Saturday, December 21, 2019

Wow.



You really don't care what a messed up song "Mother" is, or how creepy and destructive the music video for it is, even in the midst of a drug epidemic that is killing thousands of people in the United States every year.

I've been overtly abused by famous people for almost a decade.  In 2020, it will be a decade.  During that time, I haven't tended to even try to know who the parents of these famous people are. However, after years after having observed what seemed like initially normal people turning into monsters, I think their parents' failure or inability or lack of effort to stop their corruption and subsequent cruelty and criminality should be considered.  It seems that there are even parents who enjoy and support their adolescent or adult children's disgusting behavior.  

What is the problem?

Is it that a talented child who has at least one greedy, narcissistic parent is more likely to be encouraged by that parent to do whatever it takes to succeed in the entertainment industry, no matter how sleazy the path or how many people are hurt? 

Is it that there are parents who try to instill a good value system, but nothing can withstand the entertainment industry's real-life horror movie of evil? 

Is it just the money? Can millions of dollars really make someone forget fundamental decency and a sense of responsibility to society? 

I don't know how much you know about me, or what you've been told, but I want to be really clear about this so that you don't misunderstand me.  The collective wealth of the people who have offered to buy me in one way or another over the years adds up to literally billions of dollars.  That's not even including the billions of dollars made from the plagiarism of my ideas, my writing, and the distortions of my life story.  I'm not asking these questions out of envy or a sense of failure.  I don't feel like a failure.  

Here's a statistic for your family to discuss on Christmas. It's from Google:




Now how much do you love Charlie Puth's song, "Mother," for which the music video is about a high-school-aged girl who runs away from her parents' house at night to get into a car with a man in his late 20s (your son) so that he can bring her to an unknown house where people are doing drugs and having sex? 


These are some Google results for "homeless youth sex trafficking":




This is the last data that I'm going to publish at this page, and it's the last thing that I'm going to say at this page because I don't think that I should continue to try to talk to you right now; I might lose my temper and say something I'll regret.