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Online violence doesn't leave physical bruises, but it does cause mental scars. It’s a continuation of offline abuse; amplified by anonymity and reach. Millions of women, girls, and adolescents face harassment, stalking, and threats in digital spaces meant for connection. Let’s change that 🔒 Block and report abuse 🗣️...

622,712 просмотров • 7 месяцев назад •via X (Twitter)

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Lady Gaga says you have committed violence by objecting to her celebration of Dylan Mulvaney on International Women’s Day. “It's appalling to me that a post about National Women's Day by Dylan Mulvaney and me would be met with such vitriol and hatred. When I see a newspaper reporting on hatred but calling it ‘backlash’ I feel it is important to clarify that hatred is hatred, and this kind of hatred is violence. “Backlash would imply that people who love or respect Dylan and me didn't like something we did. This is not backlash. This is hatred. “But it is not surprising given the immense work that it's obvious we still have to do as a society to make room for transgender lives to be cherished and upheld by all of us. “I feel very protective in this moment, not only of Dylan, but of the trans community who continues to lead the way with their endless grace and inspiration in the face of constant degradation, intolerance, and physical, verbal, and mental violence. I certainly do not speak for this community, but I have something to say. I hope all women will come together to honor us ALL for International Women's Day, and may we do that always until THE DAY that all women are celebrated equally. That all people are celebrated equally. A day where people of all gender identities are celebrated on whichever holiday speaks to them. Because people of all gender identities and races deserve peace and dignity. “May we all come together and be loving, accepting, warm, welcoming. May we all stand and honor the complexity and challenge of trans life-that we do not know, but can seek to understand and have compassion for. I love people too much to allow hatred to be referred to as ‘backlash.’ People deserve better.”

Billboard Chris 🌎

1,498,933 просмотров • 2 лет назад

LET’S PROTECT GIRL CHILD !! To our club owners and managers, I appreciate the fact that you create job opportunities for many young girls and women who work hard to market and grow your establishments. However, during my night operations i have also observed that at times, some are pushed into situations that demand more than what is reasonable, simply to impress clients or meet expectations. In today’s digital era, many of these young girls and women engage in online marketing for your establishments, using videos and content that sometimes expose their bodies inappropriately. In some cases, this may be indirectly or even directly encouraged by management to attract big spenders who are drawn by their beauty or desire for them. While this may appear to be a marketing strategy, we must reflect on the long-term impact it has on their dignity and emotional well-being. We must remember that these young girls and women are someone’s daughter, sister, wife, mother or aunt and their families would be deeply hurt to see them exposed in ways that may compromise their dignity. In the future, their children or relatives may come across such content online, leading to unnecessary judgment, criticism, or emotional distress. My message is not to condemn anyone, but to remind us that these young girls and women go through a lot just to earn a living. Let us treat them with respect, protect their dignity, and create safer working environments that do not expose them to unnecessary pressure whether physically or through digital platforms. How can we work together to ensure they are supported, safeguarded, and not subjected to extreme demands? Your thoughts and ideas are welcome. Toa maoni yako chambe !
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LET’S PROTECT GIRL CHILD !! To our club owners and managers, I appreciate the fact that you create job opportunities for many young girls and women who work hard to market and grow your establishments. However, during my night operations i have also observed that at times, some are pushed into situations that demand more than what is reasonable, simply to impress clients or meet expectations. In today’s digital era, many of these young girls and women engage in online marketing for your establishments, using videos and content that sometimes expose their bodies inappropriately. In some cases, this may be indirectly or even directly encouraged by management to attract big spenders who are drawn by their beauty or desire for them. While this may appear to be a marketing strategy, we must reflect on the long-term impact it has on their dignity and emotional well-being. We must remember that these young girls and women are someone’s daughter, sister, wife, mother or aunt and their families would be deeply hurt to see them exposed in ways that may compromise their dignity. In the future, their children or relatives may come across such content online, leading to unnecessary judgment, criticism, or emotional distress. My message is not to condemn anyone, but to remind us that these young girls and women go through a lot just to earn a living. Let us treat them with respect, protect their dignity, and create safer working environments that do not expose them to unnecessary pressure whether physically or through digital platforms. How can we work together to ensure they are supported, safeguarded, and not subjected to extreme demands? Your thoughts and ideas are welcome. Toa maoni yako chambe !

Geoffrey Mosiria

781,388 просмотров • 8 месяцев назад

Fashion, Optics, and Hypocrisy: Meghan Markle’s Balenciaga Problem For a couple who have built a considerable portion of their public identity around mental health and child safety, the Duke and Duchess of Sussex continue to display a baffling lack of self-awareness. The Archewell Foundation, which they co-founded, has made child protection and online safety central to its mission—launching campaigns calling for safer digital spaces, stricter social media safeguards, and protection for young people from the documented harms of online abuse, exploitation, and anxiety. It’s an admirable cause on paper. Yet, once again, their actions betray their own messaging. During Paris Fashion Week, Meghan Markle was seen attending the Balenciaga show—yes, that Balenciaga. The same fashion house that ignited global outrage for its 2022 advertising campaign featuring small children holding the brand’s teddy bear handbags dressed in bondage-inspired accessories. The campaign was condemned worldwide for its deeply inappropriate imagery, with critics pointing out that such visuals blurred the moral boundaries that protect children. In a related campaign (Garde-Robe), Balenciaga also included props such as a Supreme Court decision on child pornography in visual materials — which stirred further outrage over the blurred boundaries between fashion and exploitative symbolism. The backlash was so severe that Balenciaga swiftly removed the campaign, issued public apologies, and faced ongoing reputational damage for months. For most people, the lesson was clear: you don’t associate children with adult themes. Full stop. It should have been common sense. But apparently not for Meghan Markle—the self-proclaimed advocate for children’s wellbeing and online safety. While her Archewell Foundation preaches the importance of shielding children from harm, manipulation, and predatory influences, Meghan was photographed supporting a brand that became a symbol of precisely the moral decay such advocacy is meant to challenge. To wear or publicly support Balenciaga in any capacity—even years after the scandal—undermines her stated values entirely. The passage of time does not erase the original transgression, nor does it excuse the tone-deaf optics of a supposed child-safety campaigner aligning herself with a brand that used children in a context universally condemned as exploitative. This is not about fashion—it’s about consistency, credibility, and integrity. It’s fair to ask: does an invitation to Paris Fashion Week now outweigh the values Archewell claims to hold so dear? Because that is how it looks. The image of the Markle, smiling from the front row of a Balenciaga show, is a direct contradiction to the image of a humanitarian working to make the digital and physical worlds safer for children. It is precisely the kind of hypocrisy that erodes public trust—not just in her, but in the very causes she claims to represent. To make matters worse, the timing could not be more ironic. Within days, Meghan and Harry are set to receive the “Humanitarian of the Year” award from Project Healthy Minds at the upcoming World Mental Health Day Gala in New York. The irony is staggering: accepting a humanitarian honour for their advocacy on mental health and child safety, while simultaneously endorsing—through presence and fashion—a brand that became infamous for its insensitivity toward children. This is not the behaviour of serious advocates. This is performance. If there were any genuine understanding of what child protection means, such a public association would have been unthinkable. But as history continues to show, the Sussexes’ greatest consistency lies in their inconsistency. When the optics suit them, they preach virtue. When the cameras flash, those principles are conveniently forgotten. Perhaps Archewell’s PR team will attempt a quiet clean-up—pretending the Balenciaga appearance never happened or insisting that the Duchess of Sussex was merely “supporting the arts.” But even that will not wash. True advocates for child safety do not endorse or elevate brands that have, however briefly, crossed such a moral line. In the end, this is not just another minor misstep—it’s a symptom of a much larger problem. When your entire brand is built on compassion and advocacy, hypocrisy becomes your greatest enemy. And as Meghan and Harry prepare to take the stage and accept yet another humanitarian accolade, they might do well to remember that the public isn’t blind. You cannot claim to protect children with one hand and applaud a brand condemned for exploiting their image with the other.

༺𝐻𝑅𝐻 𝐿𝒶𝒹𝓎 𝒥༻ 👑

76,722 просмотров • 9 месяцев назад

Chained, Abused, Sold 🔴🔴 The RSF’s War on Women in Sudan A disturbing video has surfaced showing #RSF fighters speaking to a woman they have chained by her legs, callously asking her name. This horrifying footage is just one example of the brutal violence RSF has inflicted upon women during the war in Sudan. Reports from survivors and human rights organizations have detailed how RSF fighters have systematically targeted women, subjecting them to rape, abduction, and enslavement. Women have been taken as war trophies, held captive, and even sold as sex slaves in a deliberate campaign of terror. Testimonies reveal that RSF forces have established makeshift detention centers where women are kept for prolonged periods, suffering repeated sexual violence. Some have been forcibly “married” to fighters, while others are traded between militias. These crimes are not isolated incidents but part of a wider strategy aimed at breaking communities through gender-based violence. The use of rape as a weapon of war by RSF has been widely condemned, yet accountability remains elusive. Women and girls, particularly from marginalized communities, have faced the worst of these atrocities, with little recourse for justice. The international community has called for investigations, but the RSF continues its campaign of terror with impunity. This war has exposed the depths of RSF’s brutality, with women bearing the brunt of their inhumane tactics. The fight for justice must include holding perpetrators accountable and ensuring that survivors receive the support and recognition they deserve. #Sudan #RSFTerroristOrg

Walaa Elsadig

32,545 просмотров • 1 год назад

Growing up in rural Kirinyaga, I learned early that courage is not the absence of fear, it is the decision to act despite it. In my youth, I faced opposition, just as today’s young Kenyans face intimidation, and in some cases, abductions and killings by the regime. But just as I stood my ground then, I believe that your voices, amplified by today’s powerful digital platforms, can fight injustice, expose truth, and drive innovation. When I ran for MP, as a young advocate, with no money, and up against powerful, political systems and people, I was often told there were roles “not meant for women.” The same voices said I couldn’t win. Even today they still say that as a woman Presidential Candidate, the odds are against me, but I learned something powerful: when you prepare, persist, and believe in your cause, doors that seemed locked will open. On this International Youth Day, I encourage every young Kenyan, especially young women, to know: the future is not something you wait for, it’s something you build. Today, our youth have opportunities I never imagined at their age, digital tools, global networks, and a platform to speak to the world from their living room. Yet, challenges remain: unemployment, inequality, unwarranted abductions, and barriers to leadership. My message is simple: remain steadfast, embrace technology, speak boldly, and lead with integrity. Kenya needs your innovation, your courage, and your fresh ideas, in government, in business, and in every community. To our young people: the time to shape Kenya’s tomorrow is today. And I am committed to walking that journey with you. Happy International Youth Day to the youth of Kenya. #InternationalYouthDay

Martha Karua

22,368 просмотров • 11 месяцев назад