
GoodPersonEffed
Brevity is my middle name, but my name was TL
- Jan 11, 2020
- 6,726
So there have been some things eating at me about fixthe26.
- It became incorporated in August 12, the son, Junior, of founder Kelli Wilson died April 25. It takes more than a minute to set up a corporation.
- They have an office space in what seems from my research to be an office sharing site. This costs money.
- A grieving mother sets up a political organization with a professional website to change federal legislation that would target Cloudlfare and other hosting sites less than three months after her son commits suicide.
- The website is professional. The writing is propaganda style -- "evidence" does not match the highly emotional and provocative appeals.
- It's casually dropped at the bottom of one page of the site that the focus for changing the legislation is on sex trafficking sites as well.
- Notice how there's a small blurb about Junior on the about page, and compare it to the stories on the "victims" page, which have detailed stories, emotional anguish, details about interactions on SS in which some share screenshots or quotes, etc.
- I can't find an obituary for Junior in the Houston Chronicle. Maybe he didn't live in the greater Houston area? Maybe he didn't live with Kelli, or maybe she doesn't live in that area either? I also did a Google search for "obituary Kelli Wilson," so if she were even mentioned as a mother, I should have been able to find the obituary; I didn't limit the search to a location. Clearly she wasn't ashamed about his suicide, so that wouldn't be a reason for not having an obituary.
- The site claims to have a social media outreach of over 3,000 people. I question that. Would appreciate it if someone could look up how many they actually have on Twitter, Facebook, the Stop Sanctioned Suicide page on Facebook, Instagram, Kelli Wilson on Facebook (did she post about Junior on her page? Photos of him? Funeral info? Maybe cross reference Jackie Bieber's Facebook page?).
- I watched a video Kelli previously did with the "badger beard" guy and, while I realize people grieve differently, my first impression was of a confident woman, not someone grieving, thrown off her center by her son's recent suicide.
- Stop Sanctioned Suicide's Facebook page used scare tactics on a couple members awhile back, screenshotting posts and asking them to pass messages to one another -- that's stalker activity, psychological warfare. One of the members has autism.
I'm not saying Junior isn't real, there's just so much that seems like lies of omission and disingenuousness.
Finally, what motivated me to post here, the photo of Kelli and Junior from the about page of the fixthe26 website:
I am not a professional, but four things jumped out at me. Am I off about this?
- His head seems like it's cut and pasted, the lines seem distinct, especially around his ear.
- His face and head are in sharper focus than hers. Wherever there's fuzziness on his face, it's not fuzzy in the same way as her face is.
- The shadow under her nose is at a different angle than the shadow under his nose and jaw.
- While the light from the upper left washes over Kelli, it seems to stop before it reaches Junior.
My BS detector has been going off all long. I mentioned yesterday on another thread that I feel like people who have lost someone to suicide are being used by fixthe26 as shields, because what monster would dare to criticize a grieving parent? The website doesn't come across as coming from a grieving parent, it comes across as calculated and manipulative. I have a good BS detector and I'm confident that there's BS going on, but the photo has thrown me off and I want to be sure I'm not seeing something that isn't there. Maybe it's my own sense of integrity that doesn't want to accuse a grieving parent, and I'm kind of freaked out and sickened that it could be a manipulation, but I feel cognitive dissonance every time I see that photo, which I listen to like I listen to my gut -- even when it doesn't have all the information, it is never wrong, even when I want it to be, and I'm having that same kind of feeling.
- It became incorporated in August 12, the son, Junior, of founder Kelli Wilson died April 25. It takes more than a minute to set up a corporation.
- They have an office space in what seems from my research to be an office sharing site. This costs money.
- A grieving mother sets up a political organization with a professional website to change federal legislation that would target Cloudlfare and other hosting sites less than three months after her son commits suicide.
- The website is professional. The writing is propaganda style -- "evidence" does not match the highly emotional and provocative appeals.
- It's casually dropped at the bottom of one page of the site that the focus for changing the legislation is on sex trafficking sites as well.
- Notice how there's a small blurb about Junior on the about page, and compare it to the stories on the "victims" page, which have detailed stories, emotional anguish, details about interactions on SS in which some share screenshots or quotes, etc.
- I can't find an obituary for Junior in the Houston Chronicle. Maybe he didn't live in the greater Houston area? Maybe he didn't live with Kelli, or maybe she doesn't live in that area either? I also did a Google search for "obituary Kelli Wilson," so if she were even mentioned as a mother, I should have been able to find the obituary; I didn't limit the search to a location. Clearly she wasn't ashamed about his suicide, so that wouldn't be a reason for not having an obituary.
- The site claims to have a social media outreach of over 3,000 people. I question that. Would appreciate it if someone could look up how many they actually have on Twitter, Facebook, the Stop Sanctioned Suicide page on Facebook, Instagram, Kelli Wilson on Facebook (did she post about Junior on her page? Photos of him? Funeral info? Maybe cross reference Jackie Bieber's Facebook page?).
- I watched a video Kelli previously did with the "badger beard" guy and, while I realize people grieve differently, my first impression was of a confident woman, not someone grieving, thrown off her center by her son's recent suicide.
- Stop Sanctioned Suicide's Facebook page used scare tactics on a couple members awhile back, screenshotting posts and asking them to pass messages to one another -- that's stalker activity, psychological warfare. One of the members has autism.
I'm not saying Junior isn't real, there's just so much that seems like lies of omission and disingenuousness.
Finally, what motivated me to post here, the photo of Kelli and Junior from the about page of the fixthe26 website:

I am not a professional, but four things jumped out at me. Am I off about this?
- His head seems like it's cut and pasted, the lines seem distinct, especially around his ear.
- His face and head are in sharper focus than hers. Wherever there's fuzziness on his face, it's not fuzzy in the same way as her face is.
- The shadow under her nose is at a different angle than the shadow under his nose and jaw.
- While the light from the upper left washes over Kelli, it seems to stop before it reaches Junior.
My BS detector has been going off all long. I mentioned yesterday on another thread that I feel like people who have lost someone to suicide are being used by fixthe26 as shields, because what monster would dare to criticize a grieving parent? The website doesn't come across as coming from a grieving parent, it comes across as calculated and manipulative. I have a good BS detector and I'm confident that there's BS going on, but the photo has thrown me off and I want to be sure I'm not seeing something that isn't there. Maybe it's my own sense of integrity that doesn't want to accuse a grieving parent, and I'm kind of freaked out and sickened that it could be a manipulation, but I feel cognitive dissonance every time I see that photo, which I listen to like I listen to my gut -- even when it doesn't have all the information, it is never wrong, even when I want it to be, and I'm having that same kind of feeling.