How many times will the 21-year-old girl be thrown from the street in Limeira? If it depends on the public’s lack of empathy and the greed of entertainment websites and pages that commodify horror and turn tragedy into a spectacle, this will last for many days. The young woman was killed several times and in different ways.
First, he was a victim of the brutal negligence of a shabby country that balances itself on trickery, corruption, unfinished works, laws that don’t work and inspections that aren’t carried out. On June 13, instructors threw her into an abyss during a jump. A gross, lethal, and completely avoidable failure.
But Maria Eduarda’s death did not end on the ground. It continues to happen on the networks, where mourning has given way to explicit crimes such as attacking the honor of memory, condoning sexual violence and disgusting incitement to vilify his corpse. It was enough for the photo of the girl, beautiful and full of life, to hit the internet for the digital sewer to project abject fantasies onto her, ignoring the tragedy. This sadism is not restricted to groups, it is born from the common man, who sees the female body, even without life, as an object of abuse and disposal.
It is the purest definition of. For those who still don’t understand what it’s about, a simple gender test is enough. If the victim were a man, would he be the target of sexual fantasies and debauchery? Of course. The male body is spared this degradation. The woman’s tragedy becomes entertainment, a fetish, to generate clicks and feed the voyeurism of a part of society that is capable of consuming death like pornography.
Behind this, platforms like X wash their hands and make big profits. They host, recommend, monetize profanity under the guise of “freedom of expression”. There is no opinion in mocking those who died. Tolerating digital necrophilia through engagement is commercial complicity. Death demands the opposite of the spectacle. May Maria Eduarda’s family find silence, respect and justice for their grief.
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