Pop star Taylor Swift has recently begun to throw out her political opinions, but I had no idea she would take this turn.
In her new song “Miss Americana and the Heartbreak Prince” off her album Lover, Swift has written what is quite clearly a love letter to QAnon, the mysterious figure at the center of a conspiracy theory in which QAnon is attempting to thwart a deep state plot to take down President Donald Trump from the likes of Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton and George Soros.
Don’t believe me that Swift is a full-on Q disciple? Let’s just look at the lyrics:
“You know I adore you, I’m crazier for you
Than I was at 16, lost in a film scene
Waving homecoming queens, marching band playing
I’m lost in the lights
American glory faded before me
Now I’m feeling hopeless, ripped up my prom dress
Running through rose thorns, I saw the scoreboard
And ran for my life (Ah)”
In the first verse alone, Swift alludes to adoring and being crazy for a cryptic figure before saying that “American glory faded before me.” Swift has seen the America she once loved crumble before her eyes thanks to a secret cabal of pedophiles and deep-state saboteurs, and now she feels she’s running for her life.
“It’s you and me, that’s my whole world
They whisper in the hallway, “She’s a bad, bad girl” (Okay)
The whole school is rolling fake dice
You play stupid games, you win stupid prizes
It’s you and me, there’s nothing like this
Miss Americana and The Heartbreak Prince (Okay)
We’re so sad, we paint the town blue
Voted most likely to run away with you”
In the chorus, Swift recognizes that people will shun her for supporting Q, but that seems to only strengthen her resolve. “Voted most likely to run away with you,” she sings, an obvious declaration of her intent to help QAnon complete his/her mission.
“No cameras catch my muffled cries
I counted days, I counted miles
To see you there, to see you there
And now the storm is coming, but-“
Here’s where Swift makes her most overt reference to Q. Everyone knows that Q’s followers have adopted the “storm is coming” motto, a rallying cry to defeat the government’s elite who aim to grow their child sex trafficking rings and, ultimately, stage a coup against Trump. And here in this pre-chorus, Swift winks and nods to the QAnon movement to let them know she’s truly one of them, despite the negative things she has to say about the president publicly.
“And I don’t want you to (Go), I don’t really wanna (Fight)
‘Cause nobody’s gonna (Win), I think you should come home
And I’ll never let you (Go) ’cause I know this is a (Fight)
That someday we’re gonna (Win), just thought you should know”
As she closes out the song, Swift recognizes that the hardest parts of Q’s work are still to come. But no matter what comes their way – no matter if Swift finds her way on Hillary Clinton’s death list or a target of one of George Soros’ paid antifa supersoldier units – Swift will stand by QAnon and, together, they will win this fight.
Some initial reviews of “Miss Americana and the Heartbreak Prince” will say it’s a cryptic song full of different threads and references, but I don’t think its intentions could be any clearer. This is Taylor Swift’s pledge of allegiance to QAnon and her devotion to the Great Awakening.