This ardent rock anthem represents frontman Deryck Whibley's honest opinions concerning about the current state of the world in the aftermath of the election of President Trump.
Asked by Rock Sound magazine about the political nature of the song's lyrics, Whibley explained it's not a political record, but more of a personal expression of his feelings. "I'm not really speaking about specific things," he said. "I'm not talking about necessarily policies and, like, immigration. I'm not trying to change the world or change any policies. I'm just saying, 'Eh, he's not my kind of guy.'" Whibley added that his decision to address his feelings about Trump in a song wasn't exactly new territory for Sum 41. (They were previously vocal about George Bush on tracks such as "We're All To Blame" and "March of the Dogs"). "The difference for this time is that I didn't necessarily want to go there," he said. "The music, for me, was to take me away from all that kind of stuff, but it just kept creeping into it somehow. And I just felt like, well, it's something in my subconscious that probably has to come out. So I just allowed it."
Whibley tells a certain sitting president in this song that "a number is all you are to me." Some people (especially those who live outside of America) will be unaware of the significance of the number 45 in the song title. It's a reference to those people who don't want to say Donald Trump's name or call him the President. Those people call him 45 instead, as he is the 45th president of the United States.
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