The billboards about human trafficking we see everywhere must be working.
Or maybe it’s just business as usual for the overlords that rule us.
This week we have a new story out, one that sounds like the sort of development that should garner widespread attention from anyone who has spent years claiming to care about trafficking, missing children, and the Epstein question. But alas, as we learned so tragically with the release of the JFK files, a blunt reality that shifted our entire momentum in writing, enough Americans simply don’t care, not really.
Or maybe they do and have just been trained to believe they are helpless to do anything about it.
Back in 2022, when talking seriously about organized trafficking networks was still dismissed in most landscapes as conspiracy theory, one point should have been easy enough: Trump’s fight against it had been hiding in plain sight while the people paid to notice such things found reasons not to notice such things. That, too, was an outcome of Mockingbird media, which included and still includes the mainstream legacy press as well as the various controlled-opposition voices online. These are also topics we have covered extensively in our work.
Trump’s Chilling Ongoing War Against Child Sex Trafficking (May 11, 2022)
Scott McKay also ran something just this morning for The American Spectator, a piece I haven’t gotten to read yet, but it seems to be of context: The Unfathomable Horror of Britain’s Rape-Gang Holocaust
Now, in the latest “news,” with the Justice Department suddenly elevating a national coordinator for human trafficking and child exploitation cases, it is hard not to guess that the same old pattern is to repeat itself, the same pattern we explored with Tulsi Gabbard and Ukrainian biolabs just yesterday. Ashe in America at Badlands Media encapsulates the story in their Badlands Brief:
DOJ Names National Coordinator for Human Trafficking and Child Exploitation
Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche has appointed longtime federal prosecutor Alessandra Serano as the Justice Department’s national coordinator for human trafficking and child exploitation cases.
Serano, a DOJ veteran since 2003, has served in multiple US Attorney’s Offices including the Southern District of California, the Virgin Islands, and most recently the Eastern District of Virginia. She had been working as senior counsel to the deputy attorney general and recently completed a temporary role with the Senate Judiciary Committee.
In her new position, Serano will oversee federal efforts to investigate and prosecute trafficking and child exploitation cases across the Justice Department and partner agencies, while also coordinating with the Office of Justice Programs on victim services funding. Within 120 days, she is expected to help deliver an updated DOJ strategy on combating trafficking and exploitation.
The role consolidates oversight of cases handled across all 93 US Attorney’s Offices as well as specialized units within the DOJ Criminal Division, elevating the position within the deputy attorney general’s office.
Let’s look at Ashe’s perspective on it:
As the “Epstein files” hysteria continues to consume all of the energy, the administration appears to be taking steps to roll up trafficking networks.
You’d think this story would make people concerned with child trafficking take notice, but this appointment was largely ignored. Don’t get me wrong, there would [be] lots of discussions about trafficking — Epstein, UK Rape Gangs, etc. — but no one noticed that :
“Within 120 days, she is expected to help deliver an updated DOJ strategy on combating trafficking and exploitation.”
That would be mid-October.
Less than a month before The Midterms™️…
Notable.
“[Serano’s] appointment follows a recent DOJ announcement of an investigation into the status of roughly 300,000 unaccompanied immigrant children, including concerns that some may have been exploited through labor or sex trafficking via so-called ‘super sponsors.’”
The appointment itself is significant because it appears designed to pull scattered prosecutions, federal offices, specialized units, and funding into one coordinated national strategy. Years ago, that would have seemed logical because it was logical, particularly while Trump was still in office and trafficking enforcement was already visible even inside Mockingbird’s own managed circulation. But the pause during the Autopen Administration prolonged the obvious, and now this “new” story arrives as if the country has only just discovered the problem. At some point, any hard-thinking American has to ask the simple question: Why does the timing of these things always seem off in such a coordinated way? Why does it always seem as though “we’ve been here before”?
MORE ON THAT: Fauci, the CIA, and the Revelation of the Method
It is perhaps, without going back and re-reading the piece, something we were getting at back in August 2024, before the election, in “Trump and the Despicable Necessity of Smart Politics. Or, the Children.” Is it really the “despicable necessity” I was going with as a writer based on my patience with and support of Trump? Or is it just despicable?
The public conversation on the matter has moved beyond the Q-frogs and internet sleuths into more acceptable conversations, but still, it remains trapped in the familiar cave of outrage, suspicion, (redacted) document-chasing, and the hypnosis of tribal reflexes and reactions. The older 2022 story and the latest DOJ move belong in the same piece here today because both point to the same uncomfortable truth, that a silent totalitarian empire exists, the crimes are hideous, the victims are lost, and yet justice always seems to arrive at a point in time when nothing will ever be accomplished, and more, it arrives fully curated and managed just enough to keep the plausible deniability alive.
The question was never only whether one administration cared more than another, as only the passing of time has made me believe. The entire governing apparatus seems capable of doing anything it damn well pleases when it benefits them, but never in that equation is the saving of ritually abused children.
And back to us, the people, the Facebook outrage and impressive new billboards over Epstein, Diddy, rape-gang scandals, the missing immigrant children, and human trafficking in general simply does not provide the gasoline enough to fuel us away from our bread and circuses long enough to care, to pray, to fast, to really go to God in our yearning for His mercy and justice with this. We agree, that the Revelation of the Method indicates there is nothing we can do about it. But we also believe that there is Someone who absolutely can do something about it if only we’ll do penance and offer intentional sacrifice.
But we don’t want to do that. Because we live in a country where religion equates to what makes us feel good and what we do has no bearing on our own eternal salvation.
So we’ve developed the civilizational habit of not doing anything on our own—no two fishes and five loaves from us—to join God in the supernatural miracle He is aching to perform.
What we have here is a never-ending cycle of limited hangouts I once thought was necessary to wake up a sleeping American people in waves. What is the better hunch now is that all of it is meant to make well-meaning people believe exactly that—while we rumble ever so ominously toward the collision of Agenda 2030 and the 2000th anniversary of Christ’s coming and His redemption of the world. What we have here is earthly justice continuing to promise that it is almost here, almost ready, almost aligned, almost stalwart enough to name names and actually act on the political rubbish it feeds us.
No, count us or maybe just me out of finding hope in this latest “news” from Washington. For while we wait through another ridiculous strategy memo—coming to a town near you in just 120 days!—and another election season that will surely turn the tide for real this time, the ultimate test remains whether this country still has the moral nerve to save children before protecting politicians or all their myriad parties.
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