Reference to the US president highlights the importance of Latinos and to the country amid the wave of illegal deportations
Bad Bunny festive energy exudes at a time when it is difficult to celebrate the United States Independence holiday, celebrated on Friday, 4. In its new music video “Nuevayol”the Latin star honors the Porto-Rican diaspora and conveys a moving pro-imigrantes.
Near the end of the video, a voice very similar to that of Donald Trump It comes from a 70’s radio and says: “I made a mistake. I want to apologize to immigrants in America. I mean, the United States. I know America is the whole continent. I want to say that this country is nothing without immigrants. This country is nothing without Mexicans, Dominicans, Porto-Rican, Colombians, Venezuelans, Cubans.” THERolling Stone contacted representatives of the Bad Bunny to clarify if the voice was to be Donald Trump.
It is a powerful message at a time when immigrants in all US are being targeted and deported by force by the Immigration and Customs Service (ICE). On Thursday, Congress approved the so-called “Big Beautiful Bill” Trumpwhich will boost Ice’s power with 10,000 new agents and 100,000 new detention beds. Earlier this week, the US government also inaugurated a new Immigrant Detention Center in Florida, which they nicknamed “Alligator Alcatraz”.
This is not the first time that Bad Bunny denounces the Ice. In June, he shared a video of what seemed to be police officers holding a group of people on the streets. “These children of P*ta are using these cars,” he says Bad Bunny In Spanish while commenting on the images of police apparently taking some people into unidentified cars. “They came here … Children of P*ta instead of leaving people alone and work.”
The music video “Nuevayol” Nor is it the first time that Bad Bunny face Trump. In the middle of 2024 presidential election, the star shared an impactful video in support of his homeland after the comedian Tony Hinchliffe call the territory “garbage” in a rally Trump.
The Porto-Rican Pride of Bad Bunny It is unshakable. Earlier this year, the Latin icon released an album that celebrates a variety of Caribbean genres, I have been taking bad pictures. In an interview with Rolling Stone, Bad Bunny He detailed his fearless approach when it comes to including politics in his music: “People are used to artists who become large and popular and do not express themselves about these things, or if they do, they talk about it in a super careful way,” he said. “But I’ll talk, and who doesn’t like it doesn’t have to hear me.”
+++ Read more: Bad Bunny detonates US immigration agents in Puerto Rico: ‘Children of P ***!’
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Source: Rollingstone

Earl Johnson is a music writer at Gossipify, known for his in-depth analysis and unique perspective on the industry. A graduate of USC with a degree in Music, he brings years of experience and passion to his writing. He covers the latest releases and trends, always on the lookout for the next big thing in music.