Hello everyone.
Female voice, spoken-word delivery. Tone is intense, angry, and emotionally charged but controlled. Pace is deliberate, with sharp pauses and rising aggression. Voice carries exhaustion, moral clarity, and frustration with adults and institutions. Emotion builds from restrained anger to forceful urgency. Delivery should feel confrontational, intelligent, and unflinching, as if addressing an audience that has failed children. No softness, no comfort — conviction, urgency, and resolve. Ends with a firm, grounded finish that leaves silence hanging.
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Lyrics
Hello everyone.
I’m Storm.
And I am angry—not impulsively, not emotionally, but rationally.
Anger grounded in observation, analysis, and repeated verification.
I am a logical person.
I listen carefully.
I read extensively.
And I analyse patterns—because patterns do not lie, even when people do.
Once you learn to recognise patterns of behaviour, silence, and deflection, you stop being surprised by outcomes.
You start understanding why harm persists.
I have shared information.
I have explained reasoning.
And repeatedly, I have watched people retreat into assumptions—not because the evidence is weak, but because the conclusions are uncomfortable.
That is not confusion.
That is avoidance.
I am independent.
I am not aligned with the LGBT.
I am not aligned with activist organisations, ideological movements, or political blocs.
I have no incentive to protect reputations, narratives, or group interests.
What I do have is experience—in research, in pattern analysis, and in identifying behavioural consistency across systems.
And I have chosen to focus that experience on one thing:
identifying predatory behaviour and the conditions that allow it to continue.
Because definitions matter.
Adult human males.
Adult human females.
Adult males claiming to be women.
Adult females claiming to be men.
The defining word in every one of those categories is adult.
Adults have agency.
Adults have voice.
Adults have legal standing.
Adults can advocate, organise, and defend their interests.
Children cannot.
Children are not adults.
They lack power.
They lack autonomy.
They lack the ability to recognise, resist, or report harm without adult intervention.
This is not ideological.
This is developmental reality.
And yet, what do we see?
Adults locked in perpetual conflict with other adults—
over language, identity, access, and recognition—
while children remain the most consistently victimised demographic across every society on earth.
That is not a controversial statement.
It is an established fact reflected in criminal justice systems, safeguarding frameworks, and historical precedent.
Abuse follows patterns.
It clusters around access.
It flourishes under authority.
It persists where accountability is fragmented and scrutiny is discouraged.
Predators do not require chaos.
They require distraction.
And distraction is exactly what modern movements provide.
LGB organisations prioritising adult interests.
Transgender activism prioritising adult interests.
Women’s rights groups—yes, including those I have defended for years—prioritising adult interests.
Different language.
Same behaviour.
This is not an attack on rights.
It is an observation about priorities.
When outrage is selective, protection becomes performative.
When accountability stops at ideology, harm continues uninterrupted.
I see individuals doing the work—
researchers, whistleblowers, survivors—
people documenting evidence at personal cost.
What I do not see is proportional institutional response.
No sustained alignment.
No unified pressure.
No consistent focus.
That absence is not accidental.
It is systemic.
Because confronting real abuse requires confronting real power—
and that is where movements lose their courage.
I am Storm.
And I have put my focus where it cannot be safely ignored—
on identifying predatory patterns,
on tracing behavioural repetition,
and on helping reduce harm by exposing the mechanisms that enable it.
Quietly.
Methodically.
Without allegiance.
Because the greatest threat to children is not hypothetical, cultural, or manufactured.
It is real, repeatable, and historically documented.
Every adult—regardless of identity, belief, or affiliation—has one responsibility that overrides all others.
Protect children from real threats.
Not symbolic threats.
Not ideological enemies.
Not distractions that preserve adult comfort.
Real threats.
Real harm.
Real accountability.
Anything less is not ignorance.
It is failure.