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Sick: Leftists Dance on Toby Keith's Grave, Dredging Up Decades-Old Feud

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Country music icon Toby Keith died on Monday evening following a three-year battle with cancer in which he showed his fans and others what strength, character and moral fortitude looked like.

On Tuesday, hordes of liberals predictably celebrated his death online and dragged up a 21-year feud he once had with the woke collective of singers formerly known as the Dixie Chicks.

In 2020, the group — which had used that name for more than three decades — decided the word “Dixie” was suddenly racist during the George Floyd riots and announced they would record and perform under the name The Chicks.

But before the name change, the group’s most prominent member attacked Keith, who recorded a hit song that he wrote as Americans were still reeling from the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.

The 2002 patriotic anthem “Courtesy of the Red, White, and Blue (The Angry American)” was a hit with fans — but not with Chicks singer Natalie Maines.

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In August of that year, Maines said she hated the “ignorant” single.

“I hate it. It’s ignorant, and it makes country music sound ignorant,” she told the Los Angeles Daily News. “It targets an entire culture – and not just the bad people who did bad things. You’ve got to have some tact.”

Maines concluded, “Anybody can write, ‘We’ll put a boot in your a**.’ But a lot of people agree with it. The kinds of songs I prefer on the subject are like Bruce Springsteen’s new songs.”

Keith at first ignored the attack on the single, which was partially inspired by his late father’s service in the Korean War.

But he eventually fired back at the liberal singer at his concerts by trotting out a doctored photo of Maines alongside now-deceased Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein.

She responded by wearing a shirt that at the Academy of Country Music Awards that read, “FUTK.”

At the time, the band said the letters stood for “Friends United in Truth and Kindness,” but Maines later admitted that was not the message she was trying to convey, according to Taste of Country.

As many assumed, the acronym stood for “F*** You Toby Keith.”

But by the end of 2003, Keith ended the feud when he said he saw that there were more important things for people to worry about than battling with fellow singers.

“You know, a best friend of mine, the guy that started the first band I was ever in, he lost a two-year-old daughter to cancer — this was just a couple of weeks ago,” he said, according to Contact Music.

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“A few days after I found she didn’t have long to live, I saw a picture on the cover of COUNTRY WEEKLY with a picture of me and Natalie and it said, ‘Fight to the Death’ or something. It seemed so insignificant. I said, ‘Enough is enough.’”

Keith gracefully explained he never asked for a fight with Maines and concluded, “One thing I’ve never, ever done, out of jealousy or anything else, is to bash another artist and their artistic license.”

That was more than 20 years ago, and yet as the country music world grapples with the tragic loss of an icon, liberals on the social media platform X have decided to revive the long-settled feud between Keith and The Chicks.

Their lack of humanity was all over the platform on Tuesday morning as they collectively celebrated Keith’s untimely passing:

There is no bottom for the modern American leftist.

Keith gave up on the feud with Maines after about a year when he realized there were issues of actual importance to deal with — such as pediatric cancer.

In 2006, long before his own cancer diagnosis, Keith started a foundation for children who were suffering that offered them and their families no-cost housing so they didn’t have to worry about money as children fought to live.

Were you a fan of Toby Keith?

“There is no greater gift than keeping families strong and together during a difficult time,” the Toby Keith Foundation says on its website. “If we can alleviate stress on a family, encourage a brother or sister and comfort a sick child, then we will make a difference in the fight against cancer.”

Americans lost an icon and a man of virtue and character on Monday night — and a morally bankrupt segment of the population that routinely engages in virtue signaling could not be happier about it.


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Johnathan Jones has worked as a reporter, an editor, and producer in radio, television and digital media.
Johnathan "Kipp" Jones has worked as an editor and producer in radio and television. He is a proud husband and father.




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