Thursday, September 11, 2025

Opportunistic Outrage: BLM, Silence, and the Murder of Iryna Zarutska

When Justice Becomes a Circus: The Charlotte Train Murder and the BLM Illusion



There are moments in life where the madness of the world feels too heavy to put into words—but then you realize, silence is complicity. This is one of those moments. A young woman, Iryna Zarutska, just 23 years old, fled the war in Ukraine to find freedom, safety, and opportunity in America. Instead of safety, she met her death—stabbed to death on a Charlotte light rail train by a man who had no reason, no provocation, no humanity. A life so full of promise cut short in a place that was supposed to be a refuge. And while her family mourns, while ordinary people grieve this tragedy, what do we see from activists like Black Lives Matter? A grotesque repost of a video declaring that “all oppressed people have a right to violence.”

Let’s stop right there. This isn’t just tone-deaf—it’s witchcraft-level madness. Since when are black people in America oppressed? Please, stop the lies. Stop this cap. In 2025, black people have access to schools, jobs, houses, cars, businesses, beaches, marriage, TikTok collaborations, the very same opportunities as everyone else. Even Africans who migrate to America from across the ocean build homes, buy cars, and live freely. So where exactly is this so-called “oppression” that justifies violence? If we were truly oppressed, we wouldn’t have access to social media to shout “oppression” every day. We wouldn’t be free to apply for any job, marry who we choose, or start businesses. The idea that violence is somehow a birthright for the “oppressed” is not only insulting—it is dangerous.


And yet, while a young girl lies in her grave, BLM hides behind semantics: “The video was not related to her death.” Please. It’s a trick. It’s spin. It’s distraction. And for what? This organization has already been exposed for enriching its founders while families of victims—the very people they claim to represent—are left with nothing. Millions of dollars collected in the name of black lives, and where is the accountability? Where is the justice?


Now let’s talk about the bystanders on that train. The surveillance footage shows multiple people near Iryna when the attack happened. Three black individuals were seated on the left side, staring at her as she was attacked. Their reaction? Suspicious. Outrageous. Their silence and lack of action—no call to police, no alert to train security, no attempt to communicate support—screams questions that need answers.

Then there’s the black woman in the red top, sitting in the same lane: she saw the entire attack unfold, yet did nothing, no gesture of concern, no call for help. Others in the back were clearly traumatized—shaken, scared—but even they did not attempt to reach out or show any human response. Iryna, a young woman just maybe returning from work, sitting quietly on her phone, was stabbed, bleeding, and silently crying as she fell from her seat. And yet, nobody did anything—not even the smallest gesture to say, “We see you, help is coming.”



I truly believe she could have been alive if someone had intervened, even minimally. These bystanders need to be held accountable, honestly. And yes, maybe racism played a role; maybe in the back of their minds, they thought, “They treated us bad, so they just deserve it.” If that’s the case, it’s disgusting, it’s outrageous, and it needs to be exposed. The fact that their faces were visible in the footage is important—they need to come forward and explain themselves, and yes, they are suspects until proven otherwise.



Conclusion: The Illusion of Oppression



This case isn’t just about one young woman—it’s about the lies we’re being fed. Oppression is being weaponized, not lived. Victimhood is being sold like a product, not experienced as reality. And all the while, real victims like Iryna are forgotten, their names overshadowed by slogans, hashtags, and activists who cash in on misery. It’s time to wake up. To call out the hypocrisy. To demand accountability—not just from murderers like DeCarlos Brown Jr., but from movements that twist violence into virtue and profit from pain.

Because when justice becomes a circus, the real victims are left buried—and the rest of us are left angry, grieving, and disgusted.

Rest in peace Iryna. Karma will surely get to that man๐Ÿ•Š️๐Ÿค


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๐Ÿ’ฅ Free Speech Buried at 31: The Assassination of Charlie Kirk

Free Speech Took a Bullet: The Assassination of Charlie Kirk







There are moments when news doesn’t just arrive — it crashes, it shakes, it bruises. This morning at 6:30 a.m. South African time, I stumbled across a post on Facebook — not a news article, not a formal announcement, but the sarcastic, mocking memes of those who hated Charlie Kirk. They laughed, they mocked, they celebrated. And then I realized: it wasn’t satire. It was real. Charlie Kirk was gone.

At just 31 years old, Charlie Kirk — husband, father of two, conservative firebrand, YouTube discoverer’s gem, unapologetic defender of his faith and politics — was shot dead during his “American Comeback Tour” at Utah Valley University. He died not in silence, but in the fire of his own mission: speaking the truth.




✍️ Who He Was



Before there was Candace Owens, Andrew Wilson, Ben Shapiro, Brandon Tatum, or even Piers Morgan, there was Charlie Kirk — a voice I discovered on YouTube, not by accident, but by impact. He was straightforward, controversial, sharp as a blade. He said what he believed, whether you liked it or not. And people didn’t like it. That’s why they mocked. That’s why they jeered. That’s why his words triggered.

But that’s also why his words mattered.




⚖️ What His Death Means


Some will tell you it was “meant to be.” I refuse to accept that. Dying at 31, leaving behind two children not even in their teenage years, and a wife forced into widowhood overnight — that is not destiny. That is theft.

I don’t believe in silencing people because you disagree with them. Freedom of speech means exactly that: you speak, I speak, we argue, we debate, we disagree. But you don’t murder. You don’t assassinate. You don’t pull the trigger because someone’s words cut deeper than your ego.

This feels planned. Because you don’t walk onto a university campus with a gun for “no reason.” Not unless you are a gangster. Not unless you had an agenda. And the agenda here was simple: to silence a man who refused to be silent.




๐ŸŒ The Reactions We Saw

What shook me almost as much as his death were the reactions. The laughing emojis. The mocking captions. The posts dripping with sarcasm. Death should never be entertainment, no matter where you stand politically. To rejoice in murder is to side with chaos. It is to cheapen humanity.

Yet, many gave condolences too. Across the aisle, across the world, from Trump to ordinary Americans, tributes poured in. Because whether you loved him or hated him, Charlie Kirk was impossible to ignore.




๐Ÿ•Š️ Final Thoughts from The Dreamer’s Pause


Charlie Kirk’s mission was not complete. He had more to say, more to do, more lives to challenge, inspire, and even provoke. That’s the power of voices like his — they don’t just talk; they shift atmospheres.

To his wife and his children, I offer my deepest condolences. To those who mocked his death, karma doesn’t miss. And to the rest of us — remember this: free speech is only free if it isn’t punished with death.

Charlie Kirk was not just a man. He was a disruption. He was an impact. He was a storm.

May his soul rest in peace. ๐Ÿ•Š️

— By the girl behind The Dreamer’s Pause


Disclaimer: Images used on this blog are for illustrative purposes only and remain the property of their respective owners. No copyright infringement is intended.

© 2025 The Dreamer’s Pause. All rights reserved.

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