Xaviaer DuRousseau denounced any suggestion that there are similarities between former big city BLM riots and the message of Aldean’s song.“I don’t think that Whoopi even knows what she’s talking about because let’s be very clear about one thing, not a single city, community, or individual besides the looters, really, benefited from the BLM protests,” DuRousseau told Lawrence Jone Cross Country.
“I remember back in 2020, I was a BLM activist before I woke up from the lies, and one of the first things I noticed that just didn’t make sense to me were why were so many of these people that were breaking into these local stores and communities, why weren’t they white? And why were they not from there? And why were they destroying even black businesses?” DuRousseau said.
Since, the song has jumped to the top of the iTunes Top 100 in the United States. Additionally, the song made it into the Top 10 on Amazon's"Hot New Releases" list and No. 2 for YouTube's trending music videos.