Rescue the Fosters, Rescuing the Kids from CPS w/ Sylvia Beachy (Eps 95)
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So, let's go. Let's go.
So,
Apologies about the delay.
We're about 15 minutes late. We had a little technical issue.
I think Rumble is actually getting overloaded because there's a lot of people transferring from YouTube to Rumble because Rumble doesn't censor as much as YouTube.
But today we have a very special guest, Sylvia Beachy.
How you doing, Sylvia?
I'm good. How are you?
Great, great. Thank you for coming on the Blood Money Podcast.
Let's just dive right into it.
The topic of this episode is rescuing the fosters, rescuing the kids from CPS. Tell us a little bit about what you do and how you got started doing what you do.
Okay, so Rescue the Fosters is a new organization that is founded by myself and KK. So I'm going to tell you what we do first, and then I'll tell you how we got started.
So basically what we do is we want to keep kids out of the foster system.
So we help families navigating the foster system.
So like if somebody, if a social worker knocks on your door, And says, we got a call.
We would like for people to call us then, but what we're getting is 12 months into the case, they're calling us saying, help.
I don't know how this happened.
They still got my kids. So we help families navigating the system.
Then we also help advocate for the youth in foster care.
So if a foster kid is saying they're unsafe and they're not in a safe environment, then we advocate for them.
And then also the other thing that we do is once Children age out of the foster system, they are dropped.
So as soon as they turn 18, they're dropped on the streets.
So we want to help kids stay off the streets.
And that's also usually when a foster youth ages out, within two years, they're in the prison system.
Wow, wow, wow, wow.
So it's almost like it's almost a given high percentage rate of if a youth ages out of a foster home, they're basically landing in prison.
Yeah, yeah, because they have become so normalized.
It's almost like a prison structure, you know, in these group homes.
And so it's just a normal thing for kids.
So we basically offer services to keep them off the streets.
And that includes like interview skills, resume writing, job hunting, obtaining housing, finding jobs, stuff like that.
So that's our goal.
So, I mean, what you're doing sounds tremendously challenging because, you know, we've done a lot of episodes here on Blood Money and it seems as though, you know, when, for example, there's no father in the home, the chances of a child ending up in prison, having, you know, drug addiction issues, suicide rates, I mean, everything skyrockets the minute you're, you know, when you go from a dual-parent home to a single-family home.
Then you go to a no-parent home and then you're talking about pretty much a highway From foster home to prison, essentially, which tells you a lot about the importance of the family structure in this country.
Yes, absolutely.
Basically, what I discovered when I was working in the system is that what they've taken out is nurture, love, and stability.
If you give that to a child, they will grow to be successful.
So it's really simple if you think about it.
It's just really our time and people lending their time.
It's not more about money in some of these instances.
It's maybe teaching them how to live independently.
Or teaching them, letting them vent, letting them know it's okay.
But it's really, honestly, what I discovered was that it's really simple.
If we start putting stability, love, and nurture, then people thrive.
So that's basically what we're offering.
Wow, wow. So how did you get started in doing this?
Well, so I worked in the foster system for almost six years.
I started out mentoring a foster youth at a group home.
It was called Else Aid More.
And this is something that anybody can do.
And we do recommend mentoring.
But basically, when these kids are taken into care, they're cut off from their family and No communication with family, friends, you know, they can't speak to anybody.
They get one call a day, which is a 15-minute call.
Sounds like prison, by the way.
That sounds like you're in prison.
Right. By the way, I'm sorry to interrupt you real quick.
One quick thing I noticed, because I used to do a lot of hip-hop videos back in the day as a music video director.
And a gentleman that ran one of the record labels actually gave me a tour of the projects and talked about how they're built like prisons.
And incidentally, the highway between growing up in the projects to prison is also very similar to what you're talking about in foster homes.
So it's I mean, it just it baffles me because you think if you build something like a prison structure with the like habits of being in prison, like a 15 minute call, you're basically indoctrinating somebody.
That's what it seems like. Right, exactly.
And that's why prison feels like their norm.
Because when you're used to something, you don't even realize that you're used to it, right?
So yeah, so they get a 15-minute call and that's it.
And it's only to certain people on their list.
And so what I would do is I would spend two hours a week.
I would take her out shopping.
I'd take her to lunch.
I'd take her to dinner, whatever.
And just get her out of that environment.
And then an opportunity opened up at the group home for a staff member, so I became a staff member.
And basically a staff member is like a caretaker.
So you take care of the kids, you make sure they're fad, you make sure they get off to school, they do their homework, you know, you're a caregiver.
And our shift was from Friday at three and ended Monday at three.
So you stayed the night.
So we really got to experience like a process See the child grow and bond with them.
So I really enjoyed that.
But it was a different world than what I'm used to.
I had no idea that these group homes were basically gang affiliations.
They're sexually abused kids.
In fact, the kids that were coming through was nothing but sex trafficked kids.
And all of a sudden, I realized we had a sex trafficking problem in the U.S., This was the first time that I even realized it.
And it was more like the kids that were coming in were either sexually abused or sex trafficked.
Yeah. And then you have gangs.
I knew nothing about gangs.
You know, the crypts, the bloods, nothing.
I came from a stable environment.
I knew nothing about this.
So it was kind of, it was a different world for me.
And then not only that, but you have fights, you have runaways, you have 1013s and that's where they get suicidal.
So you have to Call that in.
You know, it's just like, it's not a stable environment.
It's a survival environment.
Wow, wow. Now, you know, through doing a lot of interviews with people that have been, had interactions with CPS, I mean, we constantly hear a lot of negative things, a lot of negative things.
In fact, maybe I'm even kind of Minimizing my experience in all of this, I've been so involved in this whole world through interviews, through drug interventions for over a decade now.
To be honest with you, I've seen situations where parents are doing drugs with a child around.
And had I not known what I know today, I would have been like, I need to call CPS immediately, right?
Right. What I know today, like, unless, like, a parent is, and being literal here, unless a parent is an immediate threat to a child's life, I just feel as though calling CPS might actually be the worst option because I've just heard horrible things happen to these kids when they're taken in by CPS where they're taken out of a specific environment that might be bad for them, but they're put in something a lot worse.
Is my impression wrong?
Am I crazy to think that?
No, you're absolutely right.
And that's what I discovered.
Like I said, I thought we were taking kids from an abused situation and placing them in a safe environment.
And that's not what was happening.
We were taking kids from an abused environment and placing them in a different abused environment with no support.
And then when they acted out, we were putting them on psychotropic medication and putting them in the hospital.
And that's the other thing, you know.
So, I mean, you're absolutely right.
And then I started noticing, like, things that were happening were not being reported as they happened.
Yeah, or reported and covered up by people on the inside, which is something that we hear about all the time, where they don't even want it in writing.
They don't want to make a file out of it because they know they're doing wrong things.
They know they're covering up abuse.
Yes, exactly. And see that the problem was, and I was really young and naive when I started in the system because I would report it.
And then when they would cover it up, I would say something and I would get written up.
So I had about four write ups.
Yeah. And then when I went over to case managing, it got worse because I left a staff member job and went over to case managing and it got worse there.
And the reason that I quit at the group home was because I was afraid that something was going to happen to a child and they were going to blame me.
That's what I was afraid of because there was this situation where, like I said, gang affiliation.
They were doing a gang initiation and it was on a night shift.
And there was one girl that was, you know, I think she was Bloods.
And they went over into another child's room.
They held a pillow over while she was sleeping and tried to suffocate her.
Well, I got a detective on that case and I got a call from the director saying, what are you doing?
What is your intentions?
And I was like, wait, hold up.
You said you called it in.
If you called it in, I have no intentions, right?
Because it's already called in.
I was just following up on it.
So that tells me you didn't call it in.
So I got written up again.
I had about four write-ups and they all did medical error is usually what they did.
Then I went over to case managing and that's where I learned we had quotas.
And so this is another thing that people don't realize is we had quotas on if a child left the system then we had to bring in more children.
And we had A goal and we had how many kids we needed in order to reach our goal.
So, basically, if you're a nefarious social worker, you could basically use that system to put, you know, certain parents, you know, in blame of something they didn't do in order to meet your quota, basically.
Like, kind of like getting pulled over by a cop who needs to make a quota, and he, you know, he fibs a little bit, you're driving 65 or 70, he says you're driving 85.
You know, his word is yours.
I mean, that seems like a really flawed situation.
When you're given quotas that essentially are to tear families apart.
Right, right. And I was really confused by this because I was like, no, we need less kids in the system.
If we have less kids, then we can help the ones that are being abused, right?
That's logical, right?
And the other thing was they would say, well, if you don't bring in more kids, then you're fired.
You're out of here. And I'd be like...
And I was very vocal about this.
And so I would say, okay, if I see a kid on the street and I go grab that kid, that kid is not on my caseload, right?
Because legally you can't do that.
So how does this work?
And what they would tell us is they would have us call Other caseworkers.
So we would call and say, hey, we have space available.
If you have any kids, send them our way.
So this is how the system is ran.
It's ran off of nonprofits.
And that's another people don't realize is that it's nonprofits that these places are running.
And basically, CPS places a kid and the placement agency.
Well, I mean, through interviewing a lot of different social workers, and this is, by the way, when I talk about this, I'm not necessarily just talking about the United States, because with America Happens, our work has been pretty international.
I mean, we've gone to the United Kingdom, we've gone to Canada, we've had a presence in Australia, and it seems as though these countries operate...
They're CPS organizations.
In the UK, it's called CAFGAS. It's all the same stories that we hear.
And some of these stories are good social workers like yourself are essentially removed from the system.
We had multiple examples when we were doing the documentary in the United Kingdom where essentially CAFGAS social workers, same thing as CPS for the UK, where when you didn't lie, you were blackballed within the industry.
And I'm talking about lies specifically to meet their quotas, remove children from otherwise good parents.
And in one specific case, a social worker that we followed literally was told that unless you lie, we're going to remove you.
And then lo and behold, they eventually removed him.
They eventually removed him from the organization because he was unwilling to lie.
And primarily they were targeting fathers through this social worker and basically creating lies about the father in order to remove the father from the child's life.
So, I mean, that's kind of the disgusting stories we hear, which to me sounds, I mean, that sounds more like a terrorist organization than like a children's aid society or children's protective services.
Yeah, it's human trafficking.
And it's very blatant.
And you are bullied.
You are harassed.
I mean, I refuse to falsify an incident report.
They Gave me three days off, said that I was hallucinating, I was burned out.
They told me I needed to see a therapist.
They started building the narrative.
That's another thing we've heard, by the way.
They try to make you out to be crazy.
And the crazy thing about what you're saying is people that are not qualified to make medical assessments start making medical assessments in order to bully the good social workers.
Yep. Yep. That's so true.
And I, so I, I did, I, I, after the two years, I was like, I can't do this anymore.
And I quit. So you're right.
I mean, I was like, you know, I, I just can't morally work in the system.
That was my, I was like, if I want to help these kids, I got to get out of the system.
Cause you can't even help them when you, when they asked to be moved, you can't move them.
They say, well, do they have a bruise?
Do they have a mark?
Do they have a scratch? And mental abuse is not, you're not seeing it.
And so you can't move the child.
You have to leave them there.
And I would get to where I was having to manipulate the system in order to help the kids.
And then the other thing, I don't know if you've gone over the money, but The money was a huge part that I didn't realize how much the foster parents were getting paid until I was a caseworker.
Yeah, the foster parents are getting paid and isn't there also financial incentives and essentially kidnapping and trafficking these kids?
I've heard, you know, up to in the millions that is to be made.
I've heard numbers as low as, you know, like thirty, forty thousand dollars all the way up into surpassing a million.
Is there any truth in that? Oh yeah, for sure.
I'm not sure the exact number I'd have to get it, but it's depending on...
Okay, so when a kid comes into care, a caseworker has to fill out a waiver.
That waiver is based on the needs of the child.
So if you have a regular non-defiant child, you're going to get a lower rate.
But if you have one that's defiant, you're going to get more.
If they have any medical issue, you're going to get more.
If there's sex traffic, you're going to get more.
More money, you're seeing? Mm-hmm.
Wow, wow. So then there's the incentive.
Again, let's talk about not the good social workers like yourself.
And actually, the gentleman that I brought up, they've got one in the UK that lost his job.
Let's talk about the bad social workers.
I mean, when you're putting these financial amounts to like, hey, if this child is this bad or whatever, 10 out of 10, you're going to get more money.
I mean, doesn't that incentivize Oh, absolutely.
I was told on one case that if I did not get this child approved for an MWO rate, which was higher than the BWO rate, then they were going to have to let that child leave the placement agency.
And she had been in her home for seven years.
So if I didn't fill out the paperwork the way that they wanted it and they didn't get the money, then she would have to find another home.
And it's like, okay, what do I do?
Do I get the extra money to keep this child in this home?
Or do I let her go to another home?
And she was accustomed to this family.
She was wanting them to adopt her.
She didn't want to leave them.
So it's like, what do you do?
You are constantly having to make decisions that you morally would not have to make.
Because you are pushed to, okay, if you don't do this, this is happening.
If you don't do this, this is happening.
You know, it's like there's so many similarities between what you're seeing and what we've seen in the medical industrial complex.
Because one of the things we've done is interview a lot of doctors that were frontline doctors that stood against the COVID vaccines.
And as we've learned, the COVID vaccines are not necessarily for vaccination.
They actually cause a lot of more a lot of problems.
A lot of people are dying.
A lot of people are suffering. A lot of people have myocarditis.
Some doctors say that up to 100% of individuals that get the COVID vaccine get myocarditis.
But in there, we see an example of financial incentives being placed for the doctors, essentially to administer something that goes against their oath, right?
If you've done your research, you know the COVID vaccine causes harm.
But nonetheless, there's financial amounts put towards making those doctors give the COVID vaccine regardless of the damage it causes.
And what you're telling me is that the same kind of incentives are placed by CPS essentially to damage children and not do what is morally right for the children, not give them the care they need, but to essentially do things that are bad for them for financial amounts, basically.
Exactly. And like you said, when you go into that, that's the vaccines.
The first thing they do is they vaccinate the kids.
Oh, they vaccinate the kids too.
So they're giving them myocarditis, not to mention all the mental health problems that go along with their screwy system, more or less.
And then they put them on psychotropic medication.
They give them a diagnosis.
That's the first thing that happens when a kid goes into care.
They see a psychiatrist.
They see a therapist.
They get a diagnosis.
And the main diagnosis that I saw was ODD, and that's oppositional defiant disorder.
Which sounds like being a teenager?
Yeah. I mean, I had that.
I definitely had that. Yeah.
I had that for about a decade.
You know? In fact, I mean, I thought I had it until I was 23 years old.
Between 13 and 23, guaranteed I could have been diagnosed.
I mean, it's just so crazy because it feels like they're making these titles, you know, and ADD is another one.
ADD To me, ADD is kind of like, again, growing up, going through puberty.
You know, a lot of people experience that kind of ADD. Whether it stays with you for the rest of your life, you know, is a different topic.
But it seems as though, you know, the minute you're a little hyper, they want to put you on this, you know, ADD medication.
I mean, everything, all the roads seem to lead down to pharma, a whole bunch of them.
Basically, that's what it seems like.
Yeah, it does.
It leads to pharma, and they experiment on these kids because each psychiatrist gives a different diagnosis.
A kid can go to three different psychiatrists, have three different diagnosis, and then they start experimenting with the medicine, which actually usually makes them more aggressive and makes them more suicidal.
Not to mention the long-term effects of some of these medications that is lung failure or liver failure or, you know, long-term that these kids are going to have to deal with as an adult.
And here's another one.
Of course, practical. Sorry to interrupt you, but of course, practical solutions.
Like, practical solutions, again, we interview a lot of doctors.
There's miraculous things that we've seen happen in front of our eyes.
Very simple things.
Pharmaceuticals are like the last stop to most of these doctors.
There's food, there's diet, there's water.
I mean, all these different steps that seem to cure a lot of these problems that are very logical.
But again, you're not spending hundreds of dollars a month on pharmaceuticals when you're going down these very logical roads.
Exactly. Yeah, that's exactly it.
And they're experimenting and they're able to experiment on them.
And one of the medications that really shocked me that they were using, because they're not all psychotropic medications, they use them for certain things.
So one thing they use for insomnia is clonidine.
Clonidine is an adult blood pressure medicine and they use it on kids for insomnia.
I mean, melatonin would be a first stop, right?
I mean, why not just use melatonin?
Why do you have to use this kind of hardcore lab-created product?
Right. Yeah.
I mean, again, it's just, I hate to use harsh words, but after 95 episodes of hearing this sort of corruption that is destructive, I mean, we, you know, we do stuff about the environment, the climate, the geoengineering, the COVID vaccines.
I mean, it seems as though every system is set up to take advantage of the people, to destroy for financial gain.
I mean, there's no other way to look at something like this because you and I here are sitting and talking about logical solutions, right?
Yeah. And why is it that you and I sound like the smartest people in the room when you have all these doctors and therapists and all these authorities that are supposed to be smart and think about these practical solutions, yet they've come up with destructive solutions?
I mean, it seems like the money is really, 99.9% of the time, the answer is money over what's good for people.
Well, yeah, our solution does not bring in that money.
And with their solution, they get human traffic with Multiple jobs.
I mean, you've got the CPS, you've got the therapist, you've got the psychiatrist, you've got, not to mention the behavior rates, the parent, you've got a whole list, the transporters.
It's an industry of trafficking, basically.
Probably billions and billions of dollars.
I mean, do you find...
Obviously, what you're doing is amazing work, but do you find that you're kind of...
At the end of the day, what we're doing in trying to save these kids is really we're trying to put a band-aid on multiple stab wounds because the system is geared towards destructive ends as opposed to what's good for these children.
Oh, yeah. Yeah, it needs to be abolished.
CPS needs to be abolished.
Well, multiple of our systems.
Our systems are set to human traffic.
If you think about it, it's the prison system is the same way, right?
So, you know, you traffic them as a child, then you traffic them as an adult.
And if you look at the elderly...
There's an adult protective services and it's the same thing with the elderly.
If you've ever looked at that, and not to mention Medicare, and I only know that because after I left social work, I went into Medicare and I did caregiving and I worked with the elderly and it was the same system.
So it's like all of our systems are created and I don't believe that they're broken.
I believe that they're perfected.
They're perfected. They're created for destruction.
They're created to take advantage of the population.
The vulnerable. The vulnerable and the poor.
One thing that baffles me, right?
The horrors I've seen CPS do and CathCast do.
I mean, it literally is akin to what you would think the Nazis would do.
Literally. They're taking what are otherwise good families, good parents, or a good single mom or single dad, absolutely destroying them, taking the kids away from them.
A lot of these parents ultimately end up committing suicide or falling into drug addiction.
You know, they're causing catastrophe, like really evil catastrophe.
Now, if you look at like the, you know, the Third Reich and how that happened, right?
You had a lot of Ideologues that were supporting this sort of evil, right?
They're doing similar things.
Similar things in terms of destruction of families.
Yes, the end there was the oven, and they're not necessarily putting people in the oven, but they're taking all the steps that lead to the oven, right?
In terms of the prison mindset, in terms of the humiliation.
The emotional, mental destruction, the separation of families.
They're doing everything but stick somebody into the oven, right?
Now, how is it that this many evil, nefarious people...
I mean, you've got to have groups of these people to come together to agree upon this evil.
And I always wondered, how do you...
And I know they weed out people like you out of the system, the gentleman that I gave an example of from the CAFGAS system in the UK. How do you get this many evil, nefarious people together to be okay with this sort of destruction?
Well, they kind of groom them and they harass them.
That was the one thing that I noticed was that When I started there, I was leaving crying every day and then something clicked in me.
And I started speaking back.
And I noticed that when I started speaking back or saying, no, you're not going to talk to me like that, then they backed off.
But I would notice that my coworkers, you know, I was the vocal one.
I was really vocal. Good for you.
Good for you. I really commend you on that because a lot of people allow themselves to be squashed and they go along with it.
How can you respect that?
How can you respect somebody knowingly going along with evil?
Well, they gaslight you.
They make you feel like you're crazy.
When you confront them, it's kind of like, say if they told me, don't call in something, and I went and told you that they told me not to call it in, they'd be like, we didn't tell her that.
Yeah, so you can't even go to somebody else and say, because I would go to somebody else, and then they would put me in the room with the person that I made the complaint on, And then they would do that while actually you were a little out of control.
So what I did is I started reporting.
Yeah, they start ganging up on you where you have one or two people that are clearly lying, clearly fabricating, but now they're coming at you as a group because essentially you're going after them.
The minute you're a truth sayer, you become a threat to them.
Exactly. But I honestly started recording our meetings because I was afraid that something was going to happen to a kid and they were going to blame me.
So I was like, you know what, I'm just going to start recording them.
And whenever they say that they said something, I can just play the recording.
They don't realize that I recorded them.
I still have those recordings.
They haven't been released.
We've released a part of one, but it's them telling me that they didn't tell me to not call in the report.
But that's how they make the workers, is that they literally, if a worker goes and says, What they told them, then they call them liars and they're like, no.
And it's the same thing with the foster kids.
The foster kids are considered liars.
Yeah, yeah, yeah. Everybody's a liar except the social workers and that are creating the fabrication.
And in terms of the recording, you know, again, we've been doing this for about a decade.
You know, we've been we've done a piece called Family Law as a Genocide Machine, which deals with this topic actually was taking place in Europe.
The reason that was called family law as a genocide machine is because using the family law courts, you know, kids are taken from their parents and or families.
Sometimes there are situations where the mom's a drug addict, but they have a completely capable grandmother or an aunt, right?
Nonetheless, they still take the child from the family because the mother's a drug addict.
And there's been multiple instances, I would dare to say, in the thousands over the last 20, 30 years where children have been murdered.
Murdered. Murdered. And we documented a lot of this in the United Kingdom where in the course of one year there was three babies murdered, right?
Murdered. And the thing that wasn't being talked about, and by the way, this is not like, I have no prejudice against anybody, but one of the issues was Gay couples.
Gay couples that adopt kids, right?
And there was an unusual spike in the number that were being abused, right?
Because the reason there was not because they're gay couples.
I want to make that very clear.
It's because unlike the background research they're doing on the parent to steal that child, right?
They're doing background research on the parent and saying, oh, the parent's a drug addict while ignoring the very logical great-grandmother or the aunt that's willing to raise the child, right?
So they build a case against the mom, right?
But yet they ignore the background history of the couple.
Whether they're gay or they're not gay is not even important.
But the point is that in their pursuit of PC, being PC, they don't want to necessarily do proper research on this couple that's about to get this child because, you know, dare they not say that, oh, there might be wrong with this particular gay couple so they don't get attacked by the woke crowd, right? And nonetheless, without much research, without much investigation, they were just adopting these kids out and a lot of calamity occurred.
And that's what the Family Law is a Genocide Machine piece is about, because this is happening in the Western world wholesaling.
Where there are great families, and yes, sometimes the mom's a drug addict, the dad's a drug addict, whatever, but if you have a good uncle, a good aunt, a good grandmother, shouldn't those individuals that have blood relation with the child have the opportunity to raise the child as opposed to CPS or CAFCAS or one of these organizations coming and taking that child and just handing them to individuals that they're not really researching well enough to guarantee that, you know what, this is going to be a healthy family for these kids to be with.
Yeah, yeah, it's a huge problem.
And that's a lot of the calls that I'm getting is grandmother saying, I am very capable.
Yes, my daughter has a problem with drugs, but I am here and I am capable and CPS is not allowing me to.
So that's very, it's very real.
CPS, they don't really, like you said, they don't investigate.
Their investigation is hearsay, and they go with whatever gets them the kid, basically.
Exactly. I mean, how is it that we've allowed, I mean, essentially, CPS, we both agree, this is a terrorist organization, like a terrorist organization.
When terrorists come to our land and try to do stuff against us, we say they're terrorists.
But how is it that we've allowed, essentially, a terrorist organization to have so much control in our country, and is this even lawful, what they're doing?
It's not lawful.
Their word is the Bible.
And this is something that I learned in social work.
You know, I went to UGA for social work while I was working at the group home.
And what I learned in there is it's the narrative.
You have to, you know, it's all about the narrative, right?
You have to document, document, document.
That is what you're told. Document, document, document.
But what they do is they, this is why I say it's perfected.
What they do is they document what they want the narrative to be.
Exactly. Like, when I would do my notes, I was not allowed to put any notes concerning the foster parent.
If I had concerns, I could not put that in my notes.
If it went in the notes...
So you can't say anything bad about the foster parent.
So in the case that I just talked about, like I said, on the America Happens platform, and in fact, I'm going to Find the link here.
That's why I'm looking at my other screen because I want to drop this link in here for people to watch.
So they understand how this stuff works.
I mean, we did interviews, right?
With individuals that were in the foster care system, right?
That, like you were saying, most of these foster kids are on the highway from the foster system to the prisons, right?
But these individuals that we interviewed, and I so highly recommend that the viewers spend 10 minutes, 11 minutes watching this because this really highlights What, you know, Celia is talking about here and the issue.
Like when we're saying stuff like, oh, this is a terrorist organization, I hope the viewer kind of understands that these are people that have been in this world for a while.
And this is not hyperbole.
It's not us trying to exaggerate.
Like this is what these groups are doing.
They're literal terrorist organizations.
And so I'm going to put this link here below where you'll see interviews with people that went through the foster care system.
I'm still searching in here because we've got like 8,000 Pieces of content, but essentially, people that went through the foster system then had kids, and the interviews that we did, the interview subjects so eloquently describe how they went through the foster care system, made it through the foster care system, which is near impossible, had their own kids, and then the foster care system people started knocking on their door saying, oh, you know what?
You grew up in a foster home, hence and therefore you're too damaged to have children.
You're too It's not even like, oh, we discovered you're doing drugs or something.
So it's like they're re-victimizing the victims over and over again.
And those people that have gone through the foster care system, I'm actually going to copy this link.
I'm going to put it below so you guys could actually...
Grab this whoever's watching.
But yeah, essentially, these foster care victims are then re-victimized because they're essentially told by the government that they can never be parents.
Because once you're in the system, you're forever within the system.
Think about that. They're not even like qualifying as like, oh, I did something wrong.
Here's the link. Oh, there we go.
So hopefully, I mean, I know it's a long link.
You could find this. In fact, the best place to find this link, the one that I just posted here with a rumble link, is AmericaHappens.com.
If you just scroll down, and when you go to AmericaHappens.com, you just scroll down to America Happens, the documentary series, which is...
Below, very clearly designated there.
You'll see this piece.
11 minutes. Watch it so you understand why we feel so passionate about this topic.
Because I think Sylvia and I both have a similar passion.
We're both saying the exact same thing.
That's why I was asking you, hey, do you think it's too extreme that I'm saying that there's a terrorist?
Because you turned around and said, you're a logical person.
You're a lot more soft-spoken than I am.
I'm definitely outspoken.
And the fact that...
You, from your experiences, are agreeing with a lot of the assessments I'm making.
I mean, that's really scary. That's really scary because that, to me, signifies that it's an internal threat.
Like, you literally have a terroristic system operating to destroy families, while at the same time...
We have open borders, while at the same time we're giving death jabs to our kids, while at the same time we're sexualizing them in schools.
Before they even hit puberty, they're learning about trans stuff and all this illogical stuff.
I have nothing against anybody becoming trans once they're an adult, once they go through puberty.
Because when you're three years old, you're not like even a sexual being at that point.
And it's so insane that these, what I call these damaged adults, broken people like to break people.
That's what I always say. Broken people like to break people.
And you see a lot of these damaged individuals in the foster care system.
And it shows like you have a strong character, Sylvia.
You stood up against her.
What about those broken people that don't have your strong character and your moral fiber?
Those are the people that are essentially stealing other people's kids.
Yeah, and they're the ones that are in the system, too.
And they do have it perfected to where, as in, like I was saying, like the narrative, if I put it in the notes, then the notes go to the supervisor.
The supervisor reviews it, and if he doesn't like it, he deletes it, and he says, rewrite it, and rewrite it until you get it the way that I want it.
Can I tell you, with that example I gave you of the gentleman in the UK, you know why, you know one of the reasons why you start targeting him?
Because the supervisor told him he had to do the exact same thing, and he told the supervisor, this is a case that we're following, by the way, he told the supervisor, You didn't even meet this father.
You didn't even meet this father.
How could you have me change it to make the father look bad?
He's like, I met the father, I think.
And this was a case where the mom was lying.
The father was telling the truth.
And he was saying that the mom is lying.
And he gave examples of, and this supervisor told him that if you don't change it, it's your job, right?
He didn't change it.
And then they started building a case against him.
And the way they build cases is within these cases, as we've been talking, a lot of things go bad, right?
There's a lot of those bad things they cover up, but when it works for their purpose, like let's say every case went great, but one of them, you know, the child, whatever, had a drug overdose or something, had nothing to do with the social worker, they will use that in order to get rid of the social worker that's not corruptible.
Am I crazy there, or is that hard?
No, that was my experience, and I would love to meet this other social worker.
Yeah, you know, honestly, part of what we do here, and I've noticed this, you know, okay, so we started making documentaries about corruption, that sort of thing, before we launched our platform, America Happens.
One of the pieces we created was called The Godfather of Family Law, about a family law attorney that does a lot of this nonsense where, you know, creating lies about parents in order to basically steal kids and all that sort of thing.
And the reason I mentioned that is because through making these documentaries, I think we're on our sixth or seventh short documentary.
They're up to 30 minutes long that deal with the CPS topic, the family courts topic.
There's actually been exposure and comeuppance for some of these corrupt individuals.
And that's why I love doing what we do because I'm exposed it and you know what I love most is exposing specific individuals I love fighting finding caseworkers and we could prove that these individuals lied and there's evidence There's recordings like what you've made and by the way for the viewers always record. They don't want you to record They put gag orders always record everything through Through me recording some of these cases when we go undercover in that sort of thing There's been situations where judges are like y'all you can't record in these courts, whatever
Well, guess what? The minute there's no recording, you see the judge doing things like threatening the, you know, literally acting as part of the legal team, threatening individuals within the court, doing all kinds of unconstitutional and, in fact, illegal things within the court.
So recording is very important in all instances, because frankly, this is an industry of liars.
It's an industry of liars. I mean, do you agree that's an industry of liars?
Oh, yeah. Oh, for sure.
Liars, thieves, cheaters.
Scumbags. When Stalin says useful idiots and Hitler has all these, where do these useful idiots come from?
Where do these people that just follow the orders of any authoritarian regime, no matter how evil it is, where do these people come from?
Well, they don't disappear.
They don't disappear. They're there.
There's always a percentage of people that do this sort of thing.
And unfortunately, when it comes to CPS and our family courts, it seems like it's been a conglomerate of these individuals that have been brought together that have nefarious ideas.
Yeah. Yeah. Sorry, I've been talking so much.
I'm definitely passionate about this topic.
Is there anything in terms of your background and story that we didn't go over with my rants and stuff?
No, you're good.
Basically, I... I went in the system because I wanted to help children and I really enjoyed working with children and then I found out I couldn't help them in the system.
There's a lot of stories, but we could talk for hours on that.
The horror stories of why the system is broken.
So let's talk about how once you left the system with Rescue the Fosters, what your success rate's been, what that's been like.
Tell us a little bit about working out of the system and how, frankly, the very broken system, you're picking up the pieces.
That's what you're really doing because these people are a mess, they're doing evil, bad things, and you're out there really doing heroic things, trying to pick up their mess.
Tell us a little bit about that.
So we're brand new.
We started in January of this year.
We have had a few successes.
The other thing that we want to do is to reunite families that have been torn apart.
And we had our first reunification.
It was A young man I saw holding a homeless sign and I just walked up to him and I said, hey, what's your story?
And I handed him a few dollars.
And right off the bat, he was like, well, I found my biological dad and my foster dad didn't like it and he ruined my name and I can't get a job and I've been...
On the streets. And I said, well, what can I do to help you get off the streets?
And he said, I need an ID. If I had an ID, I could get a job, but I don't have any documents.
You know, that's the other thing.
I don't give them their documents.
So I said, we can do that.
I said, let me give you my name and number.
And I, when I said, my name is Sylvia, his face lit up and he goes, oh my God, that's my biological mom's name.
And he goes, I've been looking for her.
And so, um, Terry with Let Our Children Go is somebody that I work very close with, and she's really good at finding people.
So I called Terry and I was like, hey, this is the information I have.
Within 24 hours, I was on the phone with the mother, and we actually reunited them.
And she hadn't seen her son since he was six years old.
He's 22 now.
But I honestly say that was God.
Because he used my name, you know, my name is Sylvia, his mom's name.
We would not have had that conversation if I would have had a different name.
I don't think so. But that's one of our success.
And then we've had a few people reach out to us and say, hey, can you help us find?
And so far we have found, but, you know, not everybody is open to, you know, And then KK is the foster youth that aged out of the system, so she's been mentoring.
And then we've just been helping with families Navigating the system.
There was good news today.
One of the families got their kids back today.
That wasn't ours, but we were trying to help her with the group home part.
We're making progress.
That's amazing. That's amazing.
I mean, it's so heroic what you're doing.
And again, you know, you're really, the system should be doing this.
And we see this over and over again.
You know, we've been doing a border series where we've had Michael Yon, who's an investigative journalist, and Antonio, I believe I have his name written somewhere here.
I think it's Aguilera who have been out on the border essentially covering all the bad stuff happening at the border, the carnage, the rapes, the people coming through, beat up, the cartels, all that kind of stuff.
And again, that should be the job of the government, the government should be doing that.
Not us as nonprofits, individuals or whatever, trying to pick up the pieces, the damage, the carnage that the government's allowing.
That's what's crazy because you shouldn't be doing the job that you're doing.
CPS should be doing the job that you're doing, you know?
It's... which not that I'm not very happy you're doing that job, but you know, you get my point because it's not like, you know, we're here doing these sorts of things.
Why am I doing this right here, right?
Why am I doing the blood money show?
Because the mainstream media is not doing that job.
They're not talking about these things.
They don't like revealing what CPS and the family Oh, it's insane.
Yeah, yeah. I mean, I wanted to bring one example, again, not to talk too much, but my buddy Steve Sanson, who has been very much against this family law legal system, he's been going after them for the last, like, eight years, right?
He's a veteran, has a show called Veterans in Politics, and he was talking about how he went to one of these foster homes in Nevada, right?
And there was a baby that was just, I think, like six months old, just like, you know, crying, crying, nonstop crying.
And he was just, he was there helping a political candidate, you know, essentially shaking hands and kissing babies, right?
But he sees his baby crying, he picks up the baby, he asks the permission from, you know, the supervisors there.
Picks up the baby. The minute he picks up the baby, puts him on his chest, the baby stops crying and the baby felt comforted.
And to me, that was like, wow, this kid has no one to...
This kid's going to grow up with no love, right?
And what you're talking about, love, structure.
And it's just very logical that that's the answer, right?
You know, the system should be about nurturing these children, as opposed to putting them on these anti-psychotic drugs, as opposed to telling them that there's something so wrong with you that you need to be on this heavy medication so you can walk around dazed out your whole life, right?
And then we look at those anti-psychotic drugs, right?
Those are the same drugs that a lot of these school shooters are on.
Because it numbs you to the world.
I mean, literally, you're shutting somebody down emotionally as a way of ignoring the problem as opposed to fixing the problem, which fixing the problem seemed to be as simple as what happened with Steve Sanson.
He hugged that kid. He gave that kid love.
And all of a sudden that kid stopped crying.
Simple. Yeah. Wow.
Yeah. Yeah. I mean, it seems as though the right thing to do is fill people up in the system that have that mindset, that have your mindset, that have the Steve Sanson mindset, that know it's about nurturing and love as opposed to here's a bunch of drugs, shut up kid, which is that's what you're doing for giving them a bunch of drugs like that.
Yeah, so simple.
So what's next for you, Sylvia?
I mean, is it just trying to save as many kids as you can out there?
And I mean, is that the agenda going forward?
Yeah, yeah. And we're, you know, we want to change some laws in the system, some policies, some procedures, abolish ASPA. What's that?
ASPA? Oh, you're buzzing out.
Could you hear me? I lost you.
No. Your audio went out all of a sudden, Sylvia, so I don't know if...
Maybe if you log out and log back in and I'll just try to keep everybody occupied here.
I'll entertain.
Ha ha ha ha.
You're frozen.
Yeah. So anyway, we're going to wait for Sylvia to come back on.
A little technical issue seems to happen because of the internet.
But anyway, so for the viewers out there, as we wait for Sylvia to log back on, again, I highly recommend check out this episode that's right here.
Right there. Right there.
That one right there. Please check that out.
It's 11 minutes. You need to watch his stuff.
You know, the thing that we do here is that we expose all the corruption that's happening.
And there are certain topics that I think people find sexy, right?
The border invasion is very sexy.
The trans agenda is very sexy in terms of these big headlines.
You say family law. Not everybody's a parent.
Doesn't sound like an interesting topic.
You say CPS. Again, Unless you've been through it, unless you've been through the nightmares involved in what CPS does, essentially a legalized terrorist organization.
I wouldn't even call them legal because they're not legal.
They're only empowered because of our corrupt politicians, our corrupt courts.
What they're doing is highly illegal and unconstitutional.
Nonetheless, they're doing it.
And, you know, these groups have been empowered because, frankly, our silence, right?
Our silence. We look at the border and we say, wow, that's an invasion.
We're going to make a big stink out of that, what's happening at our border, right?
Cool, cool, because that is an invasion.
That is a form of terrorism against our country.
What about what our courts are doing, right?
Like Sylvia was saying, you know, there's the stigma, there's the narrative.
We've seen how these corrupted bodies use the narrative, as false as that narrative might be, COVID being a great example, to make people sound like they're crazy, to make people sound like they're, you know, these, you know, Off the charts, right-wing crazy people, right? That's their narrative.
And then we've seen how their narrative plays out.
So what I'm trying to say is, I know people out there hear these stories.
Oh, they took my children away.
Oh, they did this. Oh, they did that.
Our predisposition has been to be like, oh, what's wrong with that parent?
Why did they get their child taken away?
There must be something wrong with them if a social worker took their child away, right?
Right? But you hear people like Sylvia.
You hear people like the individuals I interviewed on this America Happens episode that's down here, Family Law is a Genocide Machine.
And you see that there's not much wrong with these people.
Have they had their knocks in life?
Have they had their challenges?
Oh, yeah. But they're out there fighting for their kids because an unjust system with these kind of incentives that Sylvia was talking about, where they literally give financial incentives for kidnapping people.
People's children, for taking people's children away, literal terrorism.
They're giving financial incentives for terrorism because if like Hezbollah does it, if like a terrorist organization that they've deemed as a terrorist organization does it, it's terrorism.
But when they do it, they say it's not terrorism, but it is terrorism because kidnapping, trafficking, displacement, alienation, all that stuff is terrorism.
And you could find that out by looking at the International Criminal Courts as to what they deem to be terroristic activities.
If we're saying that these group of individuals that do that are terrorists over there, then logic must hold that if people over here are doing the exact same thing, whether they're, you know, from the government or not, it's terrorism, right?
What I ask for the viewers is that, you know, next time you hear these stories, don't be quick to judge.
Don't be quick to say, oh, you got your children taken away from you for a reason.
There must be a reason.
How many times do we have to hear these stories before we realize maybe the parents aren't of issue?
Another fact I'll tell you, right?
There's a video that we have in our Family Laws of Genocide Machine piece, not this particular one, but there's another one that we did about how they're using essentially terrorism laws to go after parents that go after, you know, essentially go after the family law world, That protests a family law world. In fact, our first episode of blood money Which is an audio recording is about a gentleman in the UK that literally the mi5 like I'm talking You know mi6 is James Bond, right? James Bond is mi6. Mi5
is the local version Mi6 is international mi5 is supposed to be in United Kingdom, right? Same group James Bond type folks, right?
So they start going after these parents. You'll see this in family laws a genocide machine as well But if you watch blood money part first the first episode it goes in a great detail about that particular topic, right?
Where they're using these terrorism laws, basically the equivalent of the Patriot Act in the United Kingdom, to go after parents that are protesting family law corruption, saying that they're protesting is inciting violence, because their worry is that should this cat get out of the bag,
right? If people that were out there We're good to go.
There might be truth in that.
I think we've been too used to saying, oh, there might be something wrong with that parent.
That's why that happened.
But as you heard from Sylvia, this is part of the scheme.
Part of the scheme is to control the narrative.
Part of the scheme is to make sure that when they steal children, when they traffic children, when they sell children, when they put children in foster homes, which, by the way, they get a lot of financial benefit from, They wanna control that narrative.
And I think if we control that narrative, then what happens?
And this is why I'm getting the point about MI5, MI6, all these groups that are so scared from these family law organizations.
Again, I referenced Blood Money episode one, where they're going after these family law groups saying that you're doing terroristic activity by protesting family law corruption and calling these judges corrupt.
Because guess what happens?
If enough people Start to understand really what's going on, right?
So imagine next time somebody tells you, oh, you know, I had my child taken by CPS rather than going to that knee-jerk reaction of like, oh, you must have done something bad to have your child taken, right?
If people start to understand that, wait a minute, this is like a terrorist group and they could do the exact same thing to me.
They could write up a bunch of nonsense, a bunch of lies because they have the financial benefit to steal my children.
If people start coming to that conclusion, And start realizing that these groups that are essentially like homegrown terrorist groups, CPS is a homegrown terrorist group, TAFCAS in England, and yeah, Blood Money Episode 1, check it out.
Watch this Family Law is a Genocide Machine right here.
You'll see these are terrorist organizations.
They terrorize families.
They terrorize parents.
They are in the kidnapping, trafficking, child-selling business, right?
And the point that I'm trying to make here is that why is MI5 worried that, you know what, like, This information could actually cause problems, unrest, because what happens when the citizens realize that they have essentially a terrorist group running the Children's Protective Services, or Children's Aid Society, or the CAFGAS, which is the UK version.
What happens when the citizens start realizing that?
And they start realizing that, you know what, their neighbor that just had their kid taken away, that was based on bullshit.
That was based on literally kidnapping, trafficking children.
What happens when the mass population starts realizing that?
And starts realizing that CPS is nothing but a terrorist group.
So when MI5 starts using things like the Patriot Act, their version of the Patriot Act in the UK to go after parents saying that, wow, we're worried that you might be a threat to the structure of things, the powers that be, you might be a threat to them.
They're not saying that they're a threat to them because they're scared that these family law groups are going to blow up parliament or doing something like that.
No. They are scared about people being enlightened to what's happening because if the mass population realizes that we have these terrorist groups, essentially stealing parents, empowered by the government, empowered by these corrupt regimes, what happens then?
A lot of things could happen then.
You know, authority loses its power once you start realizing that authority is essentially a terrorist group, right?
So in the example I gave Sylvia, you know, I want to talk about that real quick as we close this off because I think Sylvia's...
The internet seems to have died down, but I think we got a good episode with her.
Well, my only last question for her was really, how do we take down CPS, right?
Because there is a class action lawsuit here, right?
There is a class action lawsuit with all these kids That were alienated from their parents.
Now they're growing up.
A lot of these kids are going to realize that, you know what?
I was kidnapped and trafficked.
Like, this frickin' CPS person, these liars did that to me so they could make money.
Kids are going to realize that.
And this has happened to tens of thousands, if not hundreds of thousands of kids out there that are in foster homes that are alienated from one parent or the other or both, right?
So... All these kids are going to grow up.
There's a massive class action lawsuit here.
You get like a few of these kids together.
It's almost like, you know, when the Catholic Church goes, you know, went through their, you know, scandal with priests and stuff, essentially molesting kids, pedophiles and stuff.
It gets to a point where they're not going to be able to fight.
They're not going to be able to control the narrative because it becomes too overwhelming, especially as these class action lawsuits come together, right?
Because once it starts off where there might be two or three individuals, people are going to come out of the woodwork.
I mean, just sitting here where I'm sitting with the amount of interviews that we've done, the amount of damaged children, kidnapped and trafficked children, I myself could probably add about 50 foster kids to that list.
So there is an abundance of these individuals because it's been such a corrupt system.
And the question that I had for Sylvia, which I guess we could do in a part two, or we could talk about it on another episode with some lawyers, is how do we take CPS done?
How do we get the class action lawsuit of the century To take CPS down.
And in fact, with CPS, a lot of other things need to go, like the family law system, which is complete bullshit, not based upon anything constitutional, literally a place where they fabricate nonsense.
We've done episodes on that, too, of, you know, parents being sent to prison for sending gifts to their children, stupid things like that.
Another parent that has a lifetime restraining order from his son, he can't see his son until the kid's 18 because he made social media posts about family law corruption.
So this is like a repugnant industry.
I mean, family law, CPS, it's all together.
They're all one big terrorist organization.
They're all one big organization working against the people.
They destroy families, you know, and really they need to be abolished, right?
But I think that's about it in terms of this...
Episode. Again, I highly recommend you guys check out this Family Law is a Genocide Machine.
Video, spread it, you know, show it to people, let them know what's going on.
Definitely Blood Money Episode 1.
You have to check it out.
I mean, it's audio. The audio is not that great.
It's not the production quality that we've achieved.
With our bigger team now, with awesome producers like Travis and Aisha helping us.
It was very early on, but nonetheless, that half an hour recording where we interviewed JJ, who was being essentially chased by MI5 because he's out there protesting the fact that the CPS version in the UK stole his kids.
He had three kids, and like one of the stories I was saying to Sylvia, he had some PTSD. This was a man, right?
And he had real PTSD because he had essentially a girlfriend that was frankly a psycho.
And the reason I know she was a psycho is because this dude has pictures of him being stabbed in the neck by his...
You know, ex, right?
So he sent me all these pictures where, like, she stabbed him in the neck, blood running down, other images with him with a bruise on his eyes.
So, like, this is a dude that, and again, by the way, this happens all the time.
50% of domestic violence is women abusing men, by the way.
That's a fact. That's out there.
You can check out the statistics.
Men are just not the ones that go out there to talk about it because it's kind of embarrassing, right?
Most men have egos.
Most men want to appear masculine.
But this JJ guy, you know, for years hid this abuse.
He has pictures, again, like I said, he sent dozens of pictures with stab wounds in his neck, blood on his shirt, black eyes bruised up here, a cut up on his forehead over here, right?
And just, he's like, this is what I've been dealing with the abuse.
So this guy, with three kids, abusive ex-girlfriend...
The abuse gets so bad that he reports it to the social services, which is the worst mistake anybody could ever make, right?
Remember the example I was giving when I was out there knocking on doors, okay?
I was out there knocking on doors.
Now I have 10 years of CPS information in my head because of the documentaries we've done, right?
And whereas 10 years ago when I knocked on that door and I saw that kid and I saw the mom drunk and high as shit behind the kid, right?
Ten years ago, I would have called CPS because I would have said that kid's in danger.
How crazy is it that after the experience we have, and I mentioned this Sylvia, and she agreed with me that I did the right thing, that the choice in that situation was that he's better off with a mom that's a drunk and a drug addict inside that house as opposed to if I call CPS. Because if I call CPS, this kid, at least in the home with a mom that's on drugs...
You know, is somebody going to walk in there and rape the kid, molest the kid?
Probably not because they're still a parent in the home.
But once I take that kid out of the home because I called CPS, and now that kid is, you know, in some foster home with no mom around, no dad around, nobody.
Now there's the chance of sexual abuse of that kid.
Now there's like that lifelong damaging abuse possibility.
Whereas, yes, it sucks to have a mom that's a dry addict, but...
You see how, like, the child's still safer inside that home than in the foster care system.
So, that tells you a lot about the foster care system because the people that are in the know are often put in a situation where they have to choose the lesser of two evils.
Like, I was in that moment when I saw the mom high as fucking this kid answering the door, right?
And I couldn't call CPS. I couldn't call CPS because I know the fate that awaits that kid at CPS is a lot worse than what's going on inside that home.
And that should say something because, you know, we are experienced individuals, Sylvia, who worked within the CPS system, I, who have done investigations on the CPS system, our conclusion is that however bad it is at home, unless that kid is like getting physically abused every single day, right? Just a drug addict mom?
You know what? Not enough to call CPS. Because that kid goes to CPS, his life's destroyed.
Like Sylvia was saying, most of these kids end up in prison.
It's a literal highway, like from foster care to prison.
And that child has a much better chance with You know, the drunk high mom, unfortunately, because that's how bad CPS is, right?
So anyway, enough of my ranting.
Thank you so much for showing up to this episode of Blood Money.
Again, highly recommend you check out The Family Laws of Genocide Machine.
Highly recommend that you check out Blood Money Episode 1.
And please share with people.
This is the carnage that's going on within our country.
People need to know what these organizations are doing because these organizations need to be abolished.
Forever. So that's my rant.
I hope to see you guys on the next episode of Blood Money.