David vs. Goliath: the shadow struggle against pederasty

The film 'Sound of Freedom' denounces the reality of child trafficking and exploitation, which moves more than $152 billion through sexual abuse and the sale of children's organs.

Tim Ballard and his team's war against child sex trafficking and abuse did not begin and end with "Sound of Freedom." His battle began in the offices of the CIA and the Department of Homeland Security, where he worked as an agent. When he discovered the multi-million dollar plots and business behind the abductions and rapes of minors, he decided that the most appropriate way to take down these criminals was not by stepping on carpet, but on the ground, and armed.

Tim Ballard and 'Operation Underground Railroad'

While working for DHS, Ballard was tasked with creating a task force to combat child trafficking. After beginning his work as an undercover agent, Ballard realized that the results in terms of saving minors from the agency were not what he had wanted, so he resigned and created, together with other colleagues, Operation Underground Railroad (OUR), a private foundation "that can work in any jurisdiction and in conjunction with law enforcement to rescue children directly," as noted on its website.

The second most lucrative business in the world

The organization's data on child trafficking is devastating. It is a business that has already surpassed arms trafficking in terms of turnover and is about to overtake drug trafficking as the most lucrative in the world. According to Ballard, it is now a $150 billion-plus industry ($152 billion, noted actor Jim Caviezel in an interview with Steve Bannon). To understand what this amount means, the protagonist of "Sound of Freedom" pointed out that the sum of the budgets of all the major sports teams in the world, of all the major leagues and sports, does not reach this figure.

To give you an idea, even if you add up all the sports teams in the world, NFL, NBA, European soccer, etc., it does not all add up to $152 billion.

"$77,000 for a barrel of children's parts"

The trafficking business is worth between US $32-34 billion. The remainder corresponds to the sale of organs or parts of children. Caviezel wanted to emphasize this point: "$77,000 is paid for a barrel of children's parts" that are then sent to biological laboratories. The blood of these minors is used, however, to manufacture adrenochrome, used, according to the actor, "as a drug by the elites, as it is ten times more potent than heroin and has qualities that could make the user look younger."

Adrenochrome, the whole adrenochrome empire, This is a big deal. It is listed under the NIH. It is a chemical compound. It's a molecular structure as C9H9NO3. It's an elite drug that they've used for many years. It's 10 times more potent than heroin and it has some mystical qualities as far as making you look younger.

Adrenocromo, "the greatest horror of my life"

Caviezel noted that learning how to obtain this substance "was the greatest horror" of his life. "When you are afraid, you produce adrenaline. If you are an athlete and the last quarter comes, adrenaline comes out of you. If a child knows he's going to die, his body will secrete adrenaline," he explained in an interview.

During a 2020 interview on the podcast Summit of Greatness, Ballard denounced that there are some ten million child slaves in the world. Two million of these would be subjected to sexual harassment, so the goal of the film is to get the same number of viewers the first weekend of its release as a gesture of awareness. In his interview with Bannon, Caviezel noted that minors go through the organ harvesting program after being abused.

The organizers, within "the three-letter agencies"

Another point the "Passion Of The Christ" star wanted to emphasize, is that the demand comes from people with a lot of resources - Epstein's island was not the only sex island, he said - and that "all the three-letter agencies are involved. Absolutely." Moreover, the organizers of these networks are "inside" these organizations.

During OUR's 12-year history, the organization has been involved in more than 4,000 operations, leading to the release of more than 1,600 children and the arrest of more than 6,500 individuals involved in child trafficking. Ballard realized however, that operations on the ground are not enough to combat this scourge, especially to care for children who are at risk, or have suffered and survived it. After this realization, he launched a program of child care that coordinates directly with the team involved in the rescues to provide care for the children and help them in reintegrate after the trauma they have suffered.

"Children need families"

In addition, "O.U.R. recognizes that healthy adoptions can be a step toward preventing child exploitation," so it launched the Children Need Families project. "Although CNF is not an adoption agency, its primary mission is to assist adoptive families already in the adoption process by offering them a financial subsidy."