This is sick

You might have heard that "Even men these days are not safe," implying the increasing sexual harassment towards men, and sadly, they are mostly being subjected to and stigmatized as weak or something else. Well, both some men and women have a victim-blaming mindset; it's individual and subjective. You might find women looking down on men who dare to stand up against sexual harassment, or you might find individuals from both genders putting the blame on the victim—either a man or a woman. Looking into Ain Husniza's case, a few of her classmates and teachers placed blame on her. And for Luqman Faiz's case, he is getting blamed for asking anyone who sent their pictures to him to stop. Okay, that's a long intro. After I accidentally hit my head against the wall, causing the left side of my head to feel dizzy for two days, I had to rest. While scrolling through Instagram, I found reels making jokes about puberty. I felt uncomfortable with that, so I checked out that account. Applying my OSINT skills, I found many similar accounts posting memes and jokes that were dirty, aka "lawak lucah," and so on, which go against our norms as Muslims and Malays. They even make racist jokes about certain races. (Pls click image below for clear resolution)
Loser
I mean, you're joking about private parts, zina, sexual harassment, LGBTQ, Black people, Chinese, Indian, and even Malays. Is it normal to make jokes about crime? The scariest thing is that there are kids who follow this sick content. My previous analytical writings explain how content shapes our minds. There's a limit somewhere in this life; if they don't care, bigger consequences are waiting for them.

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