Sexualising children and screaming blue murder at their blue film
I won’t rest easy on this Chrisland school scandal. I haven’t slept well for days. What does this portend for us as a society, parents, school owners, educators and adults? I can’t seem to move past it.
Our timelines have been flooded with more lewd unimaginable videos and pictures of children in open sex games moves or dancing cheered on by adults.
Preschoolers ages three and four grind themselves together at the hips to cheer adults.
It’s not news that child pornography has crept into our space a long time ago. Most of us didn’t know and most wished it away. Child pornography is a billion-dollar clandestine business in the world and in so many countries. The highest country is the Netherlands at 52 per cent followed by the United States of America at 44 per cent. France, Slovakia and Canada all get a single-digit percentage each.
It is reported that a third of the world’s child sexualised images are flagged off by India followed by Indonesia and Malaysia. According to reports, India reported a maximum number of online child sexual abuse imagery (CSAI) cases, followed by Thailand, which shows the data by the US-based National Centre for Missing and Exploited Children (NCMEC). NCMEC is the largest clearinghouse for the CSAI content shared on online platforms.
According to the report, India accounts for 3.88 million such cases filed between 1998 and 2017. This is despite the fact that India is estimated to have merely 11.9 per 1,000 internet users — which is way less than Iraq and Thailand.
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