After she was declared missing by her worried sister, a woman in Mexico was found after four days of desperate searching.
The effort was hindered because no one could recognize her from her heavily edited social media photos.
This piece of shit
D4vd was arrested for dismembering a 14 year old girl, leaving her parts in his Tesla.
Public execution for these sick fucking monsters
BREAKING: A student shot herself in Valley Forge High School in Ohio yesterday.
The media is reporting it as a simple suicide.
However we received tips saying she idolized the Colombine shooters and potentially wanted to shoot up the school on the anniversary of Colombine. She was thankfully stopped, and she just shot herself.
She apparently posted this on Instagram honoring the Colombine school shooters and appears to have also identified as trans/nonbinary. One comment referred to her as “they” while her pronouns in bio show “he/she”
Don’t let the media cover this up!!
@_Ochiedike Answer is simple. The First Kalima (Tayyab) is: La ilaha illallah muhammadur rasulullah ("There is no god but Allah, and Muhammad is the last messenger of Allah").
Only true religion is Islam among 4000, remaining are made up by the followers of satan
@TonyyCFM He isn’t white. White people cannot withstand the ☀️. Especially, as often as the story of him walking everywhere—unless he was traveling at night. 🤣🤣🤣
In Japan, survivors of sexual abuse almost never use their real names.
In 2024, Riho Fukuyama did.
She was 25 when she stood up publicly and named her own father as the man who had raped her — repeatedly, in their home in Toyama, from 8th grade through her second year of high school. At least eight times.
Her father was arrested. In court, he didn’t deny the sex happened.
He argued she could have fought back.
That her silence meant consent.
The trial court didn’t buy it. Eight years in prison. The judge called it “cowardly and cruel,” and wrote this about why she didn’t resist:
“She was forced to carry the unthinkable — being raped by her own father — entirely alone. Psychologically, she was cornered. She had almost no will left to fight.”
He appealed. Today, the Nagoya High Court threw it out.
Eight years stands.
After the ruling, Riho told reporters:
“I’m grateful they finally heard what I’ve been trying to say.”
She now runs a foundation that helps other survivors of family sexual abuse find the courage — and the legal footing — to press charges.
In Japan, this kind of abuse has long been called an invisible crime.
Riho made it visible by putting her