Translation: “America would be wonderful if only there weren’t any Americans in America.”
Who IS this dipstick?
Dean is really shoring up his share of the vote in the Vanderbilt faculty.
NRA supporters are the worst of America? Really??
How many shootings are carried out by NRA members?
How many shootings are carried out by mentally ill people?
How many by youth gangs in our big cities such as Chicago?
How many by feral people such as gangs?
How many by MS13 and other international criminal organizations??
Enemy combatant. Okay.
What an *sshole.
The NRA is the only thing preventing the USA from becoming a Leftist dictatorship.
I wonder if Will Hoge knows who the “Dixie Chicks” used to be. If this treasonous loser has any talent or potential at all, he need to apologize profusely and then step off the political stage for the rest of his career. The alternative is to simply end his career - and I wonder if that might be the plan.
Gaydar pegged
If they all fell in a hole in the Earth, I would gladly toss them bags of lead.
Country music was lost long ago.
Will Hoge, never heard of her...But she looks like a ballchinian...
A real POS:
I know some of yall feel that my posts have become too political. My apologies. In an attempt at an olive branch, please help me select which of these 2 looks you would prefer for the tour for the new album starting Sept. 18th. Thanks yall. #myamericandream
Then he posts two identical photos, showing him in Have A NIKE Day T shirts
Rolling Stone recently chatted with the outspoken Hoge - who also called for the removal of the Confederate flag in “Still a Southern Man” - about his new song, the NRA and why the country music industry is reluctant to have a dialogue about guns and the Second Amendment.
Were you scared to write a song that’s so explicitly political?
Hoge - I don’t think so. There’s a Cesar Cruz quote that hangs in my wife’s office that helps a bunch in these moments: “Art should comfort the disturbed and disturb the comfortable.” When I have doubts, or fears, or questions, that always shines a bit of a light.
Do you think there will eventually be more artists who will begin to speak out publicly on gun control?
Hoge - Not every artist needs to be Bob Dylan or Woody Guthrie. We need good country heartbreak and whiskey songs. So I truly do understand the artist who doesn’t talk about politics and just wants to be an artist that entertains. That’s totally fine with me. The issue is the artists who do want to say something being chastised for it. If someone has something to say that is well thought-out and educated and is going to provoke an actual conversation, they should feel comfortable doing that. To have a genre of music where people don’t even feel comfortable being able to have that conversation, whether they’re pro-gun or anti-gun, it’s a sad place to operate from as an artist. Hopefully that starts to change. [Woody Guthrie was a Communist according to his longtime friend Pete Seeger.]
Are you hopeful that it might actually change?
Hoge - You do start to hear more and more people who are, at least in their own small circles, starting to say, ‘Man, this is really scary. My guns wouldn’t have helped at all in [Las Vegas].’ So that’s a least a small step in the right direction.
Why did you zero in on the phrase “thoughts and prayers” as a way to discuss this topic?
Hoge - “Thoughts and prayers” is not a replacement for something actionable that would help keep our fellow Americans and our children safe. I’m curious how these politicians even sleep at night or how they look their kids and grandkids in the eyes anymore.
How deep are cultural ties between guns and country music? Is that why this is so hard to talk about?
Hoge - That’s part of it. It’s incredibly ingrained in the culture down here. I think as Americans, we live in a gun culture, whether we like it or not. As a gun owner myself, I’m not anti-gun, but there are just logical things we need to do. [He’s a FUDD.]
Before Las Vegas, were you aware of NRA Country, the subset of the NRA that forms partnerships with country singers?
Hoge - I’m very anti-NRA, and I had thought I had made that abundantly clear personally and career-wise, but I had been approached by NRA Country about featuring one of my songs, “Strong,” and I wasn’t willing to do that. That’s not an organization I want anything to do with.
Do you have friends in the business who have worked with NRA Country?
Hoge - I do, and it’s tough. When you’re a young artist and you can’t get anybody to even review your record, you look at it like, ‘Hey, here’s a marketing opportunity for me to get in front of millions of country music fans.’ I think that’s innocent for a lot of people. They’re hunters or they’re sportsman and they enjoy shooting, and there’s nothing wrong with that, but it’s exploitative in a lot of ways. The NRA uses you and your image and your music to go out and spout their B.S.
How would you summarize what you are trying to communicate with “Thoughts & Prayers”?
Hoge - This song is really just me working out my own frustrations about our grossly negligent elected officials and about a fear-mongering, bully organization like the NRA. They are the worst things about America: a rich organization, led by horrible people, preying on some of the best people in our country with fear and lies, just to grow their own profits. I’ve got to believe that at some point all responsible gun owners will see what a sham that organization truly is. So, if there are any hopes for me in this song, I’d suppose it is that: that maybe just more common-sense gun owners will speak up and stop being used by people who, in the end, care nothing about us or our families.
A country music star ranting about the evil of the NRA and gun ownership is akin to a hip hop singer telling his audience they need to stop smoking weed, go back to school, use birth control and get off welfare.
The only way I can think of to respond to this dipstick, since I have no idea who he is, is to make a contribution to the NRA. (I have been a life member since 1978.) At least he’s not advocating for the execution of all members as I have heard in the past.
Sounds like a nutcase who needs some serious mental help.