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July 12, 2025 38 mins
Is Superman Still Our Hero or Just Another Pawn in the Culture War?

Superman: Stand for Truth, Fly For Freedom

https://gorightnews.com/is-superman-still-our-hero-or-just-another-pawn-in-the-culture-war

https://rumble.com/v6w2b1y-is-superman-still-our-hero-or-just-another-pawn-in-the-culture-war.html

https://youtu.be/DRHo98wXfjs?si=ZE5aZb_UtBCOy3y0

https://www.spreaker.com/episode/is-superman-still-our-hero-or-just-another-pawn-in-the-culture-war--66953432

🗣️ #GoRight with Peter Boykin Commentary

Is Superman a Hero or Another Victim of Our Culture War, or Both?

Here’s my take: Superman is bigger than politics. He is bigger than Gunn, Cain, or me. He is not the property of the Right or the Left. He is a symbol of what we wish we could be: strong, honest, selfless, and unafraid to stand up for the little guy. If you want the “old Superman,” there are thousands of comics, shows, and movies waiting for you. But do not let your outrage keep you from seeing a new one. Maybe you will like it. Perhaps you will hate it. But at least watch it before you scream.

The real danger is not an “immigrant Superman.” The real danger is a society so addicted to knee-jerk reactions that we cannot sit together like Johnny Carson’s audience and share a laugh or a hero without tearing each other apart.

If Superman Fails Because We Made Him Political, What Hope Do We Have Left?

If #Superman fails because both sides cannot stop screaming politics at a movie about an alien farm boy in a cape, then what hope do we really have left for any part of our culture? Can we not appreciate things for what they are on the surface?

Remember this, my fellow citizens of this Constitutional Republic: everything leads back to politics. They all know it. Radicals, whether they wear a donkey or an elephant pin, know exactly how to push your buttons. They want you distracted, bickering about nonsense while they sneak through massive spending, secret surveillance expansions, or backroom deals that strip more freedom away from We the People.

Do not fall for it. Stay sharp. Stay focused. Do not be fooled. Is it not time to let entertainment be entertainment again? Without conflict, we do not get great storytelling. Marvel’s greatest arcs, mutants hunted by fearful governments, echoes of Nazi Germany, Civil War plots, came from exploring exactly these tensions. The same is true for DC’s new universe, Gods and Monsters.

Metahumans coming into the light. An alien like Superman is doing good, but terrifying the public when misinformation poisons the truth. Sound familiar? That is the real politics here: a world struggling to admit it is no longer in charge when power evolves.

Here is the truth from me: I have heard and seen that Superman is awesome. Just ignore the clickbait. Ignore the political saboteurs who wanted it to flop before it ever hit the screen. This film is truer to the comics than we have seen in a long time. Go see it. I know I will many times.

Too many people, like Dean Cain and the outrage mob, talk before they know the full story. Too many are fooled by clickbait headlines that they did not even finish reading. I did watch it, and I will tell you myself: it is not “woke.” It is not some leftist manifesto. It is a comic book movie about an immigrant from Krypton whose very existence rewrites the rules for humanity. That is it. And that is everything.

If Superman Flops Over Fake Outrage, What Does That Say About Us

If Superman fails because both sides cannot stop screaming politics at a film about an alien farm boy saving Earth, then what hope do we really have left for honest entertainment? Here is the twist: it is not failing. Despite all the noise, the first wave of reactions shows the opposite.

Early word? The new Superman movie from James Gunn is out, and it is getting widespread acclaim. Real audiences, real ticket buyers, are praising the movie for being the closest thing in years to the hopeful, big-hearted Superman we remember. David Corenswet is getting praise for truly being Superman. People describe it as a mix of action, heart, and classic superhero energy that could reboot DC’s cinematic mess into something real again.
Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:08):
And supermans. Still our hero are just an overpawn in
the cultural war. There's a story I often tell when
folks ask why I do what I do with hashtag
go right with Peter Boykin. It's about Johnny Carson and
an age before algorithms decided who we were allowed to
laugh at. Carson was America's king of late night. He

(00:33):
had everyone Democrats, Republicans, and the apolitical tuning in every
night because he never tipped his hand. He cracked a
joke about Carter one night, Reagan the next, but he
never told you how to vote. He brought us together,
one monologue at a time. It's been said that Carson

(00:56):
refused to pick a side because once you do, you
lose half your audience. He believed entertainment was an island,
one place where a divided constitutional republic could share a
lath without a fight. He was a uniter, not a divider.
So it begs the question, did James Gunn just make

(01:18):
Johnny Carson's mistake in reverse? We'll be right back with
hashtag go right with Peter boy Thanks for tuning in.

(02:04):
Remember we fight for what's right, because it's time to
go right, Go right. Welcome back, to hashtag go right

(02:29):
with Peter Boykin. You can also check out this article
and more on go writnews dot com. So we'll start
with entertainment and culture. James Gunn's Superman sparks the cultural war.
James Gunn, the bold new creative mind behind DC's next Superman,
has openly declared that Superman is an immigrant story. A

(02:50):
lot of people didn't like that. Gunn told The Hollywood
Reporter and Variety that the Man of Steel is quote
an immigrant that came from other places and populated the country,
framing the legendary Supernarrow as a stand in for America's
immigrant black vote, a child from nowhere given a chance

(03:10):
by good hearted Americans to become a hero for everyone.
Gun's vision leans into an uncomfortable truth that some would
rather ignore. Superman has always been the ultimate outsider. He
was launched from a dying Krypton by desperate parents, hoping
he would survive. He crashed landed in Kansas, where Paul

(03:31):
and Ma Kit raised him not as an alien, but
as their son. That is, that is, an immigrant. Wherever
the word offends people or not, gun says his goal
is not to drag Superman into political squabbles or scrabbles,
but to remind us of something simpler, basic human kindness.

(03:54):
In his words, it is about a hero who is
uniquely good and a world that has forgotten how to before.
He admits some people may twist that message to fit
their talking points. We've seen it both on the right
and the left, but he insists the core message is
bigger than any politician sound by. Yet the backlash was inevitable.

(04:16):
Former Superman actor Dean Kane slammed guns comments as a
quote mistake. During an interview with TMC. He warned that
framing Superman is an immigrant risk turning the hero into
a symbol of open borders and Hollywood rewriting timeless characters
to please social media moms. Kane argued, quote, we can't

(04:38):
have everybody, society will fail. I mean he's talking about
the immigration issue. I agree with all that, but he
did push the idea that leaning too hard into the
immigrant symbolism risked losing the American essence that made Superman iconic.
Now he's not alone. A chunk of fandom sees this
as part of a bigger trend class heroes retooled to

(05:01):
match modern ideologies, which they feel dilute the original charm.
These critics point back to Superman's golden age. World War
II covers with Superman's smashing swatsikas, radio shows that the
man is still battling fascism. TV shows opening with the
booming line fights a never ending battle for truth justice.

(05:25):
In the American way, it was straightforward, patriotic, an easy
to rally on behind in a divided world. But here's
the irony they miss. That slogan itself has never been
set in stone. Superman's motto has evolved to match the
moment after World War II and through the Cold War.

(05:48):
Quote the American way midt fighting communism and standing for freedom.
By the nineteen seventies, it shifted to truth, justice and
peace for all mankind to reflect a growing push for
civil rights. In modern comics, the slogan is now truth, justice,
and a better tomorrow. Why Because Superman is no longer

(06:09):
just an American hero. He is a symbol of pope
that crosses borders language and politics. And while the political
pundits bicker, early reactions paint a different picture. Reviews so
far show most fans did not see quote a woke lecture.
I didn't they say the Superman, they saw the Superman,

(06:32):
they remember, larger than life, moral to the core. I
mean my golf and maybe what we need right and
maybe what we need right, folks. Crowds are clapping, Critics
praise this new Superman. David Corn sweats nothing's wrong, name wrong,
but as an authentic and heartfelt Superman. Even skeptics like

(06:57):
Tim Poole had met eight out of ten not quote,
not even remotely political. And fans roared when mister terrific
showed up. It's a black man, you know, but he's
always been in the comics. They loved it. So maybe
Gun did not start a cultural war after all. Maybe
he just reminded us that a good story does not

(07:19):
have to pick signs. It just has to make us
believe a man can fly and do the right thing
when the world needs it most. And if that makes
us feel uncomfortable, maybe that says more about us than
it does about the guy kin. There's a word in

(07:41):
the there's a line in the movie about maybe that's
the true punk rob. So let's talk about where where
did Superman come from? And we're not just talking about, oh,
he came from Crypto either, where he went came from
pipes Mara, Pips Mara. I know where Superman came from.
Now let's talk about the good story, folks. Superman was
not born in a Hollywood board round. He was dreamed

(08:04):
up in the hearts of two young sons of Jewish immigrants,
Jerry Siegel and Joe Schuster, who grew up during the
Great Depression watching fascism sweep Europe. They gave America a hero,
a not to conquer the world, but to protect it
from itself. I mean it reminds me of you know,

(08:25):
the Superman with Christopher Reeves and his peace and he
went to go in world pick peace by grabbing all
the nuclear weapons. And when they introduced him in Ash
Comics number one in nineteen thirty eight, his tagline said,
it all a physical marvel, a mental wonder. Superman is

(08:45):
destined to reshape the destiny of a world. And then
he did. He was not just a patriotic mascot. He
was a moral compass from the start. I mean, remember,
this is Superman. He doesn't directly kill anybody. Batman kind
of lives by that code as well. Now, from the start,
Superman was more than American. He was an outsider, literally

(09:11):
an alien adopted into an American dream by humble Kansas farmers.
He became a symbol of what happens when everyday Americans
opened their doors to the stranger, the orphan, the refugee,
and help them become something greater. That immigrant parable was
not radical. It was the embodiment of our constitutional or

(09:34):
public's promise equal opportunity, liberty, and a duty to use
our power for good. By World War II, Superman's mission
was unmistakable. Comic books showed him punching Hitler and the
Jawl long before the US government officially stepped into the fight.
He urged Americans to buy war bonds, conserve resources, and

(09:57):
believe we could defeat evil if we stood united. He
was an unapologic piece of wartime propaganda, and Americans loved
him for it. And I'll remind you we had Captain
America as well, doing the same thing Putch and Nazis,
Munch and Hitler. As the Cold War dawned, Superman's motto

(10:18):
evolved truth justice in the American way. He was no
longer just battling gangsters and mad scientists. He was a
bulwark against communist tyranny, a bright red cape, waving defiantly
at the red well the Iron Curtain. In a world
grouped by nuclear dread, Superman reassured Americans that good could

(10:43):
triumph over oppression. In the nineteen seventies, amid Vietnam and Watergate,
Superman's message softened again. TV cartoons and comics pitched him
in the next generation with a wire lens, truth, justice,
and peace for all mankind. The civil rights movement had
redefined America's soul, and Superman adjusted with him, pushing kids

(11:07):
to see that real heroism meant protecting all people, regardless
of orders are colored. By the two thousands, Superman had
become so universal the writers explored what it meant for
him to be a citizen of Earth and Action Comics
nine hundred, he famously renounced his formal American citizenship to

(11:29):
show that his battles were not about US foreign policy.
They were about the dignity of human life everywhere. It
stirred controversy, but the message was clear. Superman's values were
born in Smallville, but belonged to the world. His slogan
changed again in the twenty twenties. Now it is truth, Justice,

(11:50):
and a better tomorrow. Now Critics argue it waters down patriotism.
Fans say it modernizes a hero whose fight has always
been bigger than any flag. But one thing remains. Superman's
story has never been static it was, It's been bent
and shifted with America's struggle to balance national pride and

(12:13):
universal human rights. If you want proof of how enduring
Superman's act American roots are, just look at his ongoing
tug of war between pop culture and politics. When someone
calls him too global or too woke, Remember, Superman punched
Nazis before most people knew where Berlin was. He fought

(12:34):
racist and warmong others in the pages of comics when
it was too risky to do so. But he did it.
And he did it not to divide America, but to
remind us who we could be when we lived up
to our founding nineties. In the end, America's home is Crypto,

(12:57):
his heart is in Kansas, and his duty as to
the truth, justice, and whatever version of the American way
we choose to defend for the next generation. And if
that is not the perfect symbol of our constitutional republic
built on liberty and personal responsibility, what is.

Speaker 2 (13:18):
So?

Speaker 1 (13:19):
What does it mean for our constitutional republic. In our
constitutional republic, we're supposed to stand up for all speech,
even speech that rattles our comfort zones. Remember the whole
thing of I might disagree with what you say, but
all defend your right to say it. The First Amendment
is not just some relic for dusty courtrooms. It is

(13:40):
a guardrail that lets us argue, disagree, mock, praise, and
still walk away as neighbors. At the end of the day,
a movie about an alien in a red cape should
not send us into a civil war. But here we
are ripping at each other's throats over whoever Superman should
be called an immigrant, as if that single word can
rewrite the Constitution. It cannot. Words alone do not break

(14:05):
our republic. Ignorance does gun. Superman reminds us of America
has always been a story of immigrants. That's not radical.
That's a historical fact, from pilgrims to pioneers, from Ellis
Island to the southern border today. Yeah, our greatness was
built by people from somewhere else who dreamed bigger than

(14:26):
tyranny would allow. Superman is an immigrant by design, an
or friend from Grypton taken in by Kansas farmers. He
grows that this is important. He grows up respecting America's laws,
It's people, and its fragile balance of power. He does
not replace our values, He embodies them at their best,

(14:50):
true justice, the American way. These are the principles that
hold up our constitutional republic. If you fear they are
being watered down by Hollywood or mischuge for clicks, your
solution is not rage tweeting. It is standing firm for
the real American way. Freedom of fault, robust debate, equal

(15:12):
application of the wall, and the right to choose your
heroes for yourself and a free republic. You have the
right to see Superman however you wish, a Kansas farm boy,
a universal Savior are just a fun blockbuster to escape
from our daily chaos. But you do not have the

(15:32):
right to demand everyone else see him your way alone.
That is not conservatism, That is censorship. So the next
time Hollywood tries to spend a legend, or the next
time the mob screams woke over a costume, take a breath,
Take a breather, take a chill pill super breath. Ask yourself,

(15:54):
is this the hill worth fighting for fighting on? Are
they just distracting me from the real corruption, the real
threats to our freedoms creeping in While they argue about
a movie poster, I mean a cartoon. Superman's story is
its core reminds us that power must be accountable to

(16:16):
the people. That's the same idea that build our constitutional
republic in the first place. The day we forgot that,
and we forget that is the day truth justice in
any American way old are new ceases to exist. Folks.

(16:36):
We'll be right back. I do a lot of songs
now for my articles, and a lot of people like them.
A lot of people don't like them. A lot of
people don't want to hang around and watch listen to
it for three minutes. But if you do, I'm gonna
come back with my commentary and finish up this article

(16:58):
and this podcast. But I hope you there's about four
different versions of the song. I'm pen only picking one,
but I hope you'll go online and you listen to
every single one of them and enjoy them, and we'll
be right back with the hashtag go right. Commentary with
Peter Blake.

Speaker 3 (17:33):
Out from the Shadows over Farmland, planes and North and
Rises for Struggle and Pain, They say he's just fiction.
But heroes are real when the people stand strong, when
the people can feel small towns and cities divided by screens.
The weaponize headlines, feed digital screens. But keep down with

(17:54):
hungry for honest and right. Where we fight for tomorrow,
Where we stand for the They want us distracted, they
want us confused. But we are the many and they
are the few. Like a cape in the storm, we
remember what's truth, truth, justice Tomorrow.

Speaker 4 (18:14):
It lives in you.

Speaker 1 (18:17):
Stand for truth, Fly for freedom. Let your voice be
the anthem. We all believe in God.

Speaker 3 (18:25):
Your heart, keep your reason. They can't change our minds
if we see through the trees and stand for truth,
Fly for freedom.

Speaker 1 (18:34):
Lift your aze to the sky.

Speaker 3 (18:35):
When you need up.

Speaker 1 (18:37):
Beacon, be your hero.

Speaker 3 (18:39):
We don't need a leech and one voice, brave enough
to stand for freedom. They keep us distracted, They feed
us their lives. They profit from anger, they profit from Christ.
But a simil still rises red cape and the sky.
He reminds us of hope. He minds us to try.

(19:01):
Superman's story is us to defend. He's not left or right.
He's your neighbor, your friend. From Kansas to Krypton, from
farm to the fight. He reminds us together we stand
for what's right. They want us to divided, They want
us to kneel, but we are the truth. They can't
cancel usteal Like you caep in the wind, we remember

(19:24):
what's real. Truth, justice tomorrow, that's the deed. Stand for truth,
Fly for freedom. Lets your voice be the anthem. We
all believe in God. Your heart, keep your reason. They
can't shage our minds if we see through the trees

(19:44):
and stand for truth.

Speaker 1 (19:46):
Fly for freedom.

Speaker 3 (19:48):
Lifts your rash to the sky. Wind you need up beating,
be your hero.

Speaker 1 (19:53):
We don't need a legion.

Speaker 4 (19:55):
One voice brave enough.

Speaker 3 (19:57):
To stand for freedom. If it twist every headline, if
they shout your town, remember that courage still owns this town.
For the sons and the dotors of those who fought
for the right to be heard, for the freedom of these.

(20:27):
Stand for truth.

Speaker 1 (20:28):
Fly for freedom.

Speaker 3 (20:30):
Let your heart be the fire. They can weak and
God your soul.

Speaker 1 (20:35):
Keep your reason.

Speaker 3 (20:36):
They can't braid your will and your causes.

Speaker 4 (20:39):
Freedom for truth, Fly more freedom.

Speaker 1 (20:43):
We are dear rosary born. Every time we need one, raise.

Speaker 4 (20:48):
That flag, shine that beacon truth, Justice tomorrow.

Speaker 1 (20:53):
We stand for freedom, welcome back. Thank you for listening
to my song. Enjoy it, Please share. Here's the hashtag
go right with Peter Boyko commentary. If Superman a hero
or another victim of our cultural war? Are both? Here's

(21:13):
my take. Superman is bigger than politics. He is bigger
than gun Cain or me. He's not the property of
the right or the left. He is a symbol of
what we wish we could be, strong, honest, selfless, and
I'm afraid to stand up for the little guy. If
you want the old Superman, there are thousands of the comics,

(21:36):
shows and movies waiting for you. But don't let your
outrage keep you from seeing a new one. Maybe you'll
like it, perhaps you'll hate him, but at least watch
it before you scream. The real danger is not an
immigrant Superman. The real danger is a society so addicted
to the knee jerk reactions we cannot sit together like Johnny

(21:58):
Carson's audience and share a laugh or a hero without
tearing each other apart. So if Superman fails because we
made in political what hope do we have left? If
Superman fails because both sides can't stop screaming politics at
a movie about an alien farm boy and a cape.
Then what hope do we have left for any part

(22:19):
of our culture. I mean, there's Doctor Who, British sci
fi show been on forever. It's like on a Superman
and it's about an alien from another country that can
shape shift into a white person or a black person,
a gay person, a straight person, a woman and a man,

(22:40):
and everybody's oh, it's woke, flitterly a transsexual alien. At
the end of the day, folks, can we just not
appreciate things? Can we just not appreciate things for what
they are on the surface, entertainment, enjoyment. Remember this, my
fellow citizens of this constitutional public. Everything leads back to politics,

(23:01):
it does. They all know it. The radicals know it.
Whether they wear a donkey or an elephant pen. They
know exactly how to push your buttons. They want you distracted,
They want you bickering about Superman and nonsense while they
sneak through massive spending bills, secret surveillance expansions, or backroom

(23:22):
deals that strip a way more freedoms away from us.
You know, we the people, don't fall for it. Stay sharp,
stay focused, do not be fooled. It's not time to
let entertainment be I mean, isn't it time to let
entertainment be entertainment again? Without conflict, we don't get great storytelling.

(23:44):
So there's gonna be conflict. There's gonna be politics in it.
Gun was right, and it's a political movie. You can't
make stories without something conflict. Marvel's greatest arcs the Mutants
hunted by fear governments, echoes of Nazi Germany civil war plots.
They come from exploring exactly those tensions, Star Trek and

(24:08):
Interracial Prove an interracial kiss back in the sixties. You
know it's woke today that we do. It's woke, but
it's it's real and now it's the same true for
DC's new universe. Gods and monsters, meta humans coming into
the light, an alien like Superman is doing good but

(24:30):
terrifying the public, and misinformation poisons the truth. Sound familiar,
That is the real politics here, a world struggling to
admit is no longer in charge when power, he thoughts.
So here's the truth from me. I have heard and
seen that Superman is awesome. Just ignore the clickba ignore

(24:52):
the political saboteurs who wanted to flop before it ever
hit the screen. This film is truer to the comics
than we have been seen in a very long time.
Go see it. I know I will many times. Too
many people like Dan Kane, and I like Dan Kane,
and I completely understand what he's talking about the immigrant issue.

(25:13):
But people like him in the outrage mob, they talk
before they even know the full story, if or even
watch the video or even watch the movie. Too many
are fooled by clickpake headlines that they don't even finish
reading or watching. I did. I did watch it. I
watched the movie. I reacted a little bit. I was like,

(25:33):
oh god, here just political. But I watched the movie
and I'll tell you myself, it's not Wolf. It is
not some leftist manifesto. It is a comic book movie
about an immigrant from Krypton whose very existence rewrites the
rules of humanity. That is it, and that is every

(25:54):
So if Superman flops over fake outrage, what does that
say about us? If Superman fail because both sides can't
stop screaming politics at a film about an alien farm
boy saving Earth, then what hope do we have left
for honest entertainment. Here's the twist. It's not failing. Thank god,
it's not failing. Despite all the noise, the first wave

(26:15):
of reaction showed the opposite. Early word, The new Superman
movie from James Gunn is out and it's getting widespread acclaim.
Real audiences, real ticket buyers are praising the movie for
being the closest thing in years to the hopeful, big
hearted by Golly Superman. We remember. David Cornsweat is getting

(26:36):
praise for truly being Superman. People describe it as a
mix of action part and classic superhero energy that could
reboot DC cinementic mess into something real again. The one
fan summed it up perfectly, leaving the theater. This is
what summer blockbusters are all about. I've got these also
on the website in the article go great news dot

(26:57):
com with the links to the Twitter. Tim Pole, not
as a Hollywood's favorite critic, gave it eight out of ten.
Not woke, not even remotely political. Mister Terrific was epic.
There were cheers and packed screenings. Crowds are applauding Superman.
Warner Brothers is crossing its fingers for a half a
billion baller box office, But what they need and what
they have seemed to be getting is real fans who

(27:19):
like it. Even the White House dropped the line calling
Superman the endearing symbol of hope, truth, justice in the
American way. It's kind of parody because they were talking
about Donald Trump, but they did acknowledge it. Yeah, here
we are. Some still yelling go rope, go woke, go bloke,
broke whatever, like a broken record. Former Superman Dean King

(27:40):
still blasting Gun for calling Superman and immigrant, claiming it
will hurt the box office. How woke is Hollywood going
to make this character? We talked about that and meanwhile,
normal folks laughing office said lol ol ol. But as
literally he's literally from outer space, not born in America.
He's an immigrant. There's nothing woke about it. Once kept
it said to be honest, the movie is not woke
at all. Any issues Gun mentioned and interviews are glossed

(28:02):
over are entirely missing, entirely not a woke movie, just
a fun The quote woke excuse people to swear in fear.
It's like everything I don't like is woke. When you
have two hundred million dollars banked in on a week
opening weekend, that's not a flop. That is proof that
people want Superman to win. Why wouldn't you want Superman

(28:23):
a man? You know what the biggest folk probably is. Folks,
here's a call to read, read and watch before you react.
Go write news. We exist to be different. We read
the whole story. We play devil's advocate. We call out
hypocrisy left or right. We defend your constitutional right, and
we shine light where the partisan press will not. We

(28:43):
believe in truth, not tribalism. Hashtag go right means defending
all viewpoints, not worshiping clickbait. Read the full story, see
the movie, see the movie yourself, make up your minds,
make your up your own mind. That's how we keep
our constitutional, live, republic alive by thinking for ourselves. And

(29:06):
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(29:27):
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(29:48):
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hashtag go right. God bless everybody, peace and share this
And look up in the sky, Look, look up up

(30:10):
in the sky. It's a bird. It's a plane. Well,
I guess it's ship the plane. We're superman. God bless
the pump in the shadows over farmland.

Speaker 2 (30:26):
Planes and dolphin rises through struggle and pain. They say
he's just fix, But heroes all real when the people
stand strong, When the people can feel small towns and
cities divided by screens.

Speaker 1 (30:41):
They whipping nice.

Speaker 3 (30:42):
Head lines, speed digital screams.

Speaker 1 (30:44):
But deep down we are hungry on a stand.

Speaker 4 (30:47):
All right, where we fight folks in the morrow and
we stand for the light. They want us distracted, they
want us confused. But we are the many and they
are the few. Like a cape in the storm, we
remember it's true truth, just as tomorrow we leaves any

(31:08):
stand fortu Five for freedom. Let your voice reed, the
anthem we all believe in. Gotcha heart came nor reason.
They could change our minds if we say it through
the trees and stand for true. Five for freedom, of
grass to the sky. When you need a big and

(31:29):
fe hero, we don't need a legion, one voice brave
enough to stand for freedom.

Speaker 1 (31:43):
The keep was distracted.

Speaker 2 (31:44):
They feed us.

Speaker 4 (31:45):
There alias the profit from mangas.

Speaker 1 (31:48):
They pump it from Christ. But the symbol still rises.
Red Cake bits the sky. He reminds us of folk.

Speaker 3 (31:55):
He reminds us to try Superman's stories us Tuesday.

Speaker 1 (32:00):
He's not left to all right.

Speaker 3 (32:02):
He's your neighbors, your friend from Kansas to Krypton, Fall
to the fight.

Speaker 4 (32:07):
He reminds us, together we stand for what's right. They
want us divide if they want us to kneal, but
we are the truth. They can't cancel steal. Like cap
in the wind, we remember what's real.

Speaker 1 (32:22):
To justice.

Speaker 4 (32:22):
Tomorrow, pass the tea, stand far truth, I far freedom.

Speaker 2 (32:30):
Let your voice be the end.

Speaker 4 (32:32):
We all believe in God, your high keep no reason.
They can change our minds if we see through the
trees and stand for truth. I far freedom. If youress
to the sky when you need a peaking speed hero,
we don't need a leagion. One voice brave enough to

(32:53):
stand for freedom.

Speaker 3 (33:02):
If they twist every headline, if to shout you down,
remember that courage still owns this town, where the sons and.

Speaker 4 (33:10):
The daughters of those who fought for the right to
be heard, for the freedom of the stand for truths.

(33:36):
I freedom that John f I can we can got
your soul. Can't go reason they can break go now
and your causes. Freedom, stand for truth. I'm the freedom.
Be your hero, say barn every time we need one
raised the fat shine, that be game truth Just a

(34:00):
moorlways did for feel

Speaker 2 (38:00):
Passatasatassass
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