The following is an abridged transcript from System Update’s most recent episode. You can watch the full episode on Rumble or listen to it in podcast form on Apple, Spotify, or any other major podcast provider.
System Update is an independent show free to all viewers and listeners, but that wouldn’t be possible without our loyal supporters. To keep the show free for everyone, please consider joining our Locals, where we host our members-only aftershow, publish exclusive articles, release these transcripts, and so much more!
There's a major, intense controversy in the West involving Israel and Gaza finally, not about the Israeli bombing of a Gazan coffee shop on the beach on Sunday, nor is it about its droning of various people walking once they get flour back home, nor is it about its ongoing massacre of people seeking aid and food in Gaza and the West Bank. No. What has terrified, enraged, and frightened Western leaders and Western journalists of all stripes is that a punk in a rap band named Bob Vylan appeared at a music festival in England over the weekend and chanted: "Death, death to the IDF."
It goes without saying that if they had chanted simply “Death to the Russian Army in Ukraine”, called for more Israeli killings of Iranian scientists, or if they had just celebrated exploding pagers from Israel that maimed thousands of people in Lebanon including children, nobody would have noticed and nobody would've minded at all. But because the chant was directed at the Israeli military, which happens to be engaged in multiple wars, the indignation from Western media and political circles has been vociferous, shrill and endless, not just manifested in unhinged rhetoric but also a criminal investigation by the U.K. police into this band and the immediate revocation by the U.S. State Department of the visas already issued to this band and one other, Kneecap, preventing them from their scheduled tour in the U.S.
We'll look at this reaction and what it says about free speech in the U.K., in the U.S. and the West more broadly, and also the ongoing demand that Israel have unique rules imposed on it to shield it from anger and disgust and criticism that it has provoked – with its U.S.-funded actions over the last two years – globally.
The second segment will examine this remarkable boondoggle for weapons manufacturers at the expense of the American worker, yet again, and other aspects of Trump’s budget bill, the so-called Big Beautiful Bill, now being voted on in Congress.
Six to eight weeks ago, there was a band in the U.K. called Kneecap, which as part of their concert, had been issuing all sorts of oppositional sentiment about Israel. They were saying “Free Palestine,” at one point, they even said, “Up Up, Hamas, and Hezbollah,” and they became criminally investigated because of things they said at a concert in the middle of songs.
That was one of the bands that was invited to participate in one of England's biggest musical festivals of the weekend, called the Glastonbury Music Festival. BBC covered that festival live, except when Kneecap was about to take the stage, they immediately stopped streaming it because they were concerned that BBC viewers might hear harsh criticism about Israel. You can't have that. And so, the BBC said, “Oh, they might say something politically upsetting to us, to our editorial line, so we're not going to show them.” They did, however, show a different group called Bob Vylan, which is a duo of rap singers who sing a rap-punk kind of mixture. Bob Vylan is a pseudonym for each of them that they adopted to obscure their real identity and preserve their privacy. It obviously is a play on Bob Dylan.
They did have their performance shown live on the BBC, and one of the things that fragile BBC viewers as a result were subjected to was this:
Video. Bobby Vylan, Bob Vylan, BBC. June 28, 2025.
The BBC editors decided that they would avoid Kneecap, but they would cover Bob Vylan only to find that Bob Vylan wasn't just chanting “Free Palestine,” or “From the river to the sea,” but chanted something much more upsetting to a lot of people, which was “Death, Death to the IDF.”
Just let me break down quickly what that means and what that doesn't mean. “Death to the IDF” doesn't mean kill all Jews, not all Jews are in the IDF, not all IDF soldiers are Jewish. It is an army, a military, that is at war. Just like you could say, yeah, Ukraine, kill those Russian soldiers in your country. Death to the Russian army, death to that Iranian Revolutionary Guard, death to the Ayatollahs. It's very common to call for or celebrate the killing of soldiers in a war zone if you think one side is the aggressor, if you think one side ought to be defeated.
This is very common in American discourse. We call for deaths all the time. President Trump very proudly posted about two months ago a video of about 40 people in Yemen in a prayer circle. He claimed they were Houthis plotting American attacks, lots of indications to believe that wasn't true, but in any event, he posted a video very proudly of a massive bomb that was dropped on those 40 people, extinguishing their lives, exterminating them on the spot; he celebrated it.
That's what people do in wars. Nobody suggested President Trump had committed crimes or ought to be investigated.
Vylan didn't even really call for the death of soldiers, either. He said, “Death to the IDF,” the institution that is fighting this war. You can certainly interpret that as death to IDF soldiers who are in active duty and again, you may not like that chant, and I'd agree with it, you may not want to hear anybody chanting death to anybody, but this is the sort of thing that in Western discourse is said all the time, it's just usually not said about the IDF, it’s said about militaries that are viewed as Western enemies. To say that there was indignation about this, even as Israel was engaged in horrific violence, not just in Gaza over the weekend, but also in the West Bank, actual violence, not chanting about it, is a huge understatement.
As I said, this indignation wasn't just restricted to rhetoric, but a criminal investigation of this group: a criminal investigation into whether they committed crimes by chanting that. A lot of people who claim to be free speech champions in the U.S. cheered when JD Vance went to Europe and condemned both Europe and the U.K. for censoring people and punishing people for their views.
Then, the U.S. government, the State Department, came out. I mean, I don't know if you ever dealt with it before. Usually, things take a really long time, even important things. If you want to get a passport renewed, or an emergency passport, or some kind of special visa, or other documents that you need, governments and bureaucrats take a long time. In this case, it took about six seconds for Marco Rubio to come out and announce that the visa that had been issued to the people in this group to come to the United States in October, about three, four months away, for a planned tour with tickets sold in the United States, as well as Kneecap.
Those visas have been revoked in a flash because the government apparently can act very quickly when it comes to its priorities, such as punishing people who speak against Israel. As we've already seen, we know that refraining from criticizing Israel is a condition under the Trump administration for entering the United States, for working in the United States, for studying in the United States, even for being a green card holder. So it's not a surprise, it's just amazing, the speed, the velocity with which this was done.
Again, I can't overstate the utter meltdown over this chant, certainly in the U.K., but all throughout the U.S. as well, and I think a lot of people expected Bob Vylan to apologize. Kneecap actually semi-apologized for some of what they said, but it didn't help them. They still got banned from the BBC and they still have their visas revoked. But Bobby Vylan did not apologize at all. They posted on Instagram. I think it's the group page.