04/08/2025

Standing up against Child Exploitation and a Day for Masks-Off

The following is written in a positive and literal style. If it seems otherwise, it’s because of driver interference. Watch out for valence and tone!

Hi everybody!

Another week begins and we’re into August now. Time’s moving on and we have to do everything we can to make sure it’s not time wasted—especially with the project and the drivers attempting to drain our energy and waste our time any chance they get. We need to stay focussed on the most important goals and the areas of life that matter the most. We need to make sure as much as possible that what we are doing is contributing to life getting better, rather than running us around in circles, or making things worse.

On Friday, the public exchange at the Square was directed towards children and children’s rights in regards to project and Mandatory Reality practises. I was asked to make a post about how to confront these issues and that is something I’ve been grappling with on-and-off myself for some months as a necessary issue to tackle.

Tomorrow, I’ll be beginning a series of Overt Resistance Strategies intended to build up an alternate playbook for confronting the project that you can integrate with your covert strategies and styles. I understand a lot of you have been analysing the styles I use and I believe some of the ideas you considered the best ones have gotten back to me. I’ve been able to look at the approaches from a whole new angle, noticing things I didn’t even realize I was doing, and I’ve been compiling a list of what I see as the most important and powerful tools and skills. As ever, some things are always lost in translation when relying on the driver network to communicate, but I’m certain making these strategies publicly available will be a game-changer.

There’ll be more strategies every day for the rest of the week and all of them will also apply to standing up against the project in support of your children’s rights and well-being, which is the issue of the day.

It’s an effort that has to start first with the parents standing up against unacceptable project orders, and this applies too to those in a position to be managing children taking part in project routines who need to stand up against those project directives as well. It’s an effort that require childless individuals to voice their opposition to harmful or exploitative project practises and to speak up in support of parents and child managers when they voice their concerns.

Most of the tactics to make this happen must begin with individuals taking the initiative for themselves, without waiting for project permission or for others around them to make the first move. Only as this happens, does it become an open and successful movement of many.

If you have a family, consider how you can protect your own children from these exploitative practises by taking necessary steps yourself, rather than waiting for a big community push to change the project rules. If you wait for that, you could be waiting a long time, but that doesn’t mean you can’t work personally to make things better for your own kids in the meantime.

How the project exploits our children is not ok!

Where should you begin mounting your open opposition to Project and Mandatory Reality practises in regards to using and exploiting our children?

Let’s take a look at what some of the most obvious issues are:

Prosthetics and outfits

Some of the skin-masks and prosthetics I’ve seen people being forced to wear really are quite ghastly—and while this is less common for the kids, I have seen some pretty weird masks and wigs. Nobody should be told they have to wear something deliberately designed to look scary or unpleasant and you really have to point out that that is exactly what these masks and outfits are!

In order to prevent your family from being dragged along with something that you recognize as wrong, you need to speak out against the problem in clear literal terms.

People being told they have to wear strange or inappropriate outfits for project routines is another problem that has been going on for far too long and, again, this is also true for children. Choosing the right language to address what the problem is here is important, as is standing firm and resolved when you decide to stand up against these directives, either for your own children or the children you’re in a position to manage.

It’s perfectly acceptable to speak out against highly garish or inappropriately mature outfits when the project tells you to dress up your kids—and this is also true when the inappropriate outfits are just a little more subtle. Pay attention to what is specifically wrong with the outfit and find the right words to critique it.

These routines and how the kids are forced to dress are even more inappropriate if they’re being used for maturely-themed project routines. In fact using children for things like public behavioural testing, for example, is obviously wrong regardless of the context and anybody sane would agree. It is not acceptable to be allowing our kids to be used and exploited in these ways, no matter how they’re being made to dress or behave.

As for the outfits and costumes, that’s the obvious first problem to speak out against when these routines are being set up. Look at these things with the view to locate the problem immediately—take a moment to consider specifically what the problem is and how you’ll speak out against it—and then use your voice. No code, no doublespeak, literal. You are well within your rights to address the problem openly. In fact it’s the only way to ensure the project is forced to confront it.

Driver scripting and behavioural control

I’ve heard people say some really strange things when the drivers are in control, sometimes even highly offensive or obscene things. It’s bad enough when adults are treated this way, but when it’s forced on the children it’s even worse.

Further to that, some of the behavioural routines I’ve seen kids being controlled into acting out are really not ok. Things like being made to cry or throw tantrums, or to scream or babble, are really not acceptable behaviours to be forced on our children. Obscene or explicit language is never ok either, including when it’s scripted in a more subtle, indirect way. All of these things are justifiable to speak out against openly and literally. That is the best chance you have for fighting back against them.

What to do about it

If this is how the kids are being treated, the obvious answer is that they shouldn’t even be made to participate in these project routines at all. Trying to make the project give in to that would be a big battle, but if you are a parent, you might consider standing up as an individual family unit and refusing to let your own kids be used for these routines any more anyway.

If you decide to go down this road, build up as much evidence as you can for how your children have been mistreated and find out as much as you can about what kind of consequences you may be facing from the project when you stand up against it. Treat everything the drivers tell you, especially their threats, with a grain of salt. Drivers lie often when it comes to tricking people into giving up their rights, or going along with things that they could be standing up against. What you’re facing might not be as challenging as it seems.

You are in the right, everybody knows that you are in the right, so the project will not be able to attack you on the rationality of your position—as long as you can state clearly why you will no longer allow your children to take part in these routines.

As is standard practise, you may instead be attacked or punished for some unrelated proxy issue, so you need to prepare to defend yourself and protect your loved ones if they are threatened or put at risk of harm.

It’s scary to stand up against these things, but if you don’t the project will just go on using and exploiting your kids every day. And if people aren’t willing to stand up against it openly and directly then the project will never really face the necessary pressure that will force it to halt these practises completely.

All of you need to be speaking out against these exploitative and inappropriate practices much more often and much more openly, in literal language, behind-the-scenes or wherever you can. It is never ok to use children as tools—especially not when they are going to be forced to dress or behave in ways that are so obviously bad for their mental and emotional health.

If nobody else around you is speaking out against these things when they start happening, then you have to take that initiative to stand up and do it first yourself—especially if you’re a parent or someone with a child in your personal care.

If you’re one of the people in a position of authority in that moment—with power over how these children are going to be forced to behave—then you need to be voicing your agreement with those speaking out against these practices, rather than trying to argue for the project and its obviously exploitative directives. This is not the time for doublespeak or playing the bad side. It is the time for openly choosing your side. The children and the families need you to stand with them, not against them.

If the authority figure does not back down or accept why these practices are wrong, then those speaking out will have to stay firm and refuse to back down themselves. If you are an onlooker to this exchange, now is the time to jump in and voice your support of the parent or whoever is speaking in defence of the kids. When people jump in together on these things, the battle is usually won.

It’s unlikely that you’ll ever solve this issue entirely by playing the simulations. The issue of children’s rights is definitely a battle to be waged primarily in actual reality, with clear literal language. You are well within your rights to do so. Do it for real to make real changes happen.

The Next Masks-Off Day is Saturday the 23rd of August

It’s only been two weeks since the last one but we’ve come a long way since then. Now, we’ve got a new day in sight and it’s the 23rd of August at the Square, Letterkenny.

The project’s official position is that the day is just a test event. Mine is that if you’re ready then get there and you can move over the line with me. When you’re on this side, it’s a whole new world.

If the project says it’s just a test routine, the drivers have a much bigger excuse for holding you back with their project mind control processes. After all, if the official project plan says this time nobody gets to make it either because it’s still just a test, they could claim that as their excuse for using the project-driver mind-control-infrastructure to stop you. It’s been brought to my attention that that is an issue, so do consider if that’s the best way to play it.

Regardless, the attitude I’ll be setting up with this event will be much lower pressure than the last one. We may or may not have mask-offers, it may or may not be a success in that regard, but either way, we’ll put on a spread, start some decent conversations without any expectations, and make a good day of it.

If you’re considering making the move this time, look back over the first Masks-Off Day posts and updates in the Public Announcements section. There’s some really good advice there for what you’ll need if you decide to make a push for getting over the line.

The event will take place from 1pm to 6pm on Saturday the 23rd of August.

That’s about it for now, folks. I’ll be up at the square from 2pm – 3pm today so I hope to see you there!

As always, keep your eyes on the prize and remember the major goals and strategies for Getting to Masks-Off—and that the strategies are the right way to achieve the necessary goals.

Strategies:

Conscientious Objection

Civil Non-Compliance

Expanding the Ethical Boundary

Less Dance, More You

Breaking the Project Rules

Goals:

Refusing to Play for the Bad Side

Full Abstention from Hurtful Project Routines

Never Policing Each Other for the Project

Opening Channels of Literal Communication

Building Actual Reality

Keep returning to the following articles as you test and refine your methods:

Changing the Project from Within

Breaking the Wall of Silence

Update: Strategies and Goals in Review

Update: It’s Time to Build Better Strategies

You never know what you might have missed on the first couple of reads that might help you later!

More Announcements