Billie Eilish faces backlash over her comments about ‘stolen land’ and a Native tribe’s claims.
Normally, I try to avoid the verbal diarrhea that celebrities emit in public settings. I will do an occasional post on egregious discussions on The View, both because they actually are culturally relevant (you get insight into AWFL thinking), but the rantings and ravings of celebrities at award shows rarely require comment.
That is less true, though, of Billie Eilish’s anti-ICE.comments.than of your standard celebrity political speech. That’s true for a few reasons, but most especially because Supreme Court Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson was in the audience and appeared quite pleased with Eilish’s emoting, and because a Native American tribe that originally inhabited the land on which she has a luxurious mansion is located is interested in retrieving the « stolen land » on which she now resides.
Billie Eilish calls America « stolen land »
Ok, Billie. Your $14,000,000 mansion in LA is built where the Tongva tribes once lived. Any plans on returning it?
pic.twitter.com/3qu0ubWX8G— End Wokeness (@EndWokeness) February 2, 2026
Is this a troll? It’s hard to say for sure, but it does put Eilish in something of a bind, or at least WOULD do so if she were in the least inclined to put her money where her mouth is, or her fans at all interested in holding her accountable.
pic.twitter.com/p1tYXZIFcD— Linda (@ltiffanyc54) February 3, 2026
Neither is true, of course. Eilish was virtue signaling, and her fans care more about Eilish than any immigrant or Native American, who serve as props for their political stunts, and only that.
Pop star Billie Eilish goes viral for saying America is « stolen land » and « f**k ICE » at the Grammys.
Interestingly, she has yet to announce any plans to return her $14 million property to the tribe that once owned it.
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