Last Updated on February 24, 2024
Pop star Taylor Swift wore devil horns in 2007, according to sources familiar with the music industry. The photo and video below were taken during 32nd degree Freemason Brad Paisley’s “Bonfires and Amplifiers” tour, which featured a teenage Swift as an opening act. Swift is featured in the photo with country singer Rodney Atkins.
Here is Taylor Swift dancing in devil horns and dressed in a “Lady In Red” style during Atkins’ performance in 2007, according to a source:
The photograph and video are newsworthy after Taylor Swift’s appearance at the Super Bowl, where her friend Ice Spice made the devil-horns hand sign while wearing an upside-down cross necklace. The upside-down cross, also known as the inverted cross, is an icon within Satanism in some cases.
In Taylor Swift’s recent music video “Karma,” which features Ice Spice, Swift wears an Eyes Wide Shut-style mask as all kinds of darkness goes on, including the blasphemous line “Karma is a g-d.”
Of course, Taylor Swift is no stranger to the “All-Seeing Eye” hand gesture and the “devil horns” hand gesture.
Taylor Swift supports abortion, according to her comments in the 2020 documentary Miss Americana, which led to a political back-and-forth between Swift and Tennessee Republican senator Marsha Blackburn. The media is already speculating about the impact that Swift could have in a general election if she chooses to insert herself into the political discussion and inflict her opinions on America.
The music industry is rife with Satanic references. The late rapper XXXTentacion performed a song called “I Spoke To The Devil In Miami” that included the line “Spoke to a baphomet.” XXXTentacion wondered aloud whether he would be a “sacrifice” shortly before he was murdered.
Remember the Grammys when Sam Smith and Kim Petras performed a song called “Unholy”?
Meanwhile, Taylor Swift’s boyfriend Travis Kelce continues to face online backlash after he got caught on a sideline camera bumping into his 65-year old head coach Andy Reid and screaming in Reid’s face during the Super Bowl, apparently because Kelce wanted to go into the game. Though the Pfizer spokesman and Kansas City Chiefs tight end tried to play the scandal off at first with a joking tone, Kelce eventually had to admit his own misconduct.
The Chiefs won the Super Bowl, but Kelce’s attack on Reid left a bitter after-taste to the event, similar to the much-ballyhooed “holding” call that clinched the Chiefs victory in the Super Bowl last time around.
Travis Kelce confessed that he was wrong on his brother Jason Kelce’s podcast. Travis agreed with Jason’s assertion that Travis “crossed the line.”
“I felt bad for Andy because Andy had had hip surgery. He had his game plan in his hand. And when Kelce went over, Kelce didn’t push him, Kelce went over and he accidentally bumped him, I don’t think he pushed him or anything. It was an accident, but it looked bad on television,” former Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback and longtime broadcaster Terry Bradshaw stated on Rich Eisen’s show.
Though “Inside the NFL” on the CW Network had Travis Kelce wearing a microphone for the game, the show did not broadcast audio from the Kelce-Reid incident, prompting suspicion that the Chiefs might have intervened to prevent the release of that audio. If it ever gets released, that audio would certainly get ratings!
The show Nashville featured Hayden Panetierre’s pop star character (who might have been based on Taylor Swift) dating and marrying a pro football quarterback after their publicity teams got them together to create a spectacle. On the show, Panetierre’s character married the quarterback and then quickly backed out and got an annulment, leaving the football player and his family embarrassed.
If life imitates art, and art nowadays is mostly just shallow pop culture narratives, does that mean the “Travis Kelce” storyline is getting written out of the New World Order idol worship script? I guess we will have to find out, since the mainstream media is going to continue inflicting both of these people on us whether they break up or not.
A lot of people have been getting tired of the Kelce-Swift storyline. But Travis Kelce criticized “cranky NFL fans” who are not captivated by his media-baiting romance with Swift.
“I’m having fun with it, the majority of the world is having fun with it, outside of all the cranky NFL fans who just don’t want to see the Chiefs win,” Kelce said of his relationship with Swift during an appearance on the talk show of ESPN pundit Pat McAfee. “And you know what, we’re slowly reeling ’em in. We’re slowly reeling ’em in. They just, they’re fighting it right now.”
Kelce has used his platform in sports to become a paid shill for the Pfizer coronavirus needle injection, which has been widely linked to myocarditis and other ailments and associated with strokes and heart attacks caused by blood clotting.
New York Jets quarterback Aaron Rodgers, who bravely resisted the Scamdemic needle, called Kelce “Mr. Pfizer” at one point, and Kelce clearly got a little defensive about getting called out for his Big Pharma shilling.
“I thought it was pretty good. I mean, with the ‘stashe right now I look like a guy named Mr. Pfizer. Who knew I’d get into the vax wars with Aaron Rodgers? It’s Mr. Pfizer versus the Johnson and Johnson family over there, man,” Kelce said in a press conference, referring to Woody Johnson, the owner of Rodgers’ team the New York Jets.
“Once I got the vaccine, I got it because of keeping myself safe, keeping my family safe. The people in this building. So, yeah, I stand by it, one thousand percent, and I’m fully comfortable with him calling me Mr. Pfizer,” Travis Kelce shilled.
Kelce’s mom was even in a Pfizer commercial with him, adding another layer of cynicism to the wickedness of the Kelce brand.
Did Travis Kelce sell his soul? If so, Taylor Swift might end up getting a starring role in a new remake of Bedazzled…that is, if she still has the horns!