Rage Against the Machinereturned to the stage for the first time in 11 years with a concert over the weekend — during which the band spoke out against the Supreme Court’s recent reversal ofRoe v. Wade.
While the 90-minute concert was short on dialogue,according to theMilwaukee Journal-Sentinel, Rage projected images on a big screen along with captions that shared the bandmates' collective opinions.
“Forced birth in a country that is the only wealthy country in the world without any guaranteed paid parental leave at the national level,” read one caption, according to the outlet.
Gie Knaeps/Getty

More captions then appeared on the screen, according toVariety, including “Forced birth in a country where Black birth-givers experience maternal mortality two to three times higher than that of white birth-givers,” “Forced birth in a country where gun violence is the number one cause of death among children and teenagers” and “Abort the Supreme Court.”
Other “gruesome” images included an “El Paso, Texas police car on fire, a Border Patrol agent posing with an agitated German Shepherd and a blindfolded boy smashing an ICE agent piñata,” per the Wisconsin newspaper.
Rage originally announced the tour in 2019 and planned to kick it off at a small venue near the border in El Paso after the 2020 Presidential election, Variety reported.
AP Photo/Branimir Kvartuc

While the band has not released original music in 23 years, the group “played the best of its discography,” including a cover ofBruce Springsteen’s “The Ghost of Tom Joad,” from its 2000 albumRenegades.
Rage Against the Machine joins a list of musicians who are letting their voices known about the Supreme Court verdict.
Pink went on a Twitter rampagelast month, telling those who support the decision to overturn the court’s landmark decision to not listen to her music.
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“Let’s be clear: if you believe the government belongs in a woman’s uterus, a gay persons business or marriage, or that racism is okay- THEN PLEASE IN THE NAME OF YOUR LORD NEVER F—ING LISTEN TO MY MUSIC AGAIN. AND ALSO F— RIGHT OFF. We good?” the pop singer, 42, wrote on June 25.
source: people.com