this post was submitted on 09 Feb 2026
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[–] ickplant@lemmy.world 108 points 2 days ago (4 children)

Full text:

Michael Garrett - NC Senate's Viral Statement on the Bad Bunny Halftime Show

I watched Bad Bunny deliver the most American halftime show I have ever seen. Then I came home and watched it again. And I am not okay. In the best possible way.

He sang every single word in Spanish. Every. Single. Word. He danced through sugarcane fields built on a football field in California while the President of the United States sat somewhere calling it “disgusting.” Lady Gaga came out and did the salsa. Ricky Martin lit up the night. A couple got married on the field. He handed his Grammy, the one he won eight days ago for Album of the Year, to a little boy who looked up at him the way every child looks up when they dare to believe the world has a place for them.

And then this man, this son of a truck driver and a schoolteacher from Vega Baja, Puerto Rico, stood on the biggest stage on the planet and said “God bless America.”

And then he started naming them.

Chile. Argentina. Uruguay. Paraguay. Bolivia. Peru. Ecuador. Brazil. Colombia. Venezuela. Panama. Costa Rica. Nicaragua. Honduras. El Salvador. Guatemala. Mexico. Cuba. Dominican Republic. Jamaica. The United States. Canada. And then, his voice breaking with everything he carries, “Mi patria, Puerto Rico. Seguimos aquí.” My homeland, Puerto Rico. We are still here.

The flags came. Every single one of them. Carried across that field by dancers and musicians while the jumbotron lit up with the only words that mattered: “THE ONLY THING MORE POWERFUL THAN HATE IS LOVE.”

I teared up. I’m not ashamed to say it. I sat on my couch and I wept because THAT is the America I believe in. That is the American story, not the sanitized, gated, English-only version that small and frightened people try to sell us. The REAL one. The messy, beautiful, multilingual, multicolored, courageous one. The one that has always been built by hands that speak every language and pray in every tongue and come from every corner of this hemisphere.

That is the America I want Jack and Charlotte to know. That when the moment came, when the whole world was watching, a Puerto Rican kid who grew up to become the most-streamed artist on Earth stood in front of 100 million people, sang in his mother’s language, blessed every nation in the Americas, and spiked a football that read “Together, we are America” into the ground. Not with anger. With joy. With love so big it made hate look exactly as small as it is.

And what did the President do? He called it “absolutely terrible.” He said “nobody understands a word this guy is saying.” He called it “a slap in the face to our Country.” The leader of the free world watched a celebration of love, culture, and everything this hemisphere has given to the world, and all he could see was something foreign. Something threatening. Something disgusting.

Let that sink into your bones.

The man who is supposed to represent all of us looked at the flags of our neighbors, heard the language of 500 million Americans across this hemisphere, and felt attacked. That’s not strength. That’s not patriotism. That is poverty of the soul.

And then there was the Turning Point show. Kid Rock in a college arena in North Dakota. Three million viewers watching a man who once wrote a song about liking underage girls perform as the “family-friendly” alternative to a Puerto Rican artist celebrating love. They called it the “All-American Halftime Show”, as if America has a velvet rope. As if this country belongs to some of us and not all of us. As if you need to sing in English to count.

Here’s what I want to say to everyone who posted about that show tonight, who shared it proudly, who turned away from Bad Bunny’s celebration because it was in Spanish and the flags weren’t only red, white, and blue:

Your children will see those posts. Your grandchildren will find them. The internet doesn’t forget. And one day, when the history of this moment is written, when our kids and their kids look back at 2026 the way we look back at the people who stood on the wrong side of every bridge and every march and every moment that mattered, they will know exactly where you stood. They will see who chose Kid Rock over a hemisphere of flags. They will see who called love “disgusting.” And they will carry that knowledge the way all of us carry the knowledge of what our ancestors did when they were tested.

I don’t say that with anger. I say it with sadness. Because hate is an inheritance nobody asks for, and yet it gets passed down just the same.

Bad Bunny didn’t say “ICE out” tonight. He didn’t need to. He just showed the whole world what America looks like when we are not afraid of each other. When culture is shared, not policed. When language is music, not a threat. When a flag from every nation in this hemisphere can walk across a football field together and the only words you need are the ones he gave us:

The only thing more powerful than hate is love.

Over 100 million people saw that tonight.

And no Truth Social post can take it away.

[–] THB@lemmy.world 17 points 2 days ago (2 children)

I wish the people that need to see this would actually read it.

[–] SubArcticTundra@lemmy.ml 5 points 2 days ago (1 children)

The only way they are going to see this text is if they encounter it offline. Battling with the algorithms is futile. I've moved to only discussing politics offline ie. in the pub/on the street/etc

[–] stringere@sh.itjust.works 4 points 2 days ago (1 children)

I've moved to only discussing politics offline ie. in the pub

For someone who's third place was almost always bars and clubs, quitting drinking really curtailed my social life. I've gone to bars since quitting and there's just no draw for me there now. Turns out not all bar friends are non-bar friends, not shocked but sad.

[–] SubArcticTundra@lemmy.ml 4 points 2 days ago (1 children)

I'm currently living/working in a hostel which is a great sober third place

[–] stringere@sh.itjust.works 3 points 2 days ago (2 children)

That sounds awesome. Not so much an option for a suburban dad in the midwest, though. :)

[–] Spot@startrek.website 4 points 1 day ago (1 children)

As I go to type it, boy it sounds nerdy. Doin' it anyway.

Our library has different meetup groups, DND, board game, gardening, book clubs of course, etc. They also separate kids, teens adults; might be a place to at least poke around to find out where/what other locals are doing.

[–] stringere@sh.itjust.works 2 points 1 day ago

Thanks for that. NERD! Kidding aside I'll be making a couple trips to the library this week to use the printer. I'll look into it. If squirrel brain remembers I'll try to come back and let you know hoe it goes.

[–] SubArcticTundra@lemmy.ml 1 points 1 day ago (1 children)

Ah, understandable :/ Yes, I am an as of yet unburdened 23yo

[–] stringere@sh.itjust.works 2 points 1 day ago (1 children)

Met one of my best friends in Seattle when he was stayimg at a hostel. They really are a great system. I hope your next 23 years see the creation of a better world than the one we're fighting against at the moment.

[–] SubArcticTundra@lemmy.ml 2 points 1 day ago

Thank you. And yes, hostels rock

[–] moondoggie@lemmy.world 1 points 1 day ago

Any of them who did have probably already sent him death threats

[–] Paradachshund@lemmy.today 7 points 1 day ago

Really good speech. Thanks for posting the whole thing!

[–] altphoto@lemmy.today 6 points 1 day ago

callate y toma mi voto!

Shut up and take my vote.

I'm going to recite this to my kids. What Michael Garrett said, not what I said. I'm not giving my kids my vote, they're crazy.

[–] lmmarsano@lemmynsfw.com -4 points 2 days ago

Did you know it is possible to set text in the body of a post?
screenshot of form Create Post marking the field label Body
A link to source (where the screenshot of pure text came from?) could have gone in the field labelled URL. It's still possible with edit.
screenshot of Post Actions menu with Edit selected