The Truth Is Out There


“We must protect our kids!” one placard reads as protestors storm the streets by the hundreds of thousands, flooding our cities, outraged over the terrifying truth of child sex trafficking.

The Epstein debacle has opened up a can of worms, and now people are taking action, coming up with plans, organizing, and raising themselves up to levels of “wokeness” unforeseen to protect the most innocent of our population…

To protect the future.
To protect the vulnerable.
To protect the children.

And then…

I woke up, rubbed the sleep out of my eyes, and realized it was all a dream.

Unfortunately, this is all pure fantasy.

The outrage, that is…Not the problem.

The problem is just swept under the rug faster than you can say Jimmy Saville, Boys Town, or Jeffrey Epstein.

“3 Years and Up”

“We have a major issue here in the United States” Geoffrey Rogers, co-founder of the United States Institute Against Human Trafficking (USIAHT), said in an interview. “The United States is the No. 1 consumer of sex worldwide. So we are driving the demand as a society.”

Rogers reports that 50% to 60% of child sex slaves (his words) are coming out of the foster care industry.

What’s even more terrifying is at what age the abuse usually begins.

“We work with victims that are 3 years old and up,” Brook Bello, founder of More Too Life, said. “The average victim that we work with, that’s over 18, started being raped at three. Trafficking in America, if you are trafficked in the United States, 85 percent of victims that are trafficked here are from here.”

In the age of endless outrage, oddly enough, nobody is storming the streets in defense of the abused kids.

Radio silence. Chirp, Chirp. Dead silence indeed.

The only substantial outrage coming out of the mainstream thought police is not that a billionaire got away with a slap on the wrist for trafficking chidren for sex…

But that it, by and large, is a possible vehicle for vindication against Trump or Bill Clinton, both of whom had history with Epstein.

Here’s a question:

How many of our societal problems today stem from an abused childhood?

Common sense would say the answer is likely to be the vast, vast majority.

And yet, it seems our eyes are trained to look almost everywhere but right there… this big, festering dark spot in society.

Does it mean that much of our age of outrage is revealing itself to be a sham?

Is all the kicking, screaming, and flailing truly about protecting the innocent?

Or is it all a distraction to avoid the really heavy stuff? A vehicle to air one’s personal resentments and trauma, rather than going through the pain and trouble of dealing with those issues at home?

Seems so.

Nowhere is this more glaring than in the case of Jeffrey Epstein and his Lolita Express.

It’s not at all surprising that the Epstein outrage can’t push itself past partisanship.

Little attention, after all, was given to Joaquin Garcia’s arrest last month.

Garcia, founder and pastor of Mexico’s largest megachurch (over 1 million members in 50 countries), was arrested in the United States on charges of sex trafficking, child rape, and child pornography.

Few egregious cases of sexual assault that can’t be twisted into some political crusade ever make it into public consciousness.

Last April, “Smallville” actress Allison Mack pled guilty for her role in a sex trafficking ring, admitting to recruiting women where they ended up being forced or coerced into sex.

While the government increasingly cracks down on voluntary activity by consenting adults…

And “social justice” activists call for more and more laws, unwittingly becoming best friends of the private prison industry they claim to abhor,
little attention is given to the MOST horrific and egregious cases happening right under our noses…

And even smaller amounts of attention go toward protecting the most innocent and vulnerable…

Beyond political aisles, race, creed, or religion, something has to give.

And, whatever it is, it won’t be the wake-up call we want.

But it might be the one we need.

Until tomorrow or whenever…………………..

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