NOFX's new single serves as the opening chapter in an ambitious three-part A–Z collection compiling rarities, demos, and unreleased material spanning more than 40 years of the band’s career. Whilst the majority of NOFX fans thought they were finished when they had their retirement show in 2024, this latest track post-retirement shows that NOFX are not softening their message with age.
"Minnesota Nazis" is a bleak and incisive commentary on the persistence of white supremacy in modern America, as Fat Mike delivers his observations with trademark sarcasm and moral clarity, dissecting the hypocrisy of neo-Nazi groups who hide behind claims of free speech while openly promoting hate, violence, and exclusion across America. The song paints a vivid picture of racism mixed within everyday settings – bars, neighborhoods, weekend gatherings – forcing listeners to confront how normalised and embedded these ideologies can become in every day life.
True to classic NOFX form, the track juxtaposes its grim subject matter with fast-paced punk energy and sharp wit, as the band lean into their trademark irony and provocation, calling out the contradictions of supremacist rhetoric: masked “superiors,” cultural dependence on the very communities they vilify, and chilling historical echoes that draw uncomfortable parallels to Germany in 1938. It’s punk rock as social critique – messy, loud, and impossible to ignore.
Whilst the song doesn't reinvent the NOFX sound – nor does it need to – the timely urgency of the message is amplified by the rawness of the performance, reinforcing why the band remains one of punk’s most enduring and politically fearless voices of all-time. This is protest music stripped of subtlety, delivered with the confidence of a band that has spent decades saying exactly what it thinks.
As the first taste of the wider A–Z project, “Minnesota Nazis” sets a confrontational tone for what’s to come. However, the song is also a strong reminder that NOFX’s legacy isn’t just built on irreverence and speed – it’s built on a refusal to stay silent in the face of ignorance – whether they have retired or not – even when that silence might be easier.