Not crazy about you.
Nancy Wilson of the famous rock music band was criticized for the claim that she was “more embarrassing than ever” to be American.
The 71 -year -old singer “Barracuda” submitted the controversial claim during an interview with Milwaukee Journal Sentinel earlier this month, but she recently started surfing in X Monday, March 24.
“We felt embarrassed at that time to call ourselves because of the dirty policy of the Vietnam War,” she said while discussing the song “Crazy on You”.
“To be as hidden as possible, it is embarrassing now.”
But Wilson's statements were not disposed of lightly, and criticized both the wealthy singers and critics of her controversial comments about the country.
“The millionaire, who made a lot of dough playing music, says,” a millionaire has mocked the user. “I just can't be with these people now.”
Another angry critic wrote: “The prostitute is welcome to find a country that is more suitable for its needs.” “I am ready to bet on the country's makeup if a woman is her convictions.”
“Stop playing heart music in the eighties and not embarrassing,” the X III user mocked.
Another former supporter of the band added: “It is an embarrassing thing to be a fan of heart now.”
Others Wilson ordered the abandonment of the United States if it was embarrassing.
“Then let you not miss,” then noticed one person. “Move I think,” hung again.
Elsewhere in the interview, Wilson discussed the song “Barracuda” in 1977 and how a melody revolves around “a real steel ball with a satin jacket” that “wanted to earn more money from the exciting chicks in the heart” throughout the group's profession.
She added that “Barracuda”, in particular, is “more important in the culture of horrific billionaires with the form of the form of the shape-“.
“I think that for women in culture, the pendulum will return again, and there will be another renaissance in the arts to retreat against the persecution of the old wealthy white men,” Wilson said.
“I hope to be alive to see that next revolution.”
The controversial guitarist's interview – and the subsequent intellectual response – comes months after her sister and her older colleague, Anne Wilson, 74, announced that she had finished chemotherapy and was ready to continue to roam.
Ann said in September: “I am completely okay, but it was so, with a lesser phrase,” Ann said in September. “Chemotherapy is not a joke.”
“It takes a lot of the person,” I continued. “Then there are two weeks of waiting for the test results, which is a form of mental torture. For anyone who has gone through, sympathize with great time.”
The sisters were forced to postpone a heart tour last summer following the diagnosis of Ann cancer. They are now on the road, and their next concert is scheduled for Monday night in Manitoba, Canada.