Mansion on Stolen Indian land
Posted: Tue Feb 03, 2026 2:35 pm
First, Mr Forbes must clarify that he has never heard the dulcet tones of Billie Ellish.
Staffers for Mr Forbes had to inform him that she was even a chanteuse. In rare moments of relaxation, Mr Forbes grooves to the pulsing beat of rock singers like Perry Como.
As the Clowntoker's shack, it also sits on stolen Indian land. Yes, Clown's hovel sits on Patchy Indian land.
Not Apache Indian land. The Patchy Indians were sort of low-rent relatives of the Apache. In much the same way, Clowntoker's postings on this fine forum have been sort of low-rent rantings rather than reasoned discourse. But I digress:
"The Native American tribe whose ancestral land includes Billie Eilish’s Los Angeles mansion has something to say about her Grammys virtue signaling, when the singer declared, “no one is illegal on stolen land.”
“As the First People of the greater Los Angeles basin, we do understand that her home is situated in our ancestral land,” a spokesperson for the Tongva tribe told The Daily Mail, noting that the singer had not yet reached out regarding the ownership rights of her $3 million Hollywood Hills home.
“Eilish has not contacted our tribe directly regarding her property… we do value the instance when public figures provide visibility to the true history of this country,” the spokesperson went on. “It is our hope that in future..."
Staffers for Mr Forbes had to inform him that she was even a chanteuse. In rare moments of relaxation, Mr Forbes grooves to the pulsing beat of rock singers like Perry Como.
As the Clowntoker's shack, it also sits on stolen Indian land. Yes, Clown's hovel sits on Patchy Indian land.
Not Apache Indian land. The Patchy Indians were sort of low-rent relatives of the Apache. In much the same way, Clowntoker's postings on this fine forum have been sort of low-rent rantings rather than reasoned discourse. But I digress:
"The Native American tribe whose ancestral land includes Billie Eilish’s Los Angeles mansion has something to say about her Grammys virtue signaling, when the singer declared, “no one is illegal on stolen land.”
“As the First People of the greater Los Angeles basin, we do understand that her home is situated in our ancestral land,” a spokesperson for the Tongva tribe told The Daily Mail, noting that the singer had not yet reached out regarding the ownership rights of her $3 million Hollywood Hills home.
“Eilish has not contacted our tribe directly regarding her property… we do value the instance when public figures provide visibility to the true history of this country,” the spokesperson went on. “It is our hope that in future..."