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The fact that it took a bunch of teenage boys to decide to do something about a predatory adult.
And they knew not to put the girl's face out there...
The kids are alright
PSA: if someone ever edits your photo with Al or Photoshop to create a nude photo, go to https://t.co/jjw3PScNjH and submit the original photo & the edited photo. they’ll take it down. If you’re a minor go to https://t.co/hxC8FdY5M2 or https://t.co/ttZuaSKtET
This one was not in shorts, he had nothing to expose, he wasn’t walking at night. He was the coach’s student. Parents trusted their ward in his hands… so the excuse some of you use to punish female victims is stupid and ignorant!
#justiceforRansford cuz I hate pedos with my soul
I just learned about 16-year-old Ransford Owusu Ansah; a young Ghanaian footballer who, according to multiple reports, was sexually abused by his coach for years and later died after months in hospital from complications allegedly linked to that abuse.
When women speak about sexual violence, especially in schools, people often assume it only happens to girls.
But the truth is, it happens to boys too, and far more often than we want to admit.
#JusticeForRansford
There’s a campaign on TikTok with a hashtag #justiceforochanya and girls are sharing their own experiences with pedophiles, and a lot of the stories are of teachers, and honestly, none of it is new.
Many of us have known. The only difference now is that people are finally finding their voices.
These stories follow a pattern.
Teachers wait until the last day of school, just when students are leaving, to make their move.
In their minds, you’re no longer a student.
It starts with small things: a compliment, a touch, a kiss. Then suddenly, they’ve crossed every line.
And they’re often the teachers you’ve trusted with your children and like the most, so they never speak up.
This doesn’t only happen in secondary schools. It happens in universities too. And if adults struggle to fight back how much harder is it for a teenager?
Because when it happens, you’re trapped in a power dynamic you can’t escape.
Have you ever had a teacher who didn’t like you? You know what that does to your grades and your peace.
Now imagine that same power in the hands of someone who wants to exploit you.
Eventually a lot of girls give in, not out of choice, but survival.
And even those who attempt to report, it hardly ever gets anywhere, because the system shields these predators.
I remember an incident in a girls school where students came together to report a particular teacher, after a few investigations and conversations,it didn’t go anywhere. He continued to teach.
Even in cases where you believe the young girls are “interested” as some will come and argue here, there’s a reason the LAW sets an age of consent.
Children can’t truly consent, and adults should know better.
And after school, these girls grow into women who either fight the system, defend it because they think it’s normal, or bury it because it’s too painful to face.
And while we often talk about girls, boys go through it too. The only difference is that society teaches them it’s “cool” when an older woman does it. It’s not. It’s abuse.
We have a pedophilia problem in this country. Yet every time it comes up, people shift the blame — placing the burden of self-control and morality on children, while the adults who should know better walk away untouched.
Until we start holding adults accountable, nothing will change.
In memory of Ochanya and every girl whose voice has been silenced, and in light of the renewed call for #JusticeForOchanya, I’m making DRY available for everyone to watch.
This film stands as a reminder: we must protect our children, strengthen our systems, and end the silence that allows abuse to continue
DRY is inspired by real experiences. It speaks for every child denied protection, every woman silenced, and every community that must now choose to stand up.
Remember - education is key.
When people are informed, they make better choices.
Let’s make sure ignorance is never an excuse.
Watch and share this film with your friends, family, and community.
All it takes is one person watching it right now to make a better choice.
Your duty is to help them see it.
Let’s make sure Ochanya’s story and every story like hers leads to change.
Dry comes up by 3 today. Share and like
Watch the full movie here:
👉 https://t.co/IBLgh0gkqX
Let this not just be a movie, let it be a movement. 💔
#JusticeForOchanya #EndChildAbuse #ProtectOurGirls #DRYTheMovie #StephanieLinus #NextPageTV
Why is it hard so hard to come across a guy who doesn’t want kids, so many of them (think they) do ?!?!
But then again, I’d love to be a father too.
It looks so easy and optional and non-comital and nothing really changes for them.
I want to be a father too.
I can't believe this still has to be said.
Past sexual contact is not consent
She has slept with 'everybody' is not consent
'She slept over' is not fucking consent
'We sexted' is not consent
'She wears revealing clothes' is not consent
'I like her' is definitely not consent
She was fully covered. In a hijab. No skin showing. And still, they raped her. It’s not about what women wear — it’s about us. MEN are the problem. This is heartbreaking!