8 Celebrities Who Held Bizarre And Eerie Beliefs
We seem to have reached a point in celebrity culture when holding bizarre, easily disproven, and perhaps harmful ideas or cultish beliefs is practically expected. There was a time when people would pay to see or hear about the extraordinary things celebrities did. There were times when we did buy some of their items.
They can still be held up in the same manner of adoration, but now they must also be outspoken weirdos. Take away the oddball label, and we're just talking about "successful people." Not to let you wait anymore, scroll down to see the list of the eight celebrities who held eerie beliefs.
As it gains attention, more people, companies, organizations, and governments become involved. That seems like a consensus, not a "cabal." Let's give the devil credit. If M.I.A. is true that the CIA built Google and Facebook to eavesdrop on people, there's an easy fix. They're useless. Doable? True. Don't connect. Still, "Paper Planes" rocks.
According to Icke and his followers, reptilian beings might be substituted for "Zionists." Walker and Icke agree here. It's the Jews again! Anti-resurgence Semitism seems so telegraphed and bland that it baffles sensible individuals with enlightenment beliefs. But. For an author whose lifework is discussing the historic misery of her people, it's tragic that she so quickly blames another community, especially one that has been so deliberately mistreated and tormented (and who continues to suffer the scourge of anti-Semitism today).
According to "Terryological" reasoning, 1+1=2. That's exactly right. 2! Want evidence? All right, Terrence, get at it. His question: "How can it equal one?" Since there is no effect of multiplying by itself, the value of two is nullified if one time one equals one. Since the square root of four is two, multiplying one by itself yields two. What is the answer to this riddle? Needs one. But we've been told two, and that's wrong.
They can still be held up in the same manner of adoration, but now they must also be outspoken weirdos. Take away the oddball label, and we're just talking about "successful people." Not to let you wait anymore, scroll down to see the list of the eight celebrities who held eerie beliefs.
1. Lady Gaga Got The Idea Of "Born This Way" From Her Weird Beliefs
Source: Getty Images
2. Kyrie Irving Believe The Earth Is... Flat
Source: Getty Images
3. M.I.A Thought World Governments Manipulated Google And Facebook
Source: Getty Images
As it gains attention, more people, companies, organizations, and governments become involved. That seems like a consensus, not a "cabal." Let's give the devil credit. If M.I.A. is true that the CIA built Google and Facebook to eavesdrop on people, there's an easy fix. They're useless. Doable? True. Don't connect. Still, "Paper Planes" rocks.
4. Randy Quaid Thought Hollywood Tried To Kill Him
Source: Getty Images
5. Alicia Silverstone Thought We Should Follow Birds' Actions
Source: Getty Images
6. Rob Lowe Thought A Legend Almost Killed Him
Source: Getty Images
7. Alice Walker Believes David Icke's Hypothesis (Lizard People Control The World) Is Right
Source: Getty Images
According to Icke and his followers, reptilian beings might be substituted for "Zionists." Walker and Icke agree here. It's the Jews again! Anti-resurgence Semitism seems so telegraphed and bland that it baffles sensible individuals with enlightenment beliefs. But. For an author whose lifework is discussing the historic misery of her people, it's tragic that she so quickly blames another community, especially one that has been so deliberately mistreated and tormented (and who continues to suffer the scourge of anti-Semitism today).
8. Terrence Howard Thought Maths Is Wrong
Source: Getty Images
According to "Terryological" reasoning, 1+1=2. That's exactly right. 2! Want evidence? All right, Terrence, get at it. His question: "How can it equal one?" Since there is no effect of multiplying by itself, the value of two is nullified if one time one equals one. Since the square root of four is two, multiplying one by itself yields two. What is the answer to this riddle? Needs one. But we've been told two, and that's wrong.
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