From artist’s Bandcamp
“John Wayne slaughtered our Indian brothers
Burned their villages and raped their mothers
Now he has given them a white man’s lord
‘Live by this, or die by my sword!'”
These are lyrics from “John Wayne Was A Nazi” a scathing tune by hardcore pioneers MDC. The single was originally released a year after Wayne’s death in 1980 when they were going by The Stains. After changing their name, it appeared on their 1982 debut album Millions Of Dead Cops. The song exposed the celebrated actor for his bigotry and role in helping to prop up an oppressive colonial system.
The lyrics refer to his movies that often portrayed Wayne as a heroic cowboy fighting against the villainous Native Americans. These film portrayals weren’t far off from his real-world views. For example, in a 1972 Playboy interview, Wayne says: “I don’t feel we did wrong in taking this great country away from them, if that’s what you’re asking. Our so-called stealing of this country from them was just a matter of survival. There were great numbers of people who needed new land, and the Indians were selfishly trying to keep it for themselves.”
Elsewhere in the interview, Wayne also stated “I believe in white supremacy until the blacks are educated to a point of responsibility. I don’t believe in giving authority and positions of leadership and judgment to irresponsible people.”
It is no wonder that the song declares “When I see John, I’m ashamed to be white.”
Recently Canadian hardcore band Fucked Up and Indigenous EDM act Halluci Nation reworked the tune. The song remains relevant, and John Wayne can be viewed as a figure who is representative of ongoing systemic issues.
In a press release, the Halluci Nation’s Ehren “Bear Witness” Thomas states: “The song has been with me since high school. The song and MDC have stuck with me over the years. It’s got rage to it and that message, but I love that there’s a dark humor to it as well. It really fits in with the way we make music and visuals, with the message that we try to put forward about confronting one-dimensional misrepresentations of indigenous people in the media. John Wayne becomes a stand-in for the entire colonial project.”
Fucked Up’s vocalist Damian Abraham goes on to say: “For me, it’s like this: you watch The Searchers in school, and John Wayne is presented very much as an iconic North American type of figure. As a young punk kid hearing this song for the first time, it did change the way I looked at him — it subverted it to where all of a sudden the hero is the villain, and you can see what’s going on in pop culture. As a young punk kid, this song was one of the first that showed the cracks in that veneer.”
Exposing those cracks is an important step in tearing down oppressive colonial systems and rebuilding an equitable society.