Saturday, January 25, 2025

Their Names Were Not Important To The Junk Food Media!

Reyna Dunlap
Here's why TikTok is successful.

It has broke the status quo of mainstream news and social media.

It is the No. 1 app in the U.S. 

Israel and the United States are trying desperately to ban it. 

President Donald J. Trump extended the deadline to force U.S. companies to purchase TikTok from ByteDance. It is back online but there were some controversial changes. Some have complained that any mentions of "Free Palestine" are removed. 

Folks believe it was an op when it shutdown for 24 hours.

Trump and TikTok U.S. CEO Shou Zi Chew had a private meeting at Mar-a-Lago. 

Trump in the beginning wanted to ban the app claiming it was a "national security" risk. He did an executive order that was knocked down in federal court.

It was an act of Congress to do something. In 2024, former president Joe Biden signed the law to force TikTok to divest or be banned. It cost him his reelection and former vice president Kamala Harris her election.

Chew got pretty cozy with Trump. He also appeared with Elon Musk, Mark Zuckerberg and Jeff Bezos at the second inauguration. Republicans were not happy about Trump backing TikTok. However, they're not concerned about it now that they have control of 27 states, the U.S. Senate, the House and White House.

Chew personally thanked Trump for keeping TikTok online. The app is still blocked from newer model devices (for now). The U.S. Congress is by far the worst.

John Thune, Chuck Schumer, Mike Johnson, Hakeem Jeffries, Vice President JD Vance all have low job approval. Congress has a job approval of 34%. 

Trump has a job approval of 46%.

More younger people and Black content creators know more about the world than watch they see on television or other social media outlets.

Facebook makes you jealous of others.

X makes you hate more.

YouTube doesn't show you everything.

CNN, MSNBC, FOX, NewsNation, CBS, ABC, NBC and local news are fucked up.

Even in Ohio and other states, you don't hear much about missing women of color unless its a local news story.

I didn't even know about women of color gone missing. All I heard about on mainstream social media are those Israeli female settlers and soliders released because of charade of a ceasefire. Israel has violated the ceasefire and are still conducting indiscriminate attacks on several sovereignties.

Those released are foreign nationals who hold Israeli citizenship. So that includes Americans who serve in the IDF but were captured. The U.S. media are given a press release from Israel stating the captured are girls and not soliders.

The junk food media gives the perception that Hamas is intentionally taking women for sex.

Israeli forces have raped, maimed, tortured and sodomized men, women and children. The Israelis defend this. They use dogs and tasers on people.

Chara Medlock

When Isrsel kills a large group of people, the victims images are shown. Israel dismisses it as a propaganda. Israel would make up allegations that the people killed were staged actors.

The plight of Palestinians and the plight of Black women. One in the same or just a coincidence?

The white Israeli women are more important to the U.S. junk food media than American women who are Black, Indigenous, poor or coming from a troubled upbringing. 

The names of people who were local news stories. No national news coverage.

  • Reyna Dunlap
  • Chara Medlock
  • Mekayla Martin
  • Shaunaie Owens
  • Desiree Simone Long
You know more about the Israeli women who were either settlers or IDF soliders being released from Gaza. They were given wall to wall coverage from U.S. media outlets.

Reyna Dunlap, 33 traveled from Maryland to Cleveland, Ohio. She went missing in Nov. 2024. She ended up being found dead in an abandoned home. She was there for a "Baddies" contest.

The auditions for the show were held in October. Dunlap has more than 80,000 followers on her social media X account, and 17,000 on Instagram.

Reyna was a social media influencer known as "The Nude Queen" had went missing for two months before they found her.

“This incident is believed to be an overdose,” a spokesperson for the Cleveland Police Department told Cleve Scene, noting that a final cause of death has yet to be shared. “Depending on that, we can determine what action we need to take."

Dunlap’s mother, Karen Jones, later addressed the authorities’ early findings.

“They suspected that it was an overdose. I said my daughter has never used hard drugs, talk to anybody,” she said in an interview with Cleveland’s 19 News published on Thursday, January 23. “I will stake my life that the toxicology is going to come back that she did not have any hard drugs in her system.”

Mekayla Martin 

The junk food media looks upon her in a negative fashion.

Chara Medlock, 32 was found dead in Columbus, Ohio. She lived in Canton and was a missing person since Dec. 3. The U.S. Marshals arrested a Canton fugitive Thursday at a home in southeast Columbus, police allege in court documents that he told them his ex-girlfriend's body was hidden in the basement. 

In a probable cause affidavit, detectives allege that Darrell Carter Jr., 33, told them during an interview that he didn't call police when he found his ex-girlfriend dead Dec. 9 because of his outstanding warrants. Thirty-eight days later, he said he "didn't realize it would take so long" for police to find him.

Now, Carter faces a charge of abuse of a corpse in in his ex-girlfriend's death.

She was reported missing to Canton police and was last seen Dec. 3, though there were believed to be sightings in Columbus and Massilon.

Mekayala Martin, 17 is a missing teen from Richland County, South Carolina. 

Deputies say Mekayla Martin was last seen on Dec. 30, 2024 off Mallet Hill Road.

Martin is known to have tattoos on the neck (“Princess”), chest (“Brittney”) and on both forearms. On one forearm is the word “W.A.Y.S.” and there is an unknown date on the other forearm. 

Deputies say Martin is last known to be wearing a black wig, but is known to change her hair color.

Shaunie Owens, 43 has been missing since July 2024. Owens was last seen on July 19, 2024, near Caine Avenue and East 136th Street.

Shaunaie Owens

Owens, who struggled with addiction and mental health challenges, was reportedly living with two men who told police they kicked her out days before her disappearance.

According to a police report, Owens' daughter dropped off food to her mother on July 19.

An unknown man then called the daughter, saying Owens was “going crazy” and having a mental health episode.

Owens was wearing an ankle monitor when she vanished.

The last time it pinged was near East 155th and Harvard on July 19 at 4:00 a.m.

Owens is 5-feet tall and was last seen with short black hair with burgundy tips.

Her name is not listed on the Ohio Attorney General’s missing persons list, and there are no Facebook groups dedicated to finding her.

Desiree Simone Long

Desiree Simone Long, 33 is the only missing woman of color who was found. The U.S. Marshals did arrest her for outstanding warrants but at least she was found safe.

Lorain police said a U.S. Marshals Task Force found Long Tuesday at an apartment building in Cleveland.

“While there is currently no indication that Ms. Long was the victim of an abduction attempt, the circumstances remain under active investigation,” Lorain Police Cpt. Jacob A. Morris said in a news release.

The detective leading Long’s case previously told 19 News she was last seen leaving a home and getting into a car near West 29th Street and Oberlin Avenue in Lorain.

It’s unconfirmed if the person behind the wheel was a rideshare driver or someone she knew.

Missing white woman syndrome is a term used by some social scientists and media commentators to denote perceived disproportionate media coverage, especially on television, of missing-person cases toward white females as compared to males, or females of color. Supporters of the phenomenon posit that it encompasses supposed disproportionate media attention to females who are young, attractive, white, and upper middle class. Although the term was coined in the context of missing-person cases, it is sometimes used of coverage of other violent crimes. The phenomenon has been highlighted in the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, Australia, New Zealand, and other predominantly white countries, as well as South Africa.

The phenomenon has led to a number of tough-on-crime measures, mainly on the political right, that were named for white women who disappeared and were subsequently found harmed. In addition to race and class, factors such as supposed attractiveness, body size, and youthfulness have been identified as unfair criteria in the determination of newsworthiness in coverage of missing women. News coverage of missing black women was more likely to focus on the victim's problems, such as abusive boyfriends, criminal history, or drug addiction, while coverage of white women often tended to focus on their roles as mothers, daughters, students, and contributors to their communities.

The Laken Riley Act which is a controversial law that eliminates due process. An example of a missing woman, a criminal of color, political theater and more laws that eliminate freedoms under guise of protecting.

Four Israeli female soliders being released from the Palestinian resistance.

The bill first requires that the Department of Homeland Security, through Immigration and Customs Enforcement, detain non-U.S. nationals who "[are] charged with, [are] arrested for, [are] convicted of, [admit to] having committed, or [admit to] committing" certain illegal acts. In the original version, the list was limited to theft-related crimes.

The bill also allows states to take action against the federal government if they determine it is in "violation of the detention and removal requirements" of the bill.

The amended version, which passed the Senate on January 20, includes the Cornyn Amendment, which provides for detaining illegal immigrants who are charged with or convicted of assaulting a law enforcement officer, and the Ernst Amendment (nicknamed "Sarah's Law"), which includes detaining illegal immigrants who are charged with or convicted of a crime that results in death or serious bodily injury like manslaughter resulting from driving while intoxicated.

Trump is expected to sign this into law. So thus, any immigrant caught in minor misdemeanors or low tier felonies are arrested and given court dates. If found guilty, they are sent to prison than upon release immediately deported. But if found not guilty, they are released to Immigration Customs Enforcement and immediately deported.

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