Youth performer Billie Eilish is more than just a teen pop star. She boasts of making it while recording in her brother’s home studio in the bedroom, but that isn’t all the story.
No one gets famous in their own bedroom, or from their college dorm room like Mark Zuckerberg the Facebook Master, or from their garage like Amazon’s Jeff Bezos. It doesn’t just accidentally happen. These people are targeted and chosen by Elite from the beginning and have ties.
Young Billie is no different. Her surroundings, daughter of Soapbox star mother and actress/screenwriter Maggie Baird and father actor Patrick O’Connell, has brought her a network of connections. Sure she has talent, but so do so many street performers. The difference is the industry attention by those who have eyed her from the beginning, waiting for her to sprout and take the dangling fruit so they can use her.
The industry often take a young performer (some who have gone through the Disney mind control experimentation) and they mold them into a product. This captivates an audience and fanbase of the youth. While seeming innocent and lollypoppish, like Katy Perry, they drag their youth teen fans on the journey with them, and when passing through adolescence into young adulthood, they have been subtly programmed, as the performer takes on a new adult persona usually of dark mysterious imagery.
Billie Eilish is on the same path. Difference is her imagery is already dark. She denies it, but the videos displayed are right out in the open. Songs like “Bad Guy,” which is more humorous, and “Wish you Were Gay,” are enough to get your curiosity. But what about the obvious “Good Girls Go to Hell.” She tells it is about global warming issues, but in the song she gives homage to Lucifer and considers God a female. The video is full of mind control triggers, as well as offering an obvious Faustian Bargain, to “sell your soul to the devil.” Gives Lucifer his due and surrenders her soul. She desecrates Christianity and makes it cool to be evil. If this isn’t the ultimate game, I don’t know what is. The video displays symbolism and alludes to a dark spiritual message.
Source: The Dark Meaning of “all the good girls go to hell” by Billie Eilish – The Vigilant Citizen