By Shayla Papik –
The two raging trends in SA is #1 kids abusing kids and #2 kids not realizing they’re being exploited.
“The amount of kids sexually assaulting other kids is just astronomical,” says Heidi Olson, a Sexual Assault Nurse Examiner (SANE). “What is skyrocketing just as much is the amount of kids being exploited online, but they don’t realize it.”
As a forensic nurse, Olson is trained to gather the evidence of the crime. After she got into the field 10 years ago, she began to gather evidence on WHY these trends were happening, what were the societal pressures. The forensic trail led back to corn.
Kids are viewing illicit images and videos, getting incited and then acting out on the easiest things near them, other kids. Kids see nudity so often it’s normalized, so when someone offers Zelle them or even $$ in their gaming account, they feel “empowered” to give him pics.
“It’s so normalized to them that it’s not a big deal to them,” Olson says. “They would never use the word exploitation or trafficking to describe what’s going on with them, but when we dig deep down, that’s exactly what’s going on with them.”
Meanwhile, Mom and Dad are trusting the filters and blissfully unaware that the prevalence of corn makes it virtually impossible to prevent their teen from viewing.
“Even if you do the best job in the world, the odds that your child or teenager is going to see p0rn0gr@phy at some point are astronomically high,” Olson says.
The horror story only gets scarier. Olson says the corn industry is knowingly fueling the trends. Much like Meta and Google just got busted in a lawsuit for fueling social media addiction, the corn industry is not stupid like they play.
“Think about it from a cold, business standpoint. To the multi-billion-dollar p0rn0gr@phy industry, a child isn’t just a person; they are a high-value asset,” Olson says. “The younger you expose a child to p0rn0gr@phy, the more likely they will be a lifelong user.”
Sex trafficking is no longer of men in a white van kidnapping vulnerable kids. It’s not adult users on video games offering to give underage gamers Cash App of video game tokens in exchange for something the kids have seen so much of, they think it’s no big deal.
“They think it’s empowering because they’re watching influencers who are telling them it is completely fine to do this, that there are no downsides,” Olson said.
It gets worse. Much of corn online incorporates violence. Kids see this, and thinking it’s normal, reenact it with other kids.
Source: Fight the New Drug.


