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  • May 9

MOTHERLESS NO MORE- THE COLLAPSE OF MOTHERLESS R*APE WEBSITE

  • Collette Corcoran
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WHO REALLY DID THE WORK TO TAKE THE MOTHERLESS SITE DOWN!

THE TRUE ACTIVISTS THAT DID SOMETHING ABOUT IT !

The collapse of Motherless did not happen in silence. It happened because journalists, investigators, women, activists, and eventually authorities began dragging what lived in the digital underworld into public consciousness.

A major turning point came when CNN released an investigation into what French lawmakers and campaigners were beginning to call an “online rape academy” ; a network of websites, forums, and Telegram groups where material involving unconscious women, drug-facilitated assault, voyeurism, and non-consensual abuse circulated openly. ()

The investigation did not simply expose one website, It exposed a HUGE collective shadow.

Journalists uncovered tens of thousands of videos categorised under terms such as “sleep,” “passed out,” and “eye check,” alongside forums where men allegedly exchanged advice about drugging women, evading detection, and uploading material without consent. Then came pressure from Europe.

Dutch broadcaster NOS and the current affairs programme Nieuwsuur intensified public scrutiny by revealing that Motherless had been operating from Dutch servers since at least 2024. Their reporting analysed around 20,000 videos appearing on the platform and found categories tagged “incest,” “rape,” and “school girl” among the site’s most viewed material. At that point, Dutch authorities could no longer ignore what had become internationally visible.

Prosecutors in Zeeland-West-Brabant launched a preliminary investigation, pressure mounted on NFOrce Internet Services ; the Dutch hosting company connected to the platform’s servers.

Shortly afterwards, the site went offline.

And symbolically, that matters, because psychologically this was not only about pornography. It was about the exposure of a collective dissociation. An entire digital ecosystem had emerged where empathy disappeared, where the unconscious feminine body became spectacle, where violation was reframed as entertainment, and where anonymity amplified shadow impulses that civilised society prefers to believe do not exist.

And the psyche always reveals what is hidden eventually. In Jungian terms, this was shadow material erupting into collective awareness. The deeper the repression, the more shocking the eruption becomes when consciousness finally reaches it. What took Motherless down was therefore not one singular force and it cerainly wasnt keyboard warriors.

It was years of pressure from investigative journalists, anti-exploitation activists, feminist campaigners, survivors, digital watchdog groups, and women documenting how online pornography had moved far beyond consensual erotic material into spaces saturated with humiliation, coercion, trafficking, unconscious women, voyeurism, and filmed abuse.

One of the major modern figures in this movement has been Laila Mickelwait, whose campaigns against Pornhub helped force global conversations about unverified uploads, trafficking material, and non-consensual content online. Her #Traffickinghub campaign gathered millions of signatures and pressured payment processors, lawmakers, and media organisations to investigate how exploitative material was circulating on mainstream porn platforms. GO LAILA!

Another long-standing voice has been Gail Dines, a sociologist and feminist writer whose work examined pornography not as harmless fantasy but as a cultural conditioning system shaping how women’s bodies, pain, and submission become normalised within collective consciousness. Her book Pornland became influential in feminist critiques of internet pornography culture.

Groups such as Collective Shout, founded by Melinda Tankard Reist, spent years lobbying against the sexualisation and objectification of women and girls online. Their campaigns increasingly targeted violent and exploitative digital content ecosystems and pressured corporations, payment processors, and hosting platforms to stop enabling them.

There were also grassroots survivor-led movements like BADASS (“Battling Against Demeaning and Abusive Selfie Sharing”), founded by women whose intimate images had been distributed online without consent. These activists worked directly with victims, law enforcement, and legislators while exposing how technologically ill-equipped many authorities were to deal with online sexual exploitation.

And then investigative journalists entered spaces many people did not even know existed.

CNN’s investigation reportedly uncovered forums and networks where men discussed drugging women, filming unconscious partners, sharing assault material, and exchanging methods to avoid detection. Dutch journalists at NOS and Nieuwsuur then traced how parts of this infrastructure were being hosted through Dutch servers, bringing public pressure directly onto Dutch authorities and hosting providers.

This is important psychologically and culturally, because these activists were not only fighting websites, they were confronting an entire system of dissociation, a culture where many women increasingly felt that the feminine body had become detached from humanity and transformed into consumable content within algorithmic economies driven by shock, domination, numbness, and escalation.

And whether one agrees with every activist or every political position involved, something undeniable emerged from all of this: the collective psyche was beginning to recognise that the internet had become a vast unconscious shadow field that represents the minds of our society. One where hidden desires, violence, misogyny, shame, trauma, loneliness, addiction, and power fantasies amplified each other in darkness.

The exposure of Motherless became symbolic because it revealed how far that shadow had travelled unchecked.

Now these activisits who have spent so much of their time, energy and resources to reveal it ... leave a space for us ALL to look at our unconcious shadows of how this projected itself into the collective conscious field.

In love and Devotion

Collette xxx

Please support the ACTIVISTS

https://www.facebook.com/badassorg/

https://www.collectiveshout.org/our_team

https://lailamickelwait.com/

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