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Cops pull over the completely wrong vehicle, drawing weapons and screaming aggressive orders at a terrified family. Why are they acting like they are facing an army of gangsters fully armed? For God's sake, it was a 16-year-old epileptic girl. And you were told that she has epilepsy. What's...

78,536 views • 11 days ago •via X (Twitter)

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A 17 year old girl offered a lad a lift. That's it. That's her whole crime. Being kind. He got in. Then three more climbed in after him. FOR SIX HOURS, police say, they raped her. Over and over. Driving her round Sydney in her own car like she was a thing, not a child. Then they dumped her back in the driver's seat and walked off like they'd done nothing. She's SEVENTEEN and she has to live with this for the rest of her life. That's one of them being marched out of a house in cuffs. The only one of the four old enough to be named. The rest hide behind their age. They were 14, 16 and 18. Listen to the family screaming at the police. Why are you arresting him. Why him. Shut your mouth, don't say a word. Not one of them screaming for her. Here's what police say happened, because it's worse than people know. Half five on a Sunday. Liverpool Westfield, southwest Sydney. A 16 year old she'd never met starts chatting, all friendly, follows her to her car and talks his way in and while he's allegedly attacking her, police say he's on a video call to the others. Filming it. Sending it round. Calling them in. So no, this wasn't something that just got out of hand. They were watching, allegedly, before they even turned up. He asks for a lift to a park. She says yes, thinking he'll get out when they arrive. He doesn't. Two more are waiting. A fourth pulls up in another car. And then, police allege, they took control of her own car and drove her round the suburbs while it carried on. The detective leading the case didn't hold back. She said it beggars belief that men would act this way over six hours and then the line that sticks. In all those six hours, not one of them stopped and said to the others, this is wrong. Not once. Six hours. Till half eleven at night, when they allegedly left her in the car and walked off. She rang a mate, who drove her to the police station and this is the part that should make people sit up. That girl, after all of that, gave police a detailed statement over several days. The detective called it the strength of the victim. She is the reason they had the evidence at all. She handed them the case. Look at the charges if you think it's being overblown. The 16 year old on his own faces 24 of them. Nine counts of sexual intercourse without consent. The 14 year old, ten more. A dedicated unit, Strike Force Dungannon, was set up to chase it down and they didn't rush it for a headline. They waited SIX MONTHS to arrest the two older ones, quietly building the case so it would hold. The moment they knew they could throw the book at them, they moved. When they did, they needed the riot squad to get them out of the houses and none of it happened last week. This was December 2024. That girl has carried it for over a year already. And it's only grinding through court now, in 2026. Still going. Still not done. She's still waiting. She was kind for thirty seconds. They took six hours and the rest of her life for it. Four of them. One girl and over a year on, she's STILL waiting for justice to catch up. That's the world we're handing our daughters. So remember her. Because the system already wants you to forget and ask yourself what kind of country leaves a child waiting this long.

BanksyCat

5,883,991 views • 2 days ago

Simon Sinek on why society gets relationships wrong: Simon Sinek opens up about the decades-long stress of being judged for his relationship status. "I've gone on dates where literally the person I'm on a date with [asks] 'have you ever been married?' I'm like no. They're like 'what's your longest relationship?' I'm like about three years. And they say to me, 'What's wrong with you? Why haven't you been married?'" He explains the weight he carried from internalising this judgment: "The stress that I've carried for decades… I believed my own narrative that I am a failure and I am bad at relationships. And people like, 'you have commitment issues.' They all diagnose me and it didn't sound right because I don't think I do. Maybe I do. It's stressful and you carry that weight that I'm bad at relationships and I don't know how to make people happy." Then Simon shares the insight that challenged his entire self-narrative. He describes a friend who spent 16 years in an unhealthy relationship: "She admits freely that she should have been in it for one year. Society looks at her and says, 'She did it right. I did it wrong.'" He continues: "She got it right and I got it wrong. There's something wrong with me. There's nothing wrong with her because there's something flawed in you if you can't figure out how to do it. But [she was] staying in a 16-year relationship that you should have only been in for one that was unhealthy and unhappy and just not a good thing." That realisation reframed everything: "I'm a very happy person despite my lack of relationships because I have great friends." Simon's bigger point is about what society chooses to value: "Why does society overvalue the romantic relationship? This is the world we live in where there's an excessive amount of pressure to get married, white picket fence, 1.3 children or whatever the statistic is. And entire economies [are built] on how to find it, nurse it, get it, make it. And yet there's so little on friendship." We've built a cultural scoreboard that rewards people for staying in the wrong relationship longer than people who leave or never enter the wrong one. A 16-year unhappy marriage gets treated as success. A happy life full of deep friendships gets treated as a problem to be diagnosed. Maybe the real question isn't "what's wrong with you for not being married?" it's "what's wrong with a culture that measures a life by that metric in the first place?"

Big Brain Psychology

12,413 views • 2 months ago