The X post you're linking to (from 

@EricLDaugh
on February 2, 2026) is a viral conservative-leaning reaction to Billie Eilish's acceptance speech at the 2026 Grammy Awards.
What happened at the GrammysBillie Eilish (along with her brother Finneas) won Song of the Year for "Wildflower" (from her album Hit Me Hard and Soft). During her speech, she spoke out against ongoing ICE raids and immigration enforcement actions under the current administration, saying:
"No one is illegal on stolen land."
She also reportedly added something like "Fuck ICE" (which was bleeped/censored on the broadcast), while wearing an "ICE Out" pin and calling for continued protest and speaking up. Multiple other artists that night (including Bad Bunny and others) used their moments to criticize ICE or support immigrant rights amid widespread raids and deportations happening at the time.This phrase "no one is illegal on stolen land" is a common activist slogan referencing the historical displacement and colonization of Indigenous peoples in the United States (in this case, often tied to the Tongva/Gabrielino people in the LA area).The X post's content and toneEric Daugherty's post sarcastically calls her out as a "Hollywood elitist" and demands she:
  • Return her $14 million Los Angeles mansion to the Tongva tribe (implying hypocrisy since the land is on "stolen" territory), or
  • Open it up to host "illegal aliens" (undocumented immigrants).
The caption ends with "Put up or shut the F up," framing it as a challenge to her moral consistency.The post includes a short clip (likely of her speech or related footage) and exploded in popularity:
  • Over 106,000 likes
  • 18,700+ reposts
  • 7+ million views (as of early February 2026)
ReactionsThe replies and quote-reposts are heavily from conservative/MAGA-aligned users, accusing her of hypocrisy (e.g., "If it's stolen land, why do you live there?" or memes mocking rich celebrities lecturing on borders while living securely). Some replies include photos/memes of her house, calls to "occupy" it ironically, or just general anti-celebrity sentiment.A smaller number of replies defend her or agree with the sentiment, but the dominant tone on that thread is mocking/critical.It's a classic example of the culture-war flare-up that happened right after the 2026 Grammys, where immigration policy became a major flashpoint and many celebrities used the platform to push back.