TR 668 - Exposing Hidden Messages in the Half-Time Show & the Democrats "Soft" Civil War
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Losing sucks.
Watching the Super Bowl yesterday was painful. I’d gone into it hoping to watch Patrick Mahomes make history by leading the Chiefs to a three-in-a-row victory. The reality that played out was hard to watch, as the Eagles defense stomped the piss out of the Chief’s offensive line and made Mahomes look like a school boy.
At any rate, that wasn’t even the worst of it.
Everything from opening with the so-called “Black National Anthem”—which I thought sucked, but honestly didn’t realize that’s what it was—to the worst half-time show in Superbowl history, featuring an all-black cast jerking around sporadically while some punk mumbled into the microphone about “colonizers” and how “they ain’t like us,” the entire thing seemed to be an in-your-face display of divisiveness.
Not shown on TV was the fact that Travis Kelce took a knee during the National Anthem (which was butchered by another black singer who, rather than singing the song as it is, decided to put his cultural ‘spin’ on the song, thereby ruining it for millions of Americans), the fact that Taylor Swift was mercilessly booed by the crowd, and that at some point Donald Trump simply got up and walked out of the game.
It was the worst Super Bowl ever.
In my mind, this was the left flexing the fact that they still have a firm grip on the media, the NFL, and many other of the mainstream institutions of American culture. Underneath that, I believe this was a very direct attempt to stir up racial tensions.
Because what else do the Democrats have in their playbook, right?
Right on cue, MSNBC is pushing this garbage:
‘Potentially devastating’: gutting of federal workforce hits Black America hardest
But wait, there’s more:
* Trump's America First policies spark concern among Black Americans
* Trump's America First agenda poses challenges for Black Americans
* Black Americans express fears, resolve after Trump's victory
* Trump's policies and their impact on Black communities
* How Bad Things Are About to Get For Black People - The Root
* Trump's policies: A threat to civil rights and Black Americans
Have you had enough of it yet?
How about the NFL Superbowl ad that featured a black female running over the top of and humiliating a bunch of ignorant white brutes? Did you catch that one?
Are you locked onto the theme here?
Over at The Hill this morning, they offer to illuminate the “6 hidden messages” in Kendrick Lamar’s pathetic half-time performance—all of which I’m sure 99% of Americans missed, because a) they’ve not been indoctrinated into so-called “black culture,” and b) because they couldn’t understand a damn thing he was saying.
In the spirit of diversity, let’s let the educated crackers over at The Hill elevate our cultural awareness. Here are the cultural cues you probably missed:
* Samuel Jackson, dressed as Uncle Sam, was actually playing an Uncle Tom, which “refers to Black Americans who turn their backs on the Black community and culture and willingly embrace subservience to white Americans.” No doubt this is a dig to the millions of black Americans who voted for Donald Trump.
* The performance was really all about “the revolution,” with Lamar rapping about how “the revolution is about to be televised; you picked the right time but the wrong guy.” While other more notable rappers have endorsed Trump, this jackass certainly isn’t one of them, which makes The Hill just giddy.
* For those who didn’t catch it, the entire stage setup was meant to depict black people dancing around in a prison yard. “As the rapper and his all-Black dancers spun around the field, it soon became clear they were performing in a prison yard. The set was designed to highlight the issue of mass incarceration and the racial disparities of those behind bars.”
* While some people were praising the Red, White, and Blue colors of their outfits, the message being portrayed was that America was founded by a bunch of racists. “At one point during the line-up, the dancers all bent forward, lifting their backs in the air… the move was meant to indicate how America was built on the backs of Black Americans during slavery.”
Shortly after, the dancers separated, standing in two groups on either side of Lamar. The image of the divided flag seemed to speak to political divisions around the nation, to which Lamar alludes with the line, “it’s a cultural divide.”
It is in fact a cultural divide.
It is an intentional cultural divide, just like all the LGBT nonsense and the despicable DEI agenda. Right in the middle of the Super Bowl, an event which brings Americans of every stripe and color together to watch and celebrate the phenomenal performance of athletes of every stripe and color, the NFL trots out a mid-grade rapper to insult the American people and stoke racial division.
Tennis star Serena Williams strutted onto the stage — “crip walking” no less — during the performance of Lamar’s song “Not Like Us,” which The Hill informs us was a “diss” to her ex-boyfriend (as if anyone gives a f*ck about that). But what this lesson in cultural enrichment failed to emphasize, was the lyrics of the song:
Ayy, Mustard on the beat, hoDeebo any rap nigga, he a free throwMan down, call an amberlamps, tell him, "Breathe, bro"Nail a nigga to the cross, he walk around like TeezoWhat's up with these jabroni-ass niggas tryna see Compton?The industry can hate me, f**k 'em all and they mamaHow many opps you really got? I mean, it's too many optionsI'm finna pass on this body, I'm John StocktonBeat your ass and hide the Bible if God watchin'
That’s some pretty wholesome stuff, but it gets even better:
Once upon a time, all of us was in chainsHomie still doubled down callin' us some slavesAtlanta was the Mecca, buildin' railroads and trainsBear with me for a second, let me put y'all on gameThe settlers was usin' townfolk to make 'em richerFast-forward, 2024, you got the same agenda…No, you not a colleague, you a f****n' colonizerThe family matter and the truth for the matterIt was God's plan to show y'all the liar
“You a f****n’ colonizer”
How’s that for some All-American poetry? I love how in Lamar’s twisted mind it’s “God’s plan” to show whitey their wicked ways.
Now, today, as if it was somehow divinely orchestrated, we have a sympathetic Black Pastor out of Chattanooga, Tennessee openly calling for violence:
“And I will say to you beloved, no one likes violence, but sometimes, violence is necessary. When Elon Musk forces his way into the United States Treasury and threatens to steal your personal information and your social security check, there is the possibility of violence.
Sometimes the devil will act so ugly that you have no other choice but to get violent and fight.”
Of course, being the wise man of God that he is, Reverend Steve Claudle he stops any critics in their tracks by invoking the Word of God (sort of):
“Well, someone might say, Reverend you know you shouldn’t be talking about violence. This isn’t the Christian thing to do. Well, I will say why not talk this way, because Jesus did. Jesus said in this verse, didn’t he? The kindgom of heaven suffers violence, and the violent take it by force. The kingdom of God is a warzone. It is a battlefield. You did know this, right?”
This man has 40 years in ministry and a Doctor of Ministry Leadership degree from New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary, so surely he knows what he’s talking about, right? Obviously I’m joking, but this whole kerfuffle does illustrate the slippery slope of religious beliefs and division I’ve been hammering on lately.
People who believe they are speaking for God can convince themselves of anything, and the people























