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Revisiting Anti-Bush Protest Music in the Trump Era

Remember "When the President Talks To God"? "American Idiot"? "Son of a Bush"? We do!
Green Day's Billie Joe Armstrong performs during the MTV Video Music Awards Japan 2009 in Saitama, north of Tokyo, May 30, 2009.
Green Day

The day after Donald Trump won the presidency, New Yorkers filled the subway tunnel beneath 14th Street with wall-to-wall post-it notes. The notes contained messages of support, despair and catharsis. One anonymous person scribbled the following: 

It's a common refrain on the left. Music fans want to believe Trump will usher in some golden age of righteous fury in the form of protest rock.

For realists, this is cold comfort: There is enough oppression and violence already for protest-minded music to flourish in Obama's America, and anyway, meaningful art isn't produced when the safety and resources available to marginalized artists are gradually stripped away.

In this area, Trump will not be an aberration from historical norms. Rock and punk bands have been sneering at U.S. presidents for as long as rock and punk have existed. During the Nixon years, Elton John and Neil Young heeded the call with "Postcard From Richard Nixon" and "Ohio," respectively. During the 1980s, hardcore and hip-hop sailed to prominence on a wave of anti-Reagan fury, from D.O.A.'s "Fucked Up Ronnie" to The Damned's "Bad Time for Bonzo" and Prince's "Ronnie Talk to Russia." The 1990s were quieter, but they brought us calling George H.W. Bush a "war pig fuck" on 1992's "Youth Against Fascism," as well as a that mentioned Monica Lewinsky by name.

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