In a sign of peace, the Rolling Stones are no longer playing their song 'Brown Sugar' because some believe it is about slavery.

In a Facebook post, Majka shared her opinion that, in the name of political correctness, it is happening more and more often that artistic freedom is being restricted, and thus, according to her, classic songs of pop culture are being banned. In his post, he said:

"Creating, expressing art well, and showing it is a privileged task, which hurts many people's sense of self. Best of all, those who have never been able to do anything better than average in their entire lives. To confuse culture with the resentment of the average person of the 21st century with a sensitized mind shows a very dangerous vision of the future"

Majka wrote on her social media page, then added:

"To tell an artist what he can create about is censorship like in North Korea or Belarus. If I could, I would insult all the nations, religions, thoughts, sexual orientations that exist in this world in an extended Eric Cartmanes sentence. Among them myself..."

Blikk asked several artists about the topic, including the fact that the Rolling Stones will no longer play their song "Brown Sugar" in the name of peace, because some people believe that it is about slavery. But they also attack the songs of legendary performers such as Elvis, Tom Jones or Queen, because, according to many, their lyrics are about sexual abuse, domestic violence, condemnation of others, or possibly illegal relationships.

For example, Ganxsta Zolee explained:

"I'm sick of being dirty, it's disgusting and harmful! It doesn't make people of any skin color, religion, or mindset any better if we're overcautious about it all. We will always be the most poly-correct band, but that doesn't mean we are racist or want to hurt others. Why is it wrong to call a spade a spade? You can tell me that I'm a white f*ss, I'm not offended. I'm not teaching my daughter to be polite, but to judge everyone by their actions."

Feró Nagy can't explain the Rolling Stones' decision either:

"I think the Rolling Stones made a mistake. I would play just for provocation! History and lyrics cannot be rewritten or rewritten... There will be people who don't like it, but who cares. These are works of art, we cannot deny them. Others say it's sensitization, but I think the world has gone crazy. I would never take back anything I've written."

Source: Blikk