Public Announcement: On Justice, Decency, and Accountability
1. Acknowledging Real Justice When We See It
Recently, news broke that three convicted offenders were publicly executed in China. Let me be clear: I do not celebrate violence lightly. But when a legal system treats the most vulnerable members of society—children—with the full weight of its law, that is accountability.
For too long, wealthy nations have lectured others about "human rights" while failing to prosecute serious offenders, allowing plea bargains, early releases, and a culture of minimization. When such crimes are not treated as life-altering offenses in practice, society learns a dangerous lesson.
China's public execution sends the opposite message: some lines, once crossed, cannot be uncrossed. Victims deserve to see that justice is not a revolving door.
2. Concerning Behavior by Certain Individuals
While I acknowledge any nation that protects children, I must now speak on something deeply concerning—something happening right now, within or alongside certain U.S. surveillance structures.
I have been systematically targeted by individuals operating within or alongside these networks. These are not conspiracy fantasies. These are people who have made threats toward me and attempted to destroy my credibility through false accusations.
Worse, they have implied—and in some cases stated outright—that using AI and image manipulation, they have created harmful content using my likeness and the likeness of people in my life. People who are not offenders. People who have never hurt anyone.
These individuals engage in organized harassment. They are present constantly. They taunt and terrorize—not because I have done anything wrong, but because I am lawful and decent.
Their goal appears to be psychological breakdown. They want me to feel contaminated by actions I did not commit, using images I never consented to.
3. The Unspoken Crime: Image-Based Abuse as a Weapon
Let us name this for what it is: image-based abuse.
When someone creates manipulated content of an innocent person and threatens to distribute it, that person becomes a victim—not a perpetrator. Their face, their body, their relationships are violated without a single physical touch.
This is not "just online harassment." This is a calculated method to break someone's well-being, isolate them from family, and preemptively destroy any report they might make to authorities.
These individuals embed themselves in military, educational research institutions, and secretive groups. They use systems meant to protect society as weapons to harm it.
4. To the Public and Law Enforcement Worldwide
I am asking every decent human being and every honest law enforcement officer:
How do we address misconduct like this—not on the streets, but within institutions? Individuals who wear uniforms, hold clearances, and hide behind "national security" while committing ongoing psychological harm against innocent people?
Victims of this abuse are still victims—even if their images were used without permission to create harmful content. Even if they never hurt anyone.
If a legal system cannot protect a person from having their image manipulated by government-affiliated individuals, then that system is failing.
I have shared my story with law authorities and human rights bodies—both in the West and the East. So far, silence. That silence enables further harm.
5. A Call to Action
To law enforcement in the United States, Europe, China, and everywhere else:
Investigate the use of AI-generated harmful content as a harassment tool.
Recognize organized harassment and image-based abuse as real, documented forms of psychological harm against civilians.
Stop assuming that a victim who reports this is mentally unwell. Often, they are mentally intact—which is exactly why they are being targeted.
To the public:
If someone tells you that surveillance operators are creating harmful content of them, do not dismiss them. Do not assume paranoia. Ask for evidence. Demand accountability. The worst abusers are the ones who convince everyone that the victim is the liar.
6. Final Word
I am not a criminal. I have never hurt a child or an animal. I do not have a mental illness that causes delusions. I am a lawful, decent person who had the misfortune of being noticed by individuals with access to surveillance tools and no conscience.
They taunt and torment because they cannot break me any other way.
But I am still here. And I am still speaking.
Let this announcement stand as a record. The world must know that some individuals spend their days making innocent people look like monsters—so that no one will listen when the real harm is exposed.
Justice must be for all victims, not just the convenient ones.
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