Disney star exposes Hollywood’s love for the demonic: 'There is a reason you see people dressed up as Satan'



What do Sam Smith, Doja Cat, Lil Nas X, Demi Lovato, and Megan Thee Stallion all have in common? Each of these artists – although they’re certainly not the only ones – have boldly embraced Satanic imagery in their art, be it through costumes, music videos, or song lyrics.

While the media loves to write it off as mere theatrics and right-wing hysteria, former Disney star China McClain argues otherwise.

“I’ve noticed a pattern in what is being represented. People think this stuff is just a game, [but] there is a reason why you see people dressed up as Satan” or with “upside-down crosses … or pentagrams on their clothes,” McClain said.

“There’s a reason why the entertainment industry is doing that, y’all. They know good and doggone well that God exists; they also know that Satan exists. They’re just counting on the fact that y’all don’t know that, but either way, the things that you take in – that they’re feeding you – those things affect you, whether you realize it in the moment or not,” she warned, adding that the entertainment industry “is about influence.”

“I’m not going to sacrifice honesty in order to be politically correct.”

“Wow, good for her!” says Pat Gray, who’s encouraged that McClain is willing to “stand up and speak out,” even though her boldness is likely the reason she’s no longer in the limelight.

To hear more, watch the clip below.


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Lil Nas X proud of 'J Christ' song despite poor reception and backlash — is happy to 'do gay stuff' with his dad



Musician Lil Nas X described himself as a "very spiritual young man," which helped him deal with backlash from his single "J Christ," which upset Christians through his portrayal of Jesus in the song's music video.

The artist dressed as the Bible's Noah while playing basketball against Satan in the music video, in which he also dressed as Jesus Christ and danced alongside male cheerleaders. The visuals also included celebrity look-alikes of Kanye West, Oprah Winfrey, and President Obama ascending into heaven.

Lil Nas X told Variety that despite the song getting an underwhelming reception, he was "proud" of the song and video.

"Everyone expected me to be upset or something. But I’m a very spiritual person. I’m thankful that I get to even be in the charts and still be in the conversation. And I’m making new music and it’s been so long. So I’m grateful for that."

The singer gave remarks at the premiere of a new HBO documentary about himself, which reportedly featured him praising his family for accepting his homosexuality, which included taking his dad to a gay bar.

"I never would have thought to do gay stuff with my dad, but he insisted. He was like, ‘No, I want to go with you guys!’ So, yeah, that was the best night ever," Lil Nas X said.

As well, Variety reported that the artist's brother, Tramon Hall, is revealed to be a bisexual in the film.

After the release of his latest video, Lil Nas X was criticized by Christians for once again including satanic imagery in his musical performances. A previous video showed the artist falling from heaven, down to hell, to give Satan a lap dance.

Christian rapper Bryson Gray evoked a response from Lil Nas X, as well as rapper Kid Cudi when he released his own song called "Gay Demon," targeted at rappers who promote anti-Christian themes.

"I made one snippet about wanting god to give me hope a few days ago and already like 5 christian rappers have conceptualized, wrote, recorded, and shot music videos," Lil Nas X wrote on X.

Bryson Gray has successfully gotten under Lil Nas X\u2019s skin
— (@)

"If he was serious, he would apologize for the things he's done in the past like everybody else," Gray told Fox News. "You apologize for that. You acknowledge that. And him, he’s done all this damage to children in the public sphere. So come out and say ‘I apologize,'" Gray added.

However, Lil Nas X reiterated to Variety that he is a "very spiritual young man."

"I believe that things are going to work out as long as I’m doing my part. I’ve never worked harder on an album or done more in my life internally to get things right. I’m excited for the outcome," he added.

In response to Lil Nas X saying he is spiritual, Gray told Blaze News, "I do believe he's spiritual, but that spirit is a gay demon."

Christian rapper responds to LIL NAS X \ud83d\ude2e
— (@)

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Squires: Lil Nas X and Russell Westbrook remind us that financial wealth doesn’t fix spiritual poverty



Spectacle has become the most valuable resource in America's cultural economy. That explains Lil Nas X's ascendancy, his hypersexualized grip on the nation's attention span, and the recent viral cross-dressing images of NBA star Russell Westbrook and rapper Kid Cudi.

Our uber-wealthy celebrities keep proving that no amount of financial prosperity can make up for spiritual impoverishment.

My initial reaction to seeing Westbrook and Cudi in skirts was to lament the continued assault on masculinity in pop culture. That effort is certainly under way. It was showcased at Monday night's Met Gala, the annual charity event centered around outrageous costumes. Lil Nas X was the star. The New York Times hailed his three-in-one outfit that started as an oversized cape, covered a Versace suit of armor, and eventually revealed an ornate jumpsuit.

Our country is being influenced by spiritually empty people who will do anything to be seen, acknowledged, and affirmed by complete strangers. Their decadence is causing the culture to collapse in on itself, and people are struggling to make sense of how we got here and where we are going. As is often the case, the Bible provides lessons from antiquity that shed light on things we find hard to understand in the modern world.

The book of Deuteronomy is the fifth book in the Old Testament. It includes a number of instructions from Moses to the Israelites before they enter the promised land. At different points throughout the chapter, Moses instructs the Israelites to love God with all of their heart, soul, and strength. There is also a command to parents to teach the children, whether inside or outside the home, about God's standards of righteousness. Some of the instructions regarding prosperity and ungodliness are particularly relevant today.

America is a country with tremendous prosperity and wealth, and like the ancient Israelites, we are susceptible to the temptations that come with material comfort. The most important one is forgetting God altogether and chasing after idols. The second is the belief that we were able to accomplish everything that we have done on our own. The last is the assumption that what we have today will always be there in the future.

It feels as if we are losing the battle with all three of those temptations every day. We live in an age in which a young man is celebrated for making a video where he gives Satan a lap dance and depicts himself as pregnant to announce an upcoming album. The cultural tastemakers like anything edgy and subversive, but they aren't the only culprits. One young mother posted the results of searching "baby video" in YouTube and tweeted a screenshot that showed Lil Nas X's "Industry Baby" video. The thumbnail for that video depicts him and five other men naked in a jailhouse shower scene. I am not surprised that YouTube's algorithms would produce these results. What shocked me is how many people who responded to her tweet, which went viral in part because Lil Nas X retweeted it, saw nothing wrong with it.

This is why it is so important for parents to get serious about raising their children and equipping them with a coherent worldview. My family, like many other Christians, see that as one demonstrable benefit of homeschooling. My wife and I decided to homeschool our children using a classical Christian curriculum that acknowledges God as the center of all knowledge and absolute truth as something that can be grasped. This model is the perfect antidote to an education system steeped in secular humanism and moral relativism.

The classical model also breaks down the K-12 years into three stages (the Trivium) that generally align with children's ages in elementary, middle, and high school. The Grammar stage is when students learn to define the objects they observe and memorize information. The Logic stage is when students learn to use facts to compose sound arguments. The Rhetoric stage equips students to use their acquired knowledge and critical thinking skills to persuasively defend their ideas. Contrast these stages of development to the students who are being taught that the common meanings of well-defined terms are constantly changing, arguments are justified by feelings and experience rather than facts and evidence, and minds are changed by coercion rather than persuasion. Without a solid grounding in truth, the next generation will be even more lost than we are today.

To paraphrase Pastor Voddie Baucham, parents who send their children to Caesar to be educated shouldn't be surprised when they come home acting like Romans. We are seeing this play out on a national level. American schools, especially in large metropolitan areas, are taken over by ideologues who are practicing their own religion. They are dogmatic in their beliefs about race, gender, and sexuality and have no problem proselytizing to our children. They have set themselves up as an opposing authority to parents and believe their values should shape the minds and morals of our children. Christian parents who hold to a biblical worldview need to understand how hard the culture is trying to get our children to apostatize. Much like the serpent in the Garden of Eden, their goal is to get people to question God and follow them. They want society to worship the false idol of self, but people who have to invent new sexual identities, twerk on restaurant tables, or get high to make it through each day don't exhibit the type of contentment, peace, and joy I desire. I prefer to put my trust in the One who promises soul-rest for the burdened and weary. I think you should too.

Whitlock: America’s toxic femininity pandemic provides China huge advantage in the Mold War



We're losing the Mold War to China.

The Asian superpower and America's economic and military rival is molding its culture in masculinity. America is doing the reverse. With a gentle nudge from China, we're leaning into feminine energy.

On Thursday, China's lawmakers announced a ban on television programming with incorrect political positions, including shows featuring effeminate men. The Chinese Communist Party is pushing back against the feminization of men. Meanwhile, here in America, we're celebrating it. On Thursday, the rapper Lil Nas X partnered with People Magazine to promote the fallacy that he's having a baby. In an extravagant photo spread, Lil Nas was pictured pregnant. His new album, "Montero," is slated to be "born" on Sept. 17.

"SURPRISE! I can't believe I'm finally announcing this," a caption read. "My little bundle of joy Montero is due September 17, 2021."

I know many of you think we should ignore Lil Nas X. He's a troll. The maker of Old Town Road is a one-hit wonder who is constantly courting controversy for relevance because his music is no good. I wish that were true.

Lil Nas is important because he has the support of our cultural puppet masters. There's a reason People Magazine supported his pregnancy photos. Lil Nas is bait for the minds of young people. He's a tool being used to feminize little boys. Old Town Road made him an icon among grade-schoolers. Now that he's an influencer, he's putting out music to influence young boys in the LGBTQ direction. Every other month, he executes an attention-grabbing stunt connected to a sexual taboo. When he's not giving the devil a lap dance, he's twerking naked in a prison shower or posed in a white satin dress with a huge baby bump.

Just a few years ago, we were (perhaps falsely) led to believe that 3% to 4% of Americans were gay. Now, when you turn on the television or open a social media app, society is presented as a narrative centered around alternative sexual identities. Transgenders make up 1% of society and 50% of our conversations about society. This is by design and manipulation.

If China is attempting to build a more masculine society, what kind of society would it love for its chief rival to adopt?

America is ruled by toxic femininity. The pleasing of emotions and feelings is our highest priority. We take so seriously the protection of feelings and emotions that thought crimes are judged more harshly than actual crimes. Jan. 6 is a great example. The rioters at the Capitol have been labeled and treated as insurrectionists even though the damage they caused at the Capitol pales in comparison to a typical Black Lives Matter and Antifa riot. The real crime of Jan. 6 rioters is wrongthink. They wrongly think Donald Trump was a good president. Support of Trump offends the sensibilities of feminized Americans.

Man can never fully please a woman. It's not in her nature to feel fulfilled. There's always more, something better. I'm sorry if that offends. It's my belief.

It's my belief that we're building a society that makes laws and rules based on feelings, fleeting, flighty, and filthy emotion. Emotions and feelings drive the behavior of weak people. Modern culture says men are weak when they don't express their emotions. The truth is men are weak when they don't control and tame their emotions. So are societies.

Human beings are capable of feeling a lot of things. Biological boys feel like girls. Biological girls feel like boys. I have sympathy for every human who suffers identity confusion. But we can't make laws focused on satisfying the feelings of confused people. Where does it stop? There are human beings who feel like dogs and cats. I'm not being flippant.

I do not doubt that Bruce Jenner felt like a woman trapped in a man's body. I don't doubt it for one second. We can't make laws based on people's feelings, though. Feelings change. A fair society presents challenges for all of us. Should airlines be forced to change the size of their seats because I feel uncomfortable in a standard coach seat?

There are consequences for our untamed feelings and desires. I feel like eating McDonald's five times a day. There's a price for that.

There's a price America will pay for its emasculation of men. China is taking steps to collect that debt. Lil Nas X is just another maxed-out credit card in the Mold War.

Whitlock: Black men allowed the music industry to create Lil Nas X and other morally bankrupt 'Industry Babies.'



For those of us outraged by rapper Lil Nas X's latest soft-porn music video, we have no one to blame other than ourselves.

We created Little Nasty X-rated when we danced to Too Short's "Freaky Tales," shouted "Me So Horny" at the request of the 2 Live Crew, co-signed Snoop's "Doggystyle," and rapped along to Lil Kim and 50 Cent's "Magic Stick."

We've spent 30 years defining black culture as an extension of hip-hop's pornographic lyrics and celebration of prison life.

Lil Nas X is simply holding a mirror. His sexually explicit, gay-in-prison video for the song "Industry Baby" is perfectly named. The industry birthed, nurtured, and is now hosting his coming-out party. He is the industry's baby. The industry has reared millions of Lil Nas Xs. They're not confined to our prisons and jails. Prison culture has been exported to mainstream society through music. The tatts, the cornrows, the sagging pants, the crude language, the gladiator violence, and the sexual fluidity have all been normalized.

Go listen to what we've been partying to for the past three decades. You thought "No Vaseline" was a diss track? Wrong D word. Try again.

Lil Nas X heard the message loud and queer.

"Y'all be silent as hell when n*****s dedicate their entire music catalogue to rapping about sleeping with multiple women," Nas X tweeted Sunday at Dr. Boyce Watkins, a black public intellectual who criticized X's music. "But when I do anything remotely sexual I'm 'being sexually irresponsible' and 'causin more men to die from AIDS.' Y'all ate gay people and don't hide it."

Nas X needs a better understanding of the adverb "remotely." His latest video is more than remotely sexual. The video starts innocently. A black prosecutor accuses Lil Nas X of the crime of homosexuality. A black judge sentences the rapper to five years in Montero State Prison for being gay. Nas plays the role of judge, prosecutor, defendant, and jury member. From there, things turn quite sexual. Nas makes it rain and simulates doggystyle sex with his cellmate. There's a shower scene with Nas and a half dozen naked inmates who appear to be auditioning for a remake of Janet Jackson's "Rhythm Nation" video.

By normal standards, "Industry Baby" is more than "remotely" sexual. By today's rap music standards, the video is relatively tame. It's not quite Cardi B's "Wet A$ P***y," the BET Awards' 2020 video and song of the year, the American Music Awards' song of the year, and the People's Choice Award for best collaboration.

The American entertainment industry is PornHub. Lil Nas is the best new actor at the Adult Video News Awards. He's Dana Plato, who rose to fame starring as Mr. Drummond's daughter, Kimberly, on the family-oriented TV show "Different Strokes," and ended her career doing porn.

Lil Nas became famous and attracted a cult following of kids with the innocent, 2018 country rap song "Old Town Road." Three years later, his handlers unveiled him as a satanic icon with the song "Montero," an ode to Nas descending into hell to give Satan a lap dance. For anyone who missed the wicked symbolism, "Industry Baby" is the exclamation point.

Lil Nas X, like all commercial rappers before him, is here to promote immorality and degeneracy among young people. It's worth noting that Kanye West co-produced "Industry Baby."

As is fashionable today, Lil Nas cloaks his message in social justice reform. Along with the Friday video release, the clever rapper announced he's joining forces with the Bail Project, a nonprofit organization dedicated to ending cash bail. Social justice reformers argue that cash bail drives structural racism in our criminal justice system.

"It's personal," Nas X said in a statement. "I know the pain that incarceration brings to a family. And I know the disproportionate impact that cash bail has on black Americans and the LGBTQ community. Let's bring people home and let's fight for freedom and equality."

Once again, the LGBTQ agenda is framed as a black issue. It's by design. It's been in the making for 60 years. It's our fault. We have been weak, malleable, materialistic, hedonistic, secular, and arrogant since the assassination of Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.

We created Lil Nas X.

‘SNL’ Finale With Rapper Lil Nas X Ties For Lowest Ratings Of Season

In concluding its season, political propaganda machine "Saturday Night Live" tied with last week for the worst ratings of the year.

Lil Nas X says 'SNL' is 'going to hell' after sketch portrays rapper lap dancing for God ahead of Easter



Rapper Lil Nas X jokes that "Saturday Night Live" is "going to hell" after one of its skits featured a likeness of the rapper lap dancing for God.

What are the details?

During Saturday night's opening skit, comedian Chris Redd appeared as a portrayal of Lil Nas X and discussed the ensuing controversy after the release of his highly controversial new music video, "Montero (Call Me By Your Name)."

In the music video, the rapper — whose real name is Montero Lamar Hill — can be seen making out with a half-man, half-snake. Elsewhere he can be seen sliding down a stripper pole from heaven into hell, where he presents Satan himself with a lap dance. The rapper has also been under fire for his "Satan Shoes" — an authorized design built on a pair of Nikes, and which features a drop of human blood, a pentagram pendant, and the number "666." Nike has filed a lawsuit in an attempt to stop the shoes' distribution.

During the Saturday skit, Redd addressed the outraged caused by his new video.

Comedian Chloe Fineman — portraying pop star Britney Spears hosting a fictional talk show — introduced Redd's character as one of the "social pariahs of the week," and said that experienced being "attacked by the rare combo of the Catholic Church and Nike."

When asked about the controversy around the shoes, Redd's Lil Nas X said, "I don't know why Nike is so mad. Their whole thing is 'Just do it.' Well, I did it."

Britney Spears Talk Show Cold Open - SNLwww.youtube.com

Fineman's Spears went on to address the frenzy following the rapper's music video.

"Why are they so upset?" she asked.

Redd responded, "[Because they are] closed-minded idiots. People are afraid of me because I'm different, but really I'm just your typical gay black country rap sneaker entrepreneur."

Fineman added, "What would you say to the religious folks who are mad that you gave Satan a lap dance?"

Redd explained that it wasn't "the real Satan" in the video.

"[T]he real Satan doesn't do, like, music videos, so maybe chill," he added.

Fineman responded, "Would you be willing to give a lap dance to God, just to even things out?"

Redd agreed, and Fineman bought out "God," portrayed by comedian Mikey Day.

After Redd performed the lap dance, Fineman cheered and said, "Wow! Happy Easter everyone!"

Late Saturday night, Lil Nas X himself tweeted about the sketch and said, "snl going to hell."

snl going to hell https://t.co/OBkJBBpPXM
— nope 🏹 (@nope 🏹)1617507471.0

Lil Nas X blames 'crying nerds' for getting his Satan Shoes 'cancelled'



Lil Nas X was not happy after a judge ruled against him in Nike's lawsuit to block the rapper's "Satan Shoes," and he let the world know about it Thursday.

And he knew just whom to blame: "crying nerds on the internet."

What happened?

A judge granted Nike's request for a temporary restraining order Thursday after the Lil Nas and Brooklyn-based company MSCHF sold 666 pairs of Nike Air Max 97s as "Satan Shoes," complete with pentagram, a Bible verse about Satan, and 60cc of red ink and a drop of human blood in the heel's air bubble. The shoes, which retailed for $1,018, went on sale Monday and were sold out within minutes.

Nike sued for copyright infringement and dilution of their brand, saying it did "not approve or authorize MSCHF's customized Satan Shoes."

"Moreover, MSCHF and its unauthorized Satan Shoes are likely to cause confusion and dilution and create an erroneous association between MSCHF's products and Nike," the suit said. "In fact, there is already evidence of significant confusion and dilution occurring in the marketplace, including calls to boycott Nike in response to the launch of MSCHF's Satan Shoes based on the mistaken belief that Nike has authorized or approved this product."

The shoe-brand's lawsuit came after calls from people across the internet decrying the rapper's shoes and associated obscene video.

Following the judge's ruling, Lil Nas, who's real name is Montero Lamar Hill, came out swinging Thursday night, blaming "crying nerds" for stopping him from distributing his shoes.

"sorry guys i'm legally not allowed to give the 666th pair away anymore because of the crying nerds on the internet," he tweeted.

sorry guys i’m legally not allowed to give the 666th pair away anymore because of the crying nerds on the internet https://t.co/URoj0kGnRq
— nope 🏹 (@nope 🏹)1617320858.0

He followed that accusation with another tweet bemoaning the crying nerds' power to get his shoes "cancelled."

"I haven't been upset until today, i feel like it's f***ed up they have so much power they can get shoes cancelled," he wrote. "freedom of expression gone out the window. but that's gonna change soon."

Image source: Twitter/@LilNasX screenshot

(H/T: New York Post)

Judge halts distribution of Lil Nas X's 'Satan shoes' at Nike's request — and buyers might not ever receive the $1,018 shoes they paid for



A judge has granted Nike's request for a temporary restraining order against MSCHF, the company behind rapper Lil Nas X's highly controversial "Satan shoes."

What's a brief history here?

The rapper, real name Montero Lamar Hill, collaborated with Brooklyn-based art collective MSCHF on the sneakers, which are a limited-edition design built on of a pair of Nike Air Max 97s.

The controversial shoes' air bubble is filled with 60cc of red ink as well a drop of human blood, according to the rapper.

The shoes — which also feature a pentagram pendant, an embroidered "666," and a Bible verse — retailed for $1,018 and went on sale Monday. Within minutes, the shoes sold out.

Nike filed a lawsuit against MSCHF earlier this week, stating that it did not authorize the shoes or design.

What are the details?

TMZ reported that a judge granted the company's request on Thursday for a temporary restraining order demanding the company stop fulfilling any orders.

"Due to the restraining order, MSCHF will not be allowed to ship [the shoes] to customers awaiting the shoe that the creative agency put their blood, sweat, and tears in," the outlet reported. "FYI ... judges grant temporary restraining orders of this type when there's a high probability that they will win when there's a full-blown hearing."

A portion of the company's Monday complaint read:

Nike has not and does not approve or authorize MSCHF's customized Satan Shoes. Moreover, MSCHF and its unauthorized Satan Shoes are likely to cause confusion and dilution and create an erroneous association between MSCHF's products and Nike. In fact, there is already evidence of significant confusion and dilution occurring in the marketplace, including calls to boycott Nike in response to the launch of MSCHF's Satan Shoes based on the mistaken belief that Nike has authorized or approved this product.