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@blueslogy

〔 c. bio. — 7/8〕fun fact quando eu era criança eu queria fazer a vacina contra o hiv 😥☝️

ele/ela, ⚢︎ Katılım Ekim 2019
180 Takip Edilen178 Takipçiler
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elis
elis@blueslogy·
#studytwt #studytwtbr #collegetwt — nome é levi, sou de 2005! — sou acadêmica de ciências biológicas/biologia na ufpa — meu foco é ter um crg melhor e fazer iniciação científica, quem sabe com uma bolsa 👁️ — muito off study e surtos sobre a faculdade.!..!!..! ♡/↺ = moots!
elis tweet media
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Cintia
Cintia@cintiamark·
Cintia tweet media
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Jackie X
Jackie X@jackiexmusic·
uma girafa afeminada porém hetero, uma hipopótamo empoderada, e um casal gay não assumido
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duda. ★
duda. ★@dudannlynn·
chá revelação de ensino médio incompleto
duda. ★ tweet media
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Nina🐝
Nina🐝@papel_em_branco·
Todas as cortinas estão caindo. E percebemos o quanto o Brasil tenta proteger suas crianças. Nossa justiça não é perfeita, mas estupro de vulnerável aqui é crime hediondo. No Japão imperial a pena máxima é de 5 anos de prisão ou multa de 3 milhões de ienes. Menos que uma infração de trânsito, que pode dar 20 anos de cadeia. Uma criança vale menos que um acidente de carro. A perversidade do Japão Imperial nunca foi abandonada. Continuam ali, das mulheres de "conforto" coreanas nos bordéis militares nipônicos, aos estupros de Nanjing. Por que os piores criminosos sempre visam mulheres e crianças?
NyanChuu🔮🇯🇵🍭@tanpukunokami

Something ugly is happening in Laos. Since June 2025, the Japanese Embassy in Vientiane has been issuing unusual public warnings. It had to. Japanese men keep getting arrested there — for paying to rape children. Last December, Lao authorities detained a 52-year-old Japanese man at a hotel in Luang Prabang. He had been staying in the room for about two weeks — with three girls, aged 12, 13, and 16, brought to him by a local broker. He reportedly paid nine times the going rate for the 12-year-old, because she had not been touched before. In Laos, sex with anyone 12 or under is classified as child rape, carrying 10 to 15 years in prison. He is still in custody there. Police suspect he also filmed them. Last August, Japanese police arrested a 65-year-old man from Nagoya. Seventeen notebooks were seized from his home. In them, a tally kept from July 2014 through 2025: over 140 children across Southeast Asia, with names, ages, locations, and prices paid. One entry read "9 years old." He had bought a manual on how to find such children online. In January, a 61-year-old from Osaka was arrested on fraud charges — related to running a blog that offered travel tips and a how-to guide for child prostitution. Written under the handle "The Emperor of Laos." He had traveled to the country 17 times. This is where most people will stop reading, and this is exactly where the harder conversation should start. Japan is not alone in exporting men like this. Child sex tourism is a global industry, and every rich country with passports has a version of it. What is specifically Japanese is what happens next. Japan's child prostitution law has had extraterritorial jurisdiction since 1999. A Japanese citizen who pays for sex with a child abroad can be prosecuted at home. The maximum sentence is 5 years in prison or a 3-million-yen fine. For comparison, the maximum for fatal dangerous driving is 20 years. Enforcement is another matter. The three arrests above happened because Lao authorities and Japanese police both moved. The cases where nobody gets caught — which is most of them — rely on a man being careless enough to keep a notebook, or run a blog, or do something loud enough to be noticed. In 1996, at the Stockholm World Congress on the sexual exploitation of children, Japanese lawmakers themselves acknowledged that Japan was lagging behind on this issue. Three years later, in 1999, Japan passed its child prostitution law. In 2001, Japan hosted the second congress in Yokohama and pledged to do better. Twenty-five years later, its own embassy is still issuing warnings to stop its own nationals. It is not that Japanese men are uniquely predatory. They are not. Predators travel from every wealthy country to every poor one, and have since cheap flights were invented. It is that a country that prides itself on being safe and orderly at home has never fully reckoned with what some of its citizens do when they land in Vientiane, or Manila, or Phnom Penh. The law exists. The political will to use it — to track, to prosecute, to publicize convictions at home — does not. The men being arrested in Laos right now are the loud ones. The man with the notebook. The man with the blog. The quiet ones are on the next flight. So what can we actually do? One. Raise the sentencing for extraterritorial child prostitution offenses to match domestic ones. Five years is not enough. Two. Publish the names of those convicted, and restrict their passports. Three. Require travel agencies and airlines to report suspicious travel patterns — the way banks are required to report suspicious transactions. None of this is technically hard. And one more thing. If you are ever in a hotel lobby in Vientiane, or Manila, or Phnom Penh, and you see a pairing that obviously does not fit — you can tell the embassy. You can tell the local police. Looking away is a form of complicity.

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NyanChuu🔮🇯🇵🍭
NyanChuu🔮🇯🇵🍭@tanpukunokami·
Something ugly is happening in Laos. Since June 2025, the Japanese Embassy in Vientiane has been issuing unusual public warnings. It had to. Japanese men keep getting arrested there — for paying to rape children. Last December, Lao authorities detained a 52-year-old Japanese man at a hotel in Luang Prabang. He had been staying in the room for about two weeks — with three girls, aged 12, 13, and 16, brought to him by a local broker. He reportedly paid nine times the going rate for the 12-year-old, because she had not been touched before. In Laos, sex with anyone 12 or under is classified as child rape, carrying 10 to 15 years in prison. He is still in custody there. Police suspect he also filmed them. Last August, Japanese police arrested a 65-year-old man from Nagoya. Seventeen notebooks were seized from his home. In them, a tally kept from July 2014 through 2025: over 140 children across Southeast Asia, with names, ages, locations, and prices paid. One entry read "9 years old." He had bought a manual on how to find such children online. In January, a 61-year-old from Osaka was arrested on fraud charges — related to running a blog that offered travel tips and a how-to guide for child prostitution. Written under the handle "The Emperor of Laos." He had traveled to the country 17 times. This is where most people will stop reading, and this is exactly where the harder conversation should start. Japan is not alone in exporting men like this. Child sex tourism is a global industry, and every rich country with passports has a version of it. What is specifically Japanese is what happens next. Japan's child prostitution law has had extraterritorial jurisdiction since 1999. A Japanese citizen who pays for sex with a child abroad can be prosecuted at home. The maximum sentence is 5 years in prison or a 3-million-yen fine. For comparison, the maximum for fatal dangerous driving is 20 years. Enforcement is another matter. The three arrests above happened because Lao authorities and Japanese police both moved. The cases where nobody gets caught — which is most of them — rely on a man being careless enough to keep a notebook, or run a blog, or do something loud enough to be noticed. In 1996, at the Stockholm World Congress on the sexual exploitation of children, Japanese lawmakers themselves acknowledged that Japan was lagging behind on this issue. Three years later, in 1999, Japan passed its child prostitution law. In 2001, Japan hosted the second congress in Yokohama and pledged to do better. Twenty-five years later, its own embassy is still issuing warnings to stop its own nationals. It is not that Japanese men are uniquely predatory. They are not. Predators travel from every wealthy country to every poor one, and have since cheap flights were invented. It is that a country that prides itself on being safe and orderly at home has never fully reckoned with what some of its citizens do when they land in Vientiane, or Manila, or Phnom Penh. The law exists. The political will to use it — to track, to prosecute, to publicize convictions at home — does not. The men being arrested in Laos right now are the loud ones. The man with the notebook. The man with the blog. The quiet ones are on the next flight. So what can we actually do? One. Raise the sentencing for extraterritorial child prostitution offenses to match domestic ones. Five years is not enough. Two. Publish the names of those convicted, and restrict their passports. Three. Require travel agencies and airlines to report suspicious travel patterns — the way banks are required to report suspicious transactions. None of this is technically hard. And one more thing. If you are ever in a hotel lobby in Vientiane, or Manila, or Phnom Penh, and you see a pairing that obviously does not fit — you can tell the embassy. You can tell the local police. Looking away is a form of complicity.
NyanChuu🔮🇯🇵🍭 tweet mediaNyanChuu🔮🇯🇵🍭 tweet mediaNyanChuu🔮🇯🇵🍭 tweet media
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orlas
orlas@orlandinhoog·
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kissa
kissa@lavilavine·
hj to só a vulpix pedindo pix
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Mart B.
Mart B.@martboficial·
Eu no auge dos meus 8 anos acordando em uma manhã de domingo pra saber o preço do boi e o cultivo de soja no Globo Rural:
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victoria ♀️
victoria ♀️@fatfabfeminist·
victoria ♀️ tweet media
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cowboy arisu ☁️✮
cowboy arisu ☁️✮@alixident·
eles estão há pelo menos um ano pedindo folga em conjunto, mas nãoooo vamos enviar eles pra fazer mais uma semana de fancalls desnecessárias e um evento diplomático pra servir de soft power pra político 😃
SKZ BASE@skzpopbase

#Han asking JYPE to give #StrayKids a few day off se they can go on a trip together. #Seungmin said even two days would be enough for them.

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🐹
🐹@ao3chanlix·
qm acha q o skz estar claramente sendo usado como propaganda politica eh algo p se orgulhar ja pode ir me dando sb vcs sao uns imbecis
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𝑠𝑎𝑚*⁠.☆
𝑠𝑎𝑚*⁠.☆@Sam_zinhons·
Odeio pensar que estou forçando alguém a conversar comigo
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