10 comments

  1. There’s nothing racist about it. Also, it reminded me of my home town Snohomish, WA. Word got out that antifa was coming to town. The residents lined the main street holding their rifles. Nobody was hurt. They just made a showing and antifa turned around and left.

  2. How could anyone find something racist in this song? I guess I don’t listen to enough news to know what’s going on, lol, I’m very happy with my small town views and ways thank you very much! God Bless!

  3. I’m baffled as to why anyone would think this was a racist song? The vast majority of rioters and protesters where white folks, a fact that can also be seen clearly in the footage used in this video.

    Here where I live the city council basically shut down the town to accommodate a BLM group from out of town, going so far as to send them free pizzas. The somewhat wry joke is that they were 80% out of town white folks. The black folks here actually owned the businesses that were shut down.

    As for “trying that in a small town,” well it depends on your small town. If you have the support and common sense from your leadership, you can fight back and defend your property. If you don’t have that well, you just can’t fight city hall. People in this neck of the woods faced arrest for not complying with protesters and rioters.

  4. The hot new fad in the echo chamber is talking about “sundown towns,” like this is some kind of contemporary institution (the new new Jim Crow, just in time for another election cycle where they will invoke the culture wars to distract everyone from the fact that the leader of the free world is visibly senile, the economy is garbage, and they are deploying national guardsmen to Europe). Now that I have mentioned it to you, you will see references to sundown towns everywhere. Some identity politics thought leader has put together a crowd-sourced database of “sundown towns” across the US, similar to the propaganda that the Southern Poverty Law Center cranks out. Now there are YouTube videos where far-left types drive around totally normal small towns and act traumatized like they might run into the Klan at the Waffle House or something. While the song seems innocuous to anyone who has ever listened to even a single country song, to them it is tailor-made for the latest manufactured and focus-grouped outrage du jour.

    • Good to hear from you. I’ve heard that term . From the reaction videos and comments on YouTube , most people, especially Black people, agree with this sentiment.

Leave a reply to Anonymous Cancel reply