Why I Don't Trust Corey Feldman to Really Expose Hollywood's Child-Rape Problem

in #politics6 years ago (edited)

Corey Feldman's TRUTH Campaign.png

Originally published on Medium, on October 26, 2017.

A few hours ago, I liked and retweeted the following Tweet:

t1.jpg

But that was before I did some research about Feldman.

First of all, he's a big Hillary Clinton supporter:

t2.jpg

t3.jpg

t4.jpg

He and Clinton are apparently even on a first-name basis:

t5.jpg

The problem with Feldman praising Clinton is that she's literally a corrupt, serial-lying warmonger with both indirect and direct ties to convicted child rapists/traffickers:

a1.jpg

a2.jpg

a3.jpg

In 1975, when she was a practicing lawyer, Clinton even defended a child rapist by accusing the 12-year-old victim of having "a tendency to seek out older men":

a4.jpg

Feldman also praises Bill Clinton:

t6.jpg

Now, here's my main issue with Feldman:

t7.jpg

t8.jpg

t9.jpg

Yes, some of the supposed Pizzagate evidence really is fraudulent. But there's also quite a bit of legitimate evidence suggesting the existence of a child-rape ring that's connected to Comet Ping Pong and two other restaurants:

(Shortly after Ben Swann's Pizzagate segment aired on CBS46 on January 17, 2017, he went off air for around eleven days. He then posted that he'll head back to CBS46 on January 30, and that his Twitter account and Facebook page will go dark on February 1.)

As Swann states in the video, he really only scratched the surface. For example, the name of the man who owns Comet Ping Pong, James Alefantis, comes quite close to "j'aime les enfants," which means "I love children" in French. And it gets weirder than that, a lot weirder:

a5.jpg

a6.jpg

0:00-6:07

What I kind of find to be the smoking gun is how the mainstream media, including TYT and RT, covered Pizzagate. Case in point: in the following interview, neither the interviewer nor Alefantis addresses or refutes any of the key pieces of evidence:

a7.jpg

So, even though Feldman knows that child-rape rings involving influential people exist, he called Pizzagate a fraud without addressing any of the evidence that suggests otherwise. That means he either didn't do enough research or he knew about the evidence but then called Pizzagate a fraud anyway...

t10.jpg

I want to be perfectly clear about this: I didn't write this article to hurt Feldman's feelings. I'm actually in a similar situation as he is. When I was eight years old, I was sexually abused by a highly successful German photographer. (I sued him, but, thanks to the police's "investigation," he's not in prison. And, as far as I know, he's still working with children.)

I also didn't write this article because I'm a Donald Trump supporter - I'm not. I wrote it because Feldman's behavior makes me highly doubt that he's going to do a good enough job of exposing Hollywood's child-rape problem.

Basically, I think that, instead of counting on him, we should make use of the internet and do our own research, especially since we also can't really count on mainstream media outlets. After all, they've protected rapists numerous times, with the latest example being: "How Top NBC Executives Quashed The Bombshell Harvey Weinstein Story."

3:21-8:50