Billie Eilish Lives in a Mansion on "Stolen Land" and Lectures You About Borders
Billie Eilish Grammys "No One Is Illegal On Stolen Land" Statement Exposes Left Historical Ignorance
Grammy winner Billie Eilish declared "no one is illegal on stolen land" at the 68th Grammy Awards while wearing an "ICE OUT" pin and receiving a standing ovation. She lives in a multimillion dollar mansion in Los Angeles.
Ryan Helfenbein of the Christian Post dismantled the statement on five grounds. First, if the land is truly stolen, Eilish profits from it daily without giving it back. Second, the United States acquired territory through 368 treaties between 1778 and 1871 involving cash payments, not theft, including the Louisiana Territory, Florida, Oregon, and California.
Third, the logic collapses on itself: as commentator Matt Walsh pointed out, "Land cannot be stolen if no one is illegal."
If borders have no legitimacy, property theft becomes an incoherent concept. Fourth, every nation on earth sits on previously occupied land, yet only America faces this criticism. Fifth, ICE operations have resulted in over 100,000 arrests of violent criminals including traffickers and gang members.
Grammy Awards Become Platform for Anti American Historical Revisionism

The Crusader's Opinion
This is what happens when a generation raised on Instagram lectures a civilization built by sacrifice. Billie Eilish lives on the land she calls stolen, in a mansion paid for by the system she denounces, protected by the borders she wants to erase. The Tongva tribe themselves noted the irony. Christians are called to truth, and the truth is that historical revisionism is not compassion. It is vanity dressed up as virtue. Real compassion serves, it does not perform.
Take Action
- Share: Share the facts about how U.S. land was acquired through 368 treaties, not theft.
- Learn: Study the actual history of American land acquisition and treaties with Native nations.
- Pray: Pray for discernment in our culture, that truth would prevail over sloganeering.
- Act: Support organizations that genuinely serve Native American communities rather than using them as political props.