After Joe Biden was officially projected as the winner of the 2020 Presidential election, thousands of people took to the streets to celebrate. While those revelers saw a brighter future, Morgan Wallen saw "hypocrisy."
The country star's argument was tied to the fact that there was little-to-no social distancing at the impromptu celebrations, although media organizations noted that the vast majority of people were wearing masks.
"Time to start booking shows," he wrote alongside a photo of one of the crowds. He later added, "The hypocrisy is unreal."
He continued, "If you don't agree with me, fine. We can still be friends. But I have a family, band, and crew that need to be provided for and taken care of. If it's ok for us to party in the streets with no 'social distancing' then we can book shows right now."
While Morgan is clearly frustrated with the lack of touring, his annoyance likely also stems from his recent ousting as the performer on "Saturday Night Live" for breaking COVID-19 protocols.
In early October, just days before the "Whiskey Glasses" singer was set to perform on the NBC show, social media videos emerged that showed him mask-less and kissing women at a college party in Alabama. Morgan apologized, vowed to do better and took a self-imposed "break."
On Nov. 6, he emerged from his hiatus.
"I took awhile, like almost two weeks, and just turned my phone off and didn't even look at it," Morgan told Bobby Bones on his Bobbycast podcast. "Drove on the tractor, things like that, and just cleared my head. It was really, really good to me."
"Throughout this whole process there's been times where, for awhile I would just be like, 'Man, I'm kind of like lonely and I don't even know if I like this," Morgan said in the new interview. "And then you know, there's another high and you're like, 'Oh yeah. I love this.' It kind of just goes through phases and I've kind of just had been living like that. It's like, can I not maybe do something to combat that? Maybe I don't need to be so moody. It was almost a good thing for me."
He added, "It kind of forced me away just to reflect and look at myself and kind of get to know myself again. It was good for me."