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Kneecap, Green Day target Israel at Coachella

Performers accuse the Jewish state of genocide and criticize U.S. support.

Members of the Kneecap band, including Mo Chara and Moglai Bap, perform during Day 1 of Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival in Indio, California, on April 18, 2025. Photo by Scott Dudelson/Getty Images for Coachella.
Members of the Kneecap band, including Mo Chara and Moglai Bap, perform during Day 1 of Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival in Indio, California, on April 18, 2025. Photo by Scott Dudelson/Getty Images for Coachella.

The 2025 Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival in Southern California became a platform for anti-Israel messaging over the weekend, as multiple performers used their sets to launch attacks against the Jewish state and U.S. support for Israel.

Irish hip-hop group Kneecap sparked outrage by projecting slogans such as “F*** Israel, Free Palestine” and accusing Israel of committing genocide—an accusation that Israeli officials and international legal experts have consistently rejected as unfounded and inflammatory.

The group also targeted American foreign policy, claiming the U.S. “arms and funds Israel despite their war crimes.” During their performance, front man Mo Chara likened Ireland’s colonial history to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. “Palestinians have nowhere to go. This is their f***ing home, and they’re being bombed from the sky,” he said.

Kneecap later claimed that Coachella organizers censored its anti-Israel visuals from the festival’s livestream. The allegation has not been independently verified.

American punk band Green Day added to the controversy when lead singer Billie Joe Armstrong altered the lyrics of the song “Jesus of Suburbia” to reference “the kids from Palestine.” The lyric made no mention of the ongoing rocket fire and hostage abductions, or the role of Hamas and other terrorist organizations that openly seek Israel’s destruction.

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“Terrorist propaganda online can incite real-world violence,” stated Pamela Bondi, the U.S. attorney general.
“The Iranian regime executed a 19-year-old for demanding democracy,” stated Sen. John Fetterman. “I stand with his memory and the thousands of other young Iranians.”
More than 70,000 Americans have returned to the United States from the Middle East since the Iran conflict began on Feb. 28.
“If this thing is growing, this inauthentic account is going to deceive more people,” Rep. Chris Smith told JNS. “Especially overseas, where there’s a language barrier or something.”
“We are now part of a process at the International Court of Justice initiated by Nicaragua,” Berlin said. “We have decided to focus on this process.”