A conservative Australian activist claims pop star Billie Eilish's radical anti-ICE rhetoric directly led to his deportation from the United States after he dared to mock the singer's open borders stance online.
Drew Pavlou, 24, revealed in a series of X posts that immigration authorities detained him for questioning over social media posts where he joked about moving into Eilish's California mansion - a pointed critique of her virtue-signaling opposition to immigration enforcement.
The incident perfectly captures the left's stunning hypocrisy: celebrities who rail against ICE and demand open borders suddenly become very interested in who gets to enter their own exclusive spaces. When Pavlou called out this double standard through satirical posts, the system came down on him like a hammer.
"Billie Eilish got me deported," Pavlou declared, exposing how the entertainment industry's woke politics have real consequences for ordinary people who dare to push back.
This is the same Billie Eilish who has repeatedly attacked immigration enforcement, painting ICE agents as villains while living safely behind her gated community walls. But when an activist used humor to highlight her privilege and hypocrisy, suddenly the rules mattered again.
Under President Trump's restored immigration policies, authorities are finally taking border security seriously - but it's telling that a conservative activist faces consequences while Hollywood elites continue preaching open borders from their ivory towers without any accountability.
Pavlou's case demonstrates what happens when you challenge the left's sacred narratives. Mock their hypocrisy, and they'll use every tool at their disposal to silence you. The entertainment industry has become so drunk on woke ideology that they can't handle even basic criticism of their contradictions.
How many more conservatives will face retaliation for exposing the left's double standards? And when will celebrities like Eilish be held accountable for the real-world impact of their dangerous anti-enforcement rhetoric?
