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Disgusted-Lurker ago

What's most disturbing about this is that there are over for 10,000 child porn sites...

keeper1 ago

I also find it disturbing that what we're told to do to help at the end of the article is to contact the NCMEC. We have potentially good independent news sources who don't know that a significant portion of the child protection services apparatus is profoundly compromised. It makes the problem feel so overwhelming. But we have to be able to break through. We have to keep pushing.

Proii_Pariah ago

One thing that the pizzagate investigation is shining a light on so vividly is precisely that most, if not all, of our protective organizations are infiltrated. And, in most cases, the infiltrators are at the top. But, we are rapidly pulling back the covers to expose them and for that I am grateful.

Good post man.

keeper1 ago

You are right. I hadn't thought of it that way, but pizzagate is the first hint I had that these child protection agencies were infiltrated. That had just never occurred to me. It's like being Charlie in the Chocolate Factory and Willy Wonka has just shattered your dreams--only he never takes it back. One other thing though--we've become conditioned to think nothing can ever be fixed. All these problems are too hard to solve. But that's only true because of the infiltration. If we purge the shit out of the system, we can maybe really FIX things. Wouldn't that be something? To live in an America where the systems we all pay so much for ACTUALLY worked?

Takeitslow ago

The "there's nothing can do, there too powerful" is defiantly a mental program. We outnumber these people tens of millions to one. It's so easy to stop these people.

rodeo13 ago

Programming. That's exactly right. Time to deprogram ourselves & fight.

Proii_Pariah ago

I love it! I've always been a bit of an idealist. I can see that America in my mind's eye. Any problem can be resolved. It only requires the will to do so. Of course, we have a collective reality here which requires that enough of us are willing to face the truth regardless of how unpleasant it may be and have the will to make the necessary changes. I'm a songwriter and was imagining this back in the 90's. I have a song whose refrain is "Let's start it over!". I know it's really that simple though most people see that is fatal and incurable optimism. lol

Funny thing is...since back in the early to mid 90's I've known that humanity was sweeping this issue of the rape of our children under the rug and that this would likely be the issue that would be the catalyst creating the outrage that would fuel the change. However, as furiously as people were ignoring it I never imagined that we'd make breakthroughs like we're making now.

keeper1 ago

Your words make me feel better. No surprise if you're a songwriter. I was doing a lot of research in the mid-90s on earth changes and other stuff, but I had NO idea about this vast child-abuse-and-rape stuff. And I pride myself on my extended vision. Totally missed this. I think it's like you say: it's hard to look at. We don't want to believe such things are possible. I posted somewhere else once about why I think that is: "The reason most people haven't recognized that this level of depravity is not just possible, but apparently prevalent, in these elite circles is because most people can't even conceive of this. That's not because they're stupid. It's because they're good people, for the most part. We tend to judge what is possible in others by what we know we, ourselves, are capable of. And the vast majority of us are not capable of the behavior we are uncovering here. Not only would we never DO anything like these people (if that's what they even are anymore) apparently do, we can't conceive of doing it. America's reluctance to believe that this is all actually happening is not an indictment of our culture and proof of our stupidity. It is rather a byproduct of the fact that most of us are compassionate and empathetic, decent people, so we cannot relate to this level of evil. (I don't like the word "evil" generally, but I've come to accept through this process that there is genuine evil in the world. We are reading about it here on a daily basis.)"

Proii_Pariah ago

Wow! You really remind me so much of myself. For years I refused to apply the word "evil" to anything. Probably much for the same reasons you don't like it. The last year or two has changed that. For some things there is just no other suitable word.

Great talking to you, Keeper1. I look forward to seeing you around. :)

keeper1 ago

P.S. I minored in Latin in college (no, there's no good reason for that really). I like your quote: "Ad Astra per Aspera!"

keeper1 ago

Great talking to you too, Proli. That name reminds me of being the black sheep--something I can relate to. Not a bad thing.
Funny, I hear myself in my head saying, "Hey, Ma, I made a new friend!" Too funny. Take care!

Proii_Pariah ago

Since you mentioned my name. Pariah...of course, refers to someone who is outcast, scorned, etc. Proii is a word I found in an old dictionary. It's an archaic Greek word that means "The Dawn Watch" or "Watcher At Dawn".

And you have, indeed, made a new friend.

keeper1 ago

Ha, I read it as "Proli", like shortened for "probably". Thanks for the update on it. Latin was as far as I got. Greek was next, but I ended up doing German instead. No good reason for that either. :-)