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What do Wayfair, Amazon, Walmart, and Others Have in Common?
#39
(07-13-2020, 03:23 PM)Mystic Wanderer Wrote:
(07-13-2020, 06:50 AM)AutomateThis1 Wrote: I've spent a decent amount of time trying these product skus and not a single one of them will result in images of children on Yandex.

One thing you guys should consider is that Yandex is popular for photos of girls. They are more lax over there on children being nude.

If you guys realllllly want to get a sick feeling all you have to do is go on Instagram and search for young girls doing gymnastics and child models, and you'll find page after page of young girls in certain positions and profiles where the mothers are willingly "booking" their little girls to make money off of them.

I don't know why they aren't showing up now. Maybe they pulled them off once they knew they had been discovered?

All I DO know it that someone did a search in real time and showed how when he put in the SKU number to Yandex, the girls came up; he showed them.

I'd say everything about this has been scrubbed off the web now. We found their hidey hole, now it's gone.

First off no one has found their hiding spot.

Many young Russian girls model at some point in their life. Many of them start off as children and continue doing so throughout their teens.

Yandex is basically Russian Facebook, so that goes without saying that there are going to be metric butt tons of photos of young Russian girls (and boys) who have shared their modeling pictures.

Also, Russian people not being as hung up on nudity will be nude at the beach. Young children will walk around topless in just their bottoms. That being said it's not uncommon for people to upload photos of their children being children and topless.

Where the unfortunate comes into play is that pedos will often search for candid photos of children in European countries that aren't strict about nudity. Yandex being one of those sites.

Even in the USA there are parents who don't panic about having their children run around carefree, but they just don't post pictures of their children because they don't want condescension and people perving on their kids.

Pedos and such don't even hide on the "dark web." You can find them on Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, Likee, YouTube, on various chans, and such.

Seriously. Go to Instagram and search "young models" That's literally all it takes to find people making inappropriate comments and asking for "links," "mega," "dropbox," and trying to groom young girls.

You could even search something like "jovencita/adolescente dancando" on various social media apps and you'll see many videos of children and young teenagers dancing inappropriately.

Hell, on TikTok and similar apps they barrages you with children and young teens doing inappropriate things before you even create a profile. You have to actively block that material. I tested in on a friend's phone who also didn't have TikTok. I had him download the app and he too was also bombarded with children doing inappropriate and suggestive things. Even worse are the people commenting and giving them positive reinforcement for their behavior while calling them hot and sexy.

The truth of the matter is that these people act in a more in your face manner than you'd expect. A lot of people just turn a blind eye because it's an uncomfortable topic to talk about and would rather not think about it.

Someone on ATS said that the high prices are what traffickers sell children to pimps for, but that's not exactly true.

Traffickers don't place that high of a value on anyone's life. People aren't people to traffickers. Attractive people are cattle to traffickers. They make money from volume of sells, not singular high prices.

Does it happen? Do people get sold to highest bidder or for high prices? Sure, but that only happens with super rich people in backroom dealings. They don't list the people in cryptic messages as industrial furniture.

I really appreciate that people are outraged over human trafficking and child trafficking, but you guys are getting mislead.

And the reasons that a lot of these places are pulling videos or products from view doesn't equate to them being guilty. It's just an easier way to perform damage control than spending the time and effort responding to hundreds of comments that basically accuse them of doing the same thing over and over.


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RE: What do Wayfair, Amazon, Walmart, and Others Have in Common? - by AutomateThis1 - 07-14-2020, 07:03 AM

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