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Why I Name Names
🔊 Because Silence Protects Systems, Not People People often ask me why I name names — why I call out institutions and individuals when I talk about retaliation, denial, and systemic harm. The answer is simple: Because if we keep everything vague, nothing changes. You can’t fix what you won’t name. You can’t hold accountable what stays hidden. And you can’t expect a culture of safety when everyone is afraid to say who caused the harm. Why I Name Names ⚖️ Accountability Is


When the Helpers Hurt: What I Learned About Toxic Systems
💡 The Myth of the “System That Cares” I used to think it was simple: If you’re injured, you show your medical evidence. You tell the truth. And the system takes care of the rest. That’s the story they tell you. That’s the myth. 🧠 The Reality The truth is far darker. You get gaslit . You get buried in deception . You watch decision-makers reach outside the record just to justify a denial. You hear attorneys lie to your face, regulators look the other way, and judges issu


I Asked for Therapy — They Gave Me Aggressive Litigators
💼 Bon Secours Mercy Health: “A Great Place to Work”… If You Stay in Line and Silent I suffered a near-violence event in my workplace. I was struggling — visibly, humanly, medically. When I tried to use the mental-health services the hospital proudly advertised for its employees, my own administrators threatened me. When I said I needed help, they didn’t hear pain — they heard liability. ⚖️ I Followed the Rules. They Weaponized Them. So I did what the system told me to do.
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