
Roger Waters of Pink Floyd
Roger Waters, a former member of the legendary British rock band Pink Floyd, is now going all out to vilify Donald Trump, turning his most recent concert into a diatribe against the Republican nominee for president.
Sunday night, as Trump was squaring off in St. Louis against Hillary Clinton in the second presidential debate, the now solo Waters hammered Trump with graphically unflattering lyrics and imagery at the Desert Trip music festival in Indio, California.
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While performing his 1970s hit "Pigs," Waters floated a balloon with a skull-faced Trump that featured messages stating, "Ignorant, lying, racist, sexist, pig" and "F--- Donald Trump and his wall."
On giant video screens behind the singer, a variety of anti-Trump images were displayed, including animations of the GOP candidate saluting like Hitler, vomiting, wearing a Ku Klux Klan hood, giving oral sex to a banana, and exposing his genitals.
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He sang lyrics to match the imagery, "Big man, pig man, ha ha, charade you are."
When controversial comments made by Trump were displayed to the crowd, giant letters flashed across the big screen reading "Trump is a pig."
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As Waters played "Mother" from "The Wall" album and sang the line, "Mother, should I trust the government?," the screen trumpeted the words "NO F---ING WAY."
See video of Rogers Waters mocking Trump in song:
Taking a shot at Trump's push to build a giant barrier along the U.S.-Mexico border, Waters brought 15 school-age children onstage for his rendition of "Another Brick in the Wall (Part II)." The kids wore T-shirts reading, "Derriba el muro," Spanish for "Tear down the wall."
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The 73-year-old singer-songwriter also mentioned the Black Lives Matter movement to the audience, which was described by Yahoo News as "overwhelmingly white."
As he sang "Us and Them," the giant screen flashed pictures of protest signs reading "White silence is violence" and "I cannot believe I still have to protest this [expletive]."
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Other hits in Waters' set included "Comfortably Numb," "Time," ''Money," ''Wish You Were Here" and "Dark Side of the Moon."
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Waters said he's been working with wounded warriors in Washington, D.C., and he brought Capt. Greg Galeazzi, a U.S. Army veteran who lost both his legs in Afghanistan, onstage to play lead guitar with the band on "Shine on You Crazy Diamond."
"Working with these men has been one of the most rewarding things I've ever done in my life," Waters said, according to Haaretz.
Near the end of his performance, Waters expressed support for the BDS movement, which calls for boycotts and sanctions against Israel.
"I'm going to send out all of my most heartfelt love and support to all those young people on the campuses of the universities of California who are standing up for their brothers and sisters in Palestine and supporting the BDS movement," he said, "in the hope that we may encourage the government of Israel to end the occupation."
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