@demenishki whole PR up in flames, everyone knows u cracked on stream, mocked someone for almost killing himself, and still couldn’t help but throw in one last insult in your ukulele ass apology
Japan has been safe this whole time.
Not luck. We just never brought in
cultures where raping kids and keeping
them as sex slaves is normal.
Anyone who was in Afghanistan saw it.
They'll tell you it's not rare.
It's normal over there.
Europe let it happen and now
rape gangs are in every big city.
If Japan does the same stupid thing,
our children lose the safety they have now.
We need to protect our culture
and our kids.
That's not racism.
That's just common sense.
Caught at the border. Released.
Caught again in Chicago. Released again.
Arrest warrant issued. No one came.
Three years later
he put on a ski mask,
hid behind a lighthouse,
and shot an eighteen-year-old college girl in the back.
She was looking at the skyline with her friends.
She died on the concrete.
This was preventable.
Every. Single. Piece. Of this. Was preventable.
March 19, 2026. Chicago.
She's a freshman. Eighteen.
Flew in from a small town in New York
to chase a bigger life.
Just after midnight, she walks out of her dorm
with five friends. Laughing. Whispering.
Someone heard the northern lights might be out.
They want to see the skyline from the pier.
Just kids. Just a Thursday night.
The kind of stupid beautiful thing
you do when you're eighteen
and the world still feels safe.
She walks ahead of the group.
Reaches the lighthouse first.
Behind it,
in the dark,
a man is waiting.
Black clothes. Black ski mask. A handgun.
She turns.
Whispers to her friends —
someone's back there.
He steps out. Gun raised.
They run.
One shot.
It hits her in the back.
Her friends hear her drop.
They come back.
She's on the ground. Bleeding.
Eighteen years old and dying
on a concrete pier
because she wanted to see the city lights.
Now here's the timeline
that should make your blood boil.
May 2023.
He crosses the border illegally.
Border Patrol catches him.
Has him in custody.
Releases him into the country.
June 2023.
One month later. Chicago.
Arrested for shoplifting.
They have him. Again.
Release him. Again.
He's told to show up to court.
He never does.
A judge issues a warrant for his arrest.
And nobody comes.
Nobody knocks on his door.
Nobody runs his name.
Nobody picks him up.
For three years,
a man with an active arrest warrant
lives freely in Chicago.
One block from a college campus.
One. Block.
You want to know what makes this
more than just a tragedy?
The state of Illinois has a law.
The TRUST Act.
It tells local police:
Don't help ICE.
Don't hold anyone for them.
Don't even tell them
when you let someone go.
A man gets caught at the border —
released.
Gets caught committing a crime —
released.
Skips court, warrant goes active —
and the law says don't look for him.
That is not a broken system.
That is the system doing exactly what it was built to do.
Read that sentence one more time.
The system worked perfectly.
And an eighteen-year-old girl is dead.
Her parents flew in from New York.
Stood on the pier where their daughter was killed.
Threw flowers into Lake Michigan.
Stop for a second and picture that.
A mother. At the exact spot
where her child bled out on a school night.
Throwing flowers into black water
because there's nothing left to do.
Her mother told the cameras:
"We've got to make changes."
Her father:
"There are definitely policies
that contributed to this happening."
They didn't scream. They didn't rage.
They stood on cold concrete
and asked this country, quietly,
to do better.
This country has not answered them.
She was studying business.
She was part of a Christian fellowship on campus.
Her family said she made people feel seen.
She made people feel valued.
She was someone's entire world.
And she was just trying to look at the skyline.
She should be packing up her dorm room right now.
She should be fighting with her roommate
about who gets the mini fridge.
She should be texting her mom
about what to bring home for summer.
She should be alive.
She should be alive.
She should be alive.
A border that held him would have saved her.
A jail that kept him would have saved her.
A warrant someone bothered to serve would have saved her.
A state that let its police do their damn jobs
would have saved her.
Four doors.
Four chances.
Every single one — left wide open.
And a girl who wanted to see the skyline
walked to the end of a pier
and never came back.
God bless every parent
who drops their kid off at college,
drives home with an empty back seat,
and has no choice but to trust
that this world will bring them back alive.