“That is our life, that is our tune.”
Twisted Sister lead singer Dee Snider loves that his 1984 smash hit “We’re Not Gonna Take It” is getting used as a battle hymn by Ukraine’s resistance towards Russian invaders, he proclaimed on Twitter.
“I completely approve of Ukrainians utilizing “We’re Not Gonna Take It” as their battlecry. My grandfather was Ukrainian, earlier than it was swallowed up by the USSR after WW2. This could’t occur to those folks once more!” Snider tweeted on Saturday as Ukrainian forces had been battling to defend Kyiv and different cities.
Frankly, the rabble-rousing tune is a becoming tune for these heroic homeland defenders, 13 of whom instructed Russian naval forces to “go f–ok” themselves earlier than getting shelled on a Snake Island base some days in the past.
Snider — who’s been utilizing hashtags “F–KRUSSIA” and “F–KPUTIN” in latest tweet tirades on the worldwide matter — has been outspoken towards the nation because the Chilly Warfare and early days of the New Jersey and Lengthy Island rock group.
He lately reposted a photograph of himself carrying a “Russia Sucks” button from a time he recalled because the late Seventies.
“My Ukrainian grandpa would have been so proud!” Snider tweeted together with the photograph on Sunday.
In response to tweets asking him to separate his aggression with Russian head of state Vladimir Putin from civilians of the nation, Snider additionally famous that his Transylvanian grandmother had endured the Soviet siege of the Carpathian mountains in Romania years in the past as effectively.
“Who do you assume had been carrying these Russian weapons, driving the tanks & flying these planes? Canadians?” he wrote.
Although, quickly after Snider agreed to make use of the hashtag “F–KPUTIN” as an alternative of “F–KRUSSIA” after listening to the plea of a Russian lady born in 1999 who tweeted at him, saying “I hate this struggle” and that she was “protesting towards it.”
“And alter will come from the younger and younger at coronary heart. It’s by no means simple,” Snider posted in response.
Whereas the lead singer is gung ho on the tune getting used within the Jap European battle for freedom, Snider, too, sounded off on why he doesn’t approve of it getting used for anti-maskers.
“Effectively, one use is for a righteous battle towards oppression; the opposite is a childish toes stomping towards an inconvenience,” Snider tweeted Sunday, referring to himself as a longtime “voice of motive” in one other publish on the matter.
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