The Western Journal

The Super Bowl Halftime Show Is Exactly What the Left Wants America to Look Like

This piece is a political opinion essay that treats the Super Bowl halftime show, featuring Bad Bunny, as a political statement about immigration and American cultural identity rather than mere entertainment. It argues that the show signaled a broader cultural shift backed by the Democratic Party toward a more diverse, multilingual society, which the author believes undermines customary American roots.

Key points:

– The author did not watch the game but saw clips that highlighted Bad Bunny speaking Spanish and waving various national flags, viewing the performance as having a deliberate message and unclear target audience.

– A Twitter post from Bad Bunny is cited to illustrate how the moment was perceived publicly, and the piece critiques the left for promoting a future where European-rooted culture and shared language are diminished.

– The author shares personal experiences of working with Mexican laborers as a teenager and feeling like an outsider due to language barriers, arguing for the importance of Americans being able to function in public life without translators.

– The piece asserts that Puerto Rico is American soil and that Bad Bunny is legally American, but contends the halftime show itself wasn’t “american” in a cultural or historical sense; it claims the show reflects a broader political agenda.

– The argument emphasizes a desire for assimilation and common language within American communities, while acknowledging appreciation for immigrant-owned businesses and personal affection for diverse cultures.

– The author contends that Democratic policy aims to replace traditional american culture and language with a more diverse, multilingual landscape, which they describe as chaotic.

– The conclusion calls readers to vote and participate in elections, arguing that political outcomes will shape the country’s cultural trajectory; it suggests that the viewer can glimpse the future by watching online content associated with the performance.


The NFL’s Super Bowl halftime show on Sunday night was a statement more than it was an attempt at entertainment.

I will admit, I did not watch the halftime show. I skipped the game entirely.

But the clips circulating on X Monday morning were more than enough for me to understand the message that was being sent.

A flamboyant Puerto Rican performer pranced around the stage intensely and exclusively speaking Spanish. The flags of other nations waved freely. The spectacle was presented as is and with zero explanation as to who it was intended for.

Was Bad Bunny trying to insult me? I genuinely do not know, because I made a willful decision not to learn Spanish fluently. I don’t want to, and I shouldn’t have to.

The NFL handed the most prominent cultural platform in the country to a performer who made no effort to speak to Americans in their own language.

Watching the clips, the feeling is familiar to me. It is like being in a Vietnamese nail salon, where you are sitting in the waiting area after paying for a service for your lady.

You’re aware that you are not part of the conversation the staff is having, but that you or she might be the subject of it.

I’ve experienced that dynamic before. As a teenager, I spent the summer after ninth grade working concrete jobs with a crew of Mexican laborers. I was the only one who spoke no Spanish.

There was laughter throughout some days. There were moments when it was obvious the jokes were at my expense. There were also tamales and beer offered to me sometimes at lunch.

It wasn’t all bad, and it toughened me up. It was life. I don’t resent those guys, and if I could go back, I might laugh at my younger self, too.

But that was a summer job, and I was a kid.

I am a man who pays taxes, and this is my country. I send my children to the government’s schools each morning with instructions to be skeptical of the curriculum. I do not want to feel like a foreigner in the nation my ancestors helped build, and I do not want to require a translator to function in public life.

The Democratic Party wants that future anyway. They want every public gathering to resemble Sunday night’s spectacle. They want Americans slowly conditioned to feel disoriented, outnumbered, and out of place.

Puerto Rico is American soil, and Bad Bunny is legally as American as I am. That fact does not change the reality that the halftime show itself was not American in any cultural or historical sense.

The left can’t get enough of stuff like that.

They want Main Street stripped of its European roots. They want family businesses founded by people who lived like Audie Murphy to be replaced.

They want community buildings named after people like Cesar Chavez — and eventually, if we’re being honest — Hugo Chavez.

They want towns and cities filled with people who no common language, no common values, and no d understanding of what it means to be American.

That does not mean I avoid immigrant-owned businesses, by the way. I eat lunch regularly at a Mexican grocery store. I can’t get enough of the hole-in-the-wall food. I’ll be back this week and next week without hesitation with my barely passable Spanish

I might just go there today.

But do I want every grocery store to feel like that? No. Do I want every community to lose a d culture and language?

Absolutely not.

The left wants that for me. They want to replace my neighbors with as many foreign nationals as possible, to label it as “diversity,” and to pretend it is a strength. It is chaos that the party’s voters and elites want more of.

The Super Bowl halftime show was just a small window into the country that Democrats are actively seeking to build. It is one you don’t belong in if you’ve ever been friends with a guy named Mike.

If you want to know where the party’s policies will lead, you don’t need to read their bills or listen to their speeches.

Just open YouTube and type in “Bad Bunny Super Bowl.”

That is the future they want for you and your family.

Remember that the next time you think about skipping a local, state, or national election. I refuse to believe it is too late to vote ourselves out of this mess.




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