Bruce Springsteen, the aging rocker whose glory days are decades behind him, shamelessly hijacked a sold-out concert in Minneapolis to subject paying fans to a three-hour anti-Trump political lecture instead of the entertainment they paid good money to see.
According to reports, the former rock star spent more time bashing President Trump's successful second-term agenda than actually performing the hits that made him famous back when America still cared about his opinion. This is what passes for "entertainment" in liberal circles – forcing captive audiences to endure leftist propaganda.
Social media erupted with disgust over Springsteen's partisan stunt. "He's promoting foreign belief into Americans wave life instead of defending America. He promoting communist socialist agenda," fired back one fed-up patriot on Twitter, perfectly capturing what millions of Americans think about these Hollywood has-beens.
"THIS IS HIS ONLY HOPE OF FILLING A VENUE. HAS BEEN," posted another user, highlighting the sad reality that Springsteen apparently needs Trump Derangement Syndrome to sell tickets these days.
The timing couldn't be more pathetic. Here we have President Trump delivering on his America First promises – securing the border, bringing back jobs, and restoring American strength – while Springsteen whines from his millionaire bubble to folks who just wanted to hear "Born in the USA."
One social media observer noted that Springsteen "doth protest too much," comparing him to failed vice presidential candidate Tim Walz – another fitting comparison between two men who've lost touch with real Americans.
This is exactly why the mainstream entertainment industry is dying. Instead of entertaining fans, these washed-up celebrities think concert tickets give them permission to lecture hardworking Americans about politics. News flash, Bruce: people want music, not your tired liberal talking points.
How many more fans will Springsteen lose before he realizes Americans are sick of being preached to by out-of-touch elites? Or is this really just a desperate attempt to stay relevant in an industry that's passed him by?
