Pop darling Olivia Rodrigo was already disgusted by the “propaganda” pushing the Trump administration’s deportation agenda before discovering her music was being used in one of their social media posts.The “Deja vu” singer told Dazed magazine she was first blindsided, then furious, when she was routinely scrolling through her phone and saw the Department of Homeland Security had put her song “All-american bitch” in a PSA urging immigrants to “self-deport.”Seeing the video, which shows agents chasing, tackling and arresting people, felt like a one-two punch, according to Rodrigo.“It was so deeply disturbing to see that propaganda, and the fact it was my song in there made me feel even more enraged,” she said.When the post first went live last November, the Grammy-winner went straight to the comment section to tell the social media ghouls at DHS, “Don’t ever use my songs to promote your racist, hateful propaganda.”Olivia Rodrigo, here at the Academy Museum Gala last October, was shocked when she found one of her songs in a pro-deportation video last November.John Shearer via Getty ImagesThough the video is still available on the DHS Instagram, it has no accompanying audio and tapping the sound icon prompts an alert that reads, “This song cannot be played because it’s currently unavailable.”Saying that she is ashamed to live somewhere that could be so inhumane, Rodrigo said, “What they’re doing is so awful and barbaric and cruel. I am really sad to be in a country that thinks that’s OK.”While some musicians are wary of airing their politics in a world that’s so divided, the “Vampire” singer told Dazed, “I think part of being an artist is sharing how you feel with other people.”“I don’t have a political science degree, I’m not the most educated person on planet Earth, but I like to try and stay up to date on things and share how I feel,” added Rodrigo, who first spoke out against President Donald Trump’s immigration crackdown when raids hit Los Angeles last June.“I’ve lived in LA my whole life and I’m deeply upset about these violent deportations of my neighbors under the current administration,” she posted on her Instagram story at the time. “LA simply wouldn’t exist without immigrants.”“Treating hardworking community members with such little respect, empathy, and due process is awful,” her post continued. “I stand with the beautiful, diverse community of Los Angeles and with immigrants all across America. I stand for our right to freedom of speech and freedom to protest.”