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Military Contractors Sex Traffick Kids on the Side While Fulfilling Contracts Your Tax Dollars Pay For
This video will absolutely shock you. Why you’ve never heard of this, because it was quickly swept under the rug, will shock you more.
In March 2005, Congresswoman Cynthia McKinney, Georgia’s first African-American woman in Congress, boldly confronted Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld during a House Armed Services Committee hearing. She grilled him over DynCorp, a U.S. military contractor implicated in human trafficking, including the sex trafficking of women and children. McKinney cited credible reports, like whistleblower Ben Johnston’s 2002 exposé, revealing DynCorp employees in Bosnia purchasing girls as young as 12 for forced prostitution. Shockingly, despite these allegations, DynCorp continued securing lucrative government contracts, including a $72.8 million deal in 2012. McKinney demanded accountability, asking why no prosecutions followed. Rumsfeld deflected, blaming “rogue employees” and citing bureaucratic regulations, offering no real answers. The hearing amounted to a mere finger-wagging session, with no justice served—no arrests, no sanctions, just hollow promises to “look into it.”
Cynthia McKinney’s Courageous Stand Against Military Contractors Dark Secrets
McKinney’s fearless stance made headlines but came at a cost. Her outspoken criticism of government corruption, including DynCorp’s ties to human trafficking, alienated powerful interests. Widely regarded as a factor in her 2002 and 2006 election losses, her confrontations with the establishment painted her as a target. Political opponents and media smeared her as a conspiracy theorist, overshadowing her human rights advocacy. The lack of prosecution for DynCorp’s crimes, coupled with McKinney’s political fallout, exposes a troubling reality: the U.S. government’s complicity in shielding contractors profiting from heinous acts. This wasn’t just a failure of justice; it was a betrayal of public trust. McKinney’s sacrifice underscores the need for relentless accountability, yet the system’s silence on DynCorp’s atrocities and her subsequent ousting reveal a chilling truth: speaking out against the powerful often comes at a steep personal price.
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