They Removed My Post. But Over 200,000 People Already Saw It.
This morning, one of my most powerful posts was removed by Reddit’s filters. It was a post about truth and the training tools that never should have been used in a classroom. And about what happens when a healthcare worker speaks up—and what’s done to her when she does.
But here’s the thing: it had already been seen by over 200,000 people.
That post was up for just over an hour, and it exploded. Thousands of upvotes. Hundreds of comments. Dozens of people from my area—Jamestown, Fredonia, even Chautauqua County—chimed in or messaged me with shock, support, and disbelief. Some shared their own stories. Others said what I already knew: this wasn’t just wrong. It was humiliating, unethical, and retaliatory.
The post wasn't removed not by a single moderator, but by automated filters—the kind that usually get triggered when a post moves fast and hits hard. That’s how you know you’re over the target.
But let me be absolutely clear: you can’t delete impact.
The screenshots are saved. The timeline is documented and media has eyes on this. The public knows the truth—and more importantly, they’re talking about it.
So no, I’m not discouraged. If anything, I’m more motivated.
You can remove one post, but I’ll just keep springing up more. Different subreddits. Different platforms. New headlines. Fresh angles. Every time it happens, more people get to see what retaliation looks like, and how broken some of these systems really are.
If you're reading this because you saw that post—thank you. Your voice, your comment, your support? It mattered. It still does.
And if you think silencing me stops this? You clearly don’t know who you’re dealing with.
There are plenty of platforms to choose from—even if the posts get removed. And by the time they’re taken down, it’s already too late: thousands have already seen it.
And I saved the receipts.
-- K
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