Ariana Grande-Butera (born June 26, 1993), known professionally as Ariana Grande, is a widely successful American actress and pop singer. Like most mainstream music figures, she describes herself as a liberal feminist and is an active supporter of the homosexual agenda (she also has a homosexual brother) and abortion. She has a history of attending left-wing protests and events, occasionally performing for attendees.
On 22 May 2017, an Islamic terrorist attack at the Manchester Arena killed twenty-three people and wounded 139 others during an Ariana Grande concert, becoming the most deadly terror attack ever in the United Kingdom.[1] Ironically, the attack took place shortly after Grande made statements expressing sympathy for Islam.
Grande has shown that she has very little regard for her own fans, having decided to no-show a cancer fundraising event in Los Angeles where she was set to do meet-and-greet photo sessions with fans,[2] as well as saying that she wished her fans "would die”.[2]
In another incident caught on camera, she was caught saying that she actually hates her own country of America and its citizens, instead expressing sympathy for Islam,[3] only to backtrack and make excuses for those comments when they came to light. Grande's ill-considered comments came shortly before British native and Islamic terrorist Salman Ramadan Abedi launched a suicide bombing at the Manchester Arena in Manchester, England following her concert there on May 22, 2017, which led to the deaths of 22 people at the event (including seven children).[4][5]
Grande has marched with Black Lives Matter[6] and performed at the anti-Second Amendment March for Our Lives on March 24, 2018, in Washington, D.C.[7]
She has also appeared at Gay Pride events, such as Dance On the Pier in New York City, and once donated the proceeds from one of her concerts to Planned Parenthood in response to pro-life legislation that had then recently been passed in several states.[8]
Grande was raised Roman Catholic but left the church (along with her brother) during the papacy of Benedict XVI, citing the church's opposition to homosexuality as her reason for abandoning the faith.
She and her brother have since embraced Kabbalah, a form of Jewish mysticism. Ironically (and perhaps unbeknownst to Grande), Judaism has the same scriptural laws about homosexuality as does Catholicism.[9] It should also be noted that defending Islam while advocating pro-homosexual causes is a famous example of liberal hypocrisy.
Categories: [Actresses] [Women Singers] [Liberals] [Anti-American] [Homosexual Agenda] [Hollywood Values] [Anti Second Amendment] [Former Christians] [Feminists]