New Congressional Hurdle Requires YOUR Help!
After a monumental victory last week with the AI moratorium being decisively struck down, we are once again facing a formidable challenge with Congress. Reports from Capitol Hill have uncovered
talks of killing the Kids Online Safety Act bill,
as a response to Senator Marsha Blackburn's efforts to remove the AI moratorium from the "big, beautiful bill" that passed last week.
Because Blackburn has been a steadfast advocate for the Kids Online Safety Act, her colleagues efforts to kill the bill are a means of retaliation for what they perceive as her going against her own party.Ā While some members of Congress see Blackburn's relentless pursuit of protecting children disloyalty or difficulty,
we see it as tremendous courage.
Read More
But sadly, Sen. Blackburn's courage is not echoed by many of her fellow Congresspeople. Some have fallen into the deep, deep pockets of Big Tech and are willing to compromise child safety for money.
This is where you come in.
We are up against one of the richest industries in the world. And we can't fight them alone.
Your support
gives us the power to take on Big Tech and protect our children from online exploitation.
Please take action below by showing your support for the Kids Online Safety Act and consider a donation to fund the fight against Big Tech and ensure our elected officials are doing right by our children.
Take Action!
Donate Now
Is The Proposed āA.I. Moratoriumā Another CDA Section 230?
As congress considers whether or not to implement a proposed
10-year moratorium on A.I. state regulation
, Haley and Dani talk about the potential devastating effects this could have. Some have even referred to this as
āSection 230 on steroidsā
so this episode is essential for understanding what the moratorium is and what the impacts would be. Big Tech doesnāt need another layer of immunity or security to allow them to hide while they profit off the exploitation of human beings in the name of advancing technology.
Watch on
YouTube
or listen on
Apple Podcasts
,
Spotify
, or your favorite podcast platform!
You can also
read our blog
explaining the A.I. moratorium below.Ā š
Read the Blog
š£
ACTION: Call on Congress to Oppose the AI Moratorium!
Take Action!
āThe Right Trackā: A Clarifying Lens into the Reality of ProstitutionĀ
āIf this was such a good profession, then why is everyone dying to get out of it?ā
Ā ā Prostitution Survivor, in documentary
The Right Track
In my mind,Ā
prostitution
and sex trafficking had always been separate from one another. One requiring consent, the other requiring force. Sex trafficking was evil and criminal while prostitution, while not ideal, was oneās choice.Ā
This documentary proved me wrong.Ā
āThe Right Trackā
Ā provides a raw look into the reality of prostitution, as told by the women who have personally walked its dark alleys. My blurry idea of the commercial sex trade was quickly brought into startling clarity by these womenās stories,Ā
as they took me to where they have been and where they never want to be again.Ā
NCOSE is very grateful toĀ
the Jensen Project f
or spearheading this powerful documentary, and for the survivor leaders and other experts who shared their stories and insights, including Melanie Thompson, Brenda Myers-Powell, Audra Doody, Tricia Grant, Yasmin Vafa, and more.Ā
Read More
š£
ACTION: Tell Your Representative to Pass the Survivor Model!
Take Action!
Snapchat Evades Accountability After Teacher Sexually Grooms Him on the Platform
John had a turbulent childhood. His father left him and his mother was tragically murdered. At age 15, his female science teacher sensed that John was vulnerable because of these hardships. After getting John alone in a room after class, she was able to get his Snapchat account username.Ā
She began messaging him on the app, sending sexual pictures of herself.Ā
Eventually the interactions escalated to the teacher sexually abusing John in person. She gave John money to buy certain prescription drugs, which she would use them before molesting him. Until one day, he overdosed.Ā Ā
During Johnās lengthy recovery in the hospital, his legal guardian sued multiple defendants, including Snap, Inc., alleging thatĀ
Snap failed to prevent the teacherās abusive behavior and designed an application that allowed sexual predators to thrive.Ā
But the court ruled Snap could not be held liable. Why?Ā
Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act.
Read More
š£
ACTION: Urge Congress to End Section 230 Immunity!
Take Action!
Sincerely,
-----------------------------------------------------------
Email Marketing By CharityEngine ([link removed])
To be removed from this list, copy the following address into your web browser [link removed]