LHGrey™️@grey4626
NOT FUCKING BUYING IT.
AOC, sweetheart...spare us the pathological fucking excuses.
Your three-point manifesto is textbook defensive rationalization straight out of the narcissistic playbook:
amygdala hijack in overdrive, prefrontal cortex offline, tribal loyalty short-circuiting every synapse that should be screaming “taxpayers own this shit.”
Classic elite capture dissociation...you preach “believe all women” until it threatens the congressional predator protection racket that keeps the machine humming.
Then suddenly it’s “rushed text,” “unsubstantiated allegations,” and crocodile tears about survivor agency. Bullshit.
Let’s dissect your cop-out with surgical, lethal precision...
I. “It releases documents on false or unsubstantiated allegations!”
The resolutio...H. Res. 1072/1100, the exact text you’re dodging...explicitly targets Ethics Committee reports on violations or alleged violations of the House sexual harassment rules.
That’s not a bug...that’s the fucking point. These are taxpayer-funded settlements and investigations paid out of the Office of Congressional Workplace Rights slush fund or committee coffers.
Public money.
Public records.
Legally, once Congress cuts the check, it’s no longer private HR theater...it’s a fiduciary duty to the American people under Article I oversight powers.
You want to hide “unsubstantiated” payouts?
That’s how predators shop for offices with the biggest hush-money budgets. Your “due process” concern is a red herring; the accused already had process.
Taxpayers get the ledger.
II. “Zero victim consent or consultation!”
Cry me a fucking river.
Victims gave statements under the existing system’s promise of anonymity...within a taxpayer-funded workplace.
When that system writes checks with our dollars to bury misconduct, the public’s right to audit overrides your selective sanctity-of-process fetish.
You compare it to Epstein files...where you cheered the dump...but clutch pearls here? Epstein victims weren’t congressional staffers on the public dime.
This isn’t private settlement; it’s government accountability.
Congress has zero constitutional right to promise permanent concealment of how it spends our money on sexual misconduct payouts.
Your “victims had no voice” line is gaslighting 101...betrayal trauma on steroids. You’re not centering survivors; you’re weaponizing them to shield the institution that failed them.
III. “Redaction won’t work...small offices, public timelines, doxxing!”
The bill mandates redaction of personally identifiable information of victims or alleged victims...and witnesses in the updated version. Full stop.
Your fear-mongering about “full witness statements” exposing people via employment dates is speculative horseshit designed to kill the bill before any actual redaction happens.
Congressional reality check: this is the same Ethics Committee that slow-walks everything into oblivion.
They rushed?
No...privileged resolution under House rules forces a vote in two legislative days precisely to stop leadership (both parties) from burying it in committee like every other accountability push since the 2017 slush-fund scandal.
You voted to refer it back to the black hole. That wasn’t “ironing out details.”
That was institutional self-preservation.
You claim “as a survivor” you need “guaranteeing safety and agency” for a YES.
Translation: performative trauma armor deployed to launder your vote against transparency while you’ve sponsored bills forcing private companies to disclose every harassment claim and settlement.
Hypocrisy so naked it should trigger your own amygdala.
Bottom line, AOC: This wasn’t flawed text. It was sunlight on the swamp. You killed it because the rot runs through both parties’ offices.
Victims don’t need more promises from the same predators who wrote the rules. They need the public ledger so voters can purge the pervs.
Drop the fucking excuses.
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