. They have jobs, live in cities, and associate with like-minded Lost Souls. There is power in numbers. For the most part, since they’re not committing a crime they’re free to wander around.
If Trump retired after 2020 it’d sort of end there. Exceeeeeeept, Trump didn’t slink away. He’s as alive as ever.
The Lost Souls are gonna kick The Crazy up a few notches. These cancellations are them going back into their Time Machine and ignore, cancel, lie, etc and have a 2-Minute Virtue-signaling Hate on Social Media about Trump and his supporters and “kill Hitler 2.p”…so they can feel self-important in between lines of coke.
Clarence Thomas got it right, when he wrote about the protests (threats?) from the Roe leak: "We are becoming addicted to wanting particular outcomes, not living with the outcomes we don't like."
Get out Martina. You have taken country out of country music.
I’m not sure why they would even talk to non-patriots to begin with. They cold play an hour of John Phillip Souza and it would be better, anyhow.
...this was a striking exhibition of both cowardice and confusion. The performers did not flee a politicized event. They politicized it by fleeing....the concert was always going to carry political weight, and their cowardice only added more. Had McBride, Michaels, and the rest simply taken the stage, they would have modeled something Americans desperately need to see, the idea that love of country can sit apart from partisan combat. By bailing, they deepened the very division they pretended to mourn. It was a self-inflicted embarrassment.
“…at something less “politically charged.” “
To the TDS-ers EVERYTHING is politically charged. That’s why Abdul couldn’t keep his fecking mouth shut when a QB did something a gazillion sports personalities have done since the dawn of time.
These are some real Z grade musical acts.
Maybe just play some classic patriotic songs instead .
More here:
https://freerepublic.com/focus/f-chat/4381411/posts
1. Show up and perform. Entertain. Your job. No politics.
2. Can any one of these “top” performers clarify the partisan ideology or agenda that is causing their backing down? Doubtful. Maybe their peers “warned” them that they would appear to be supporting PDJT since he chairs the event. Sounds kinda partisan on their part to me. Weak ass clowns! Do they even know what ‘partisan’ means?
😠🖕
All are well beyond their sell-by dates.......................
Not all of us.
IIRC there is a word for that.... 🤔
I refer to them now as ‘tedexers’ or ‘tedsies’. TDS extremists that is(redundant). Share if you like it. 😊👍
“ the 2020-equivalent question was “would you steal the election by whatever means, to remove Trump from office? Because, ya know, he’s Hitler.””
Stochastic terrorists in the Democrat party and the media have promoted this idea hoping that some weak minded person incited by their rhetoric will take violent action. A few have already.
THE LEFT ARE UN AMERICANS
that’s the big question....
“...there is a word for that....”
-
And what might that be?
when you invite them, you give them an opportunity to reveal themselves ...
Get out Martina. You have taken country out of country music.
She puts the Can’t Understand Normal Thinking, into Country.
Once again they prove why I call democraps “the domestic enemy party”. They have convinced these weak minded low IQ individuals that patriotism for the USA is “partisan” and hating the country is non-partisan.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.