WHEN A COUNTRY SONG SOUNDED LIKE A WARNING — NOT JUST A CHORUS. When Toby Keith sang “Courtesy of the Red, White and Blue,” it wasn’t poetry for critics. It was a promise. “Justice will be served,” he warned — not softly, not politely. Just clearly. On February 28, 2026, when the United States struck Iran, some people heard that chorus echo again — not from a radio, but from history itself. What once blasted through speakers suddenly felt woven into headlines. Supporters called it protection. A signal that America does not wait to be cornered. That national security isn’t theory — it’s action taken before danger grows louder. Yes, power carries consequences. It always has. But so does silence. In moments like that, patriotism stops being a lyric and becomes a decision. And the harder question lingers — is strength sometimes the only language enemies truly understand?
WHEN A COUNTRY SONG SOUNDED LIKE A WARNING — NOT JUST A CHORUS When Toby Keith released “Courtesy of the Red, White and Blue (The Angry American)” in 2002, it…