Hank WIlliams Jr....speaks the truth about the usureper in teh WH!

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Are you ready for some political commentary?


Country legend Hank Williams Jr. played to a crowd of nearly 8,500 at the Iowa State Fair Grandstand on Friday night.

You might recall, criticism of President Barack Obama on a Fox News program last year led to ESPN dropping Williams’ “Monday Night Football” theme song after 22 years. Friday, Williams shot barbs at Obama, ESPN and “Fox & Friends” in his opening song “Keep the Change” before launching into “All My Rowdy Friends Are Coming Over Tonight,” the basis for the “Monday Night Football” theme.

Williams was lively and over-the-top, strolling the stage, strumming his guitar, sawing on his fiddle and hammering on the piano during a nearly two-hour set.

Performing is in Williams’ blood, and the lineage of talent was on clear display.

He paid tributes to those roots, telling the crowd stories of growing up in a house where it wasn’t unusual to find Fats Domino, Johnny Cash, Jerry Lee Lewis, Elvis Presley and others over for dinner. Williams showed a knack for mimicry, performing a version of his dad’s “Your Cheatin’ Heart” as in the style of Domino and a version of Lewis’ “Whole Lotta Shakin’ Goin’ On” that included Williams playing the piano with both his boots and his booty.

He unapologetically refers to himself as a dinosaur, as evidenced by the song of the same name. Of course, “Dinosaur” was written when he was 30, and Williams is 63 now. He’s made it a long way for a supposedly extinct animal, and from the vitality he showed Friday night, he will likely survive another age or two.

He also used the song as a great segue to his dad’s “There’s a Tear in My Beer.” Even though he’s been gone nearly 60 years, Hank Williams still casts a long shadow.

Junior is clearly his own man, but he’s wisely not running from his legacy. The younger Williams is just one of a generation of country singers who owe as much to Hank Williams as rock singers owe to Elvis.

For a good portion of the concert, it seemed like Williams had moved beyond issues of politics and was putting the focus on the Bocephus party. But those made their way back into the show in a much more straightforward way later in the set.

Following the song “We Don’t Apologize for America,” a chant of “USA, USA” broke out among the crowd. Williams smiled, telling the crowd that he was their mouthpiece and adding:

“We’ve got a Muslim president who hates farming, hates the military, hates the U.S., and we hate him!”

The cheers that followed were loud and enthusiastic.


Williams closed his set with an extended rendition of “Family Tradition” before performing a segment of Kris Kristofferson’s “If You Don’t Like Hank Williams,” letting the world know that if you don’t like his dad, or him, or Johnny Cash or Kid Rock, Van Halen or others, you can kiss his … (the part of him he used to play piano earlier. And not his boots).
 
It seems to be a habbit among those who truely love liberty. Lies and deception are all that spews forth from the lips of those who do not!
 
Sounds like he did a great job at pandering to the redneck, married to their sister bigots that frequent his venue. Much like Perg who panders to the lonely can't find a man because they're fucked up women on Lit.
 
Though further study is warranted at least one interdisciplinary research study demonstrated that steady, ongoing Whiskey drinking helps dampen the negative long-term effects of cocaine use.

If true Mr. Williams has that going for him.
 
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