Missing Children and the Deep State

To Our Fellow Americans Who Fear the Deep State: We hear you. Your concern about corruption and coverups runs deep—and for good reason. Many are rightly outraged by what’s been hidden in plain sight: the abuse of power by elites like Jeffrey Epstein, Harvey Weinstein, Kevin Spacey, and P. Diddy—men who used money, fame, and influence to coerce people into sexual acts, including young adults and children. These crimes violate not only our laws but the sacred human right to body autonomy and self-sovereignty, leaving lifelong emotional and psychological scars. That’s no joke—and no comedian should be using this unfolding crisis for cheap laughs.

At the same time, let’s clarify the full picture of missing children in the U.S. Each year, about 460,000 children are reported missing—but the vast majority are found, and most cases stem from family disputes, custody battles, or runaways—not stranger abduction. In 2024, for example, the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children handled nearly 30,000 cases, recovering 91%. Only a small fraction involve criminal networks or trafficking—yet those are the most urgent to stop, because they involve ongoing harm, trauma, and silence.

MAGA supporters are not wrong to demand full disclosure and accountability. But let’s aim higher than revenge or spectacle. What we need now is a national commitment—to transparency, to child safety, and to restoring our systems with integrity. That’s how we reclaim America—not just from the so-called Deep State, but from the deeper rot that lets predators hide behind money and power.

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