EPIDEMIC: 2025 ends with over a million young Americans on OnlyFans — and counting There’s a certain sadness to modern America that no statistic can capture. But this one comes close: with over 1.1 million American accounts on OnlyFans as of last year, and 84% of accounts globally belonging to women, the U.S. is on pace for a million of its young women to perform on the site in 2026, if it's not there already. A staggering sign, not of empowerment, but of a culture quietly eating its young.For many of these women, the attraction is simple. Quick money. Fast validation. Digital applause that feels like affection. The promise is painted in neon: You can make more in a month than your parents made in a year. The platform markets itself like a modern miracle, offering flexible hours, creative control, and unlimited earnings.And once in a while, someone does strike digital gold. Someone earns six figures. A few earn seven. One teen made a million in an afternoon.Many of these creators are earning less than minimum wage.But that’s the carnival barker’s pitch, getting the (relatively) innocent in the door. Most women make almost nothing. They join believing they’re one selfie away from superstardom. They discover they’re one of millions in a digital bazaar where the rich get richer and the rest get tired, discouraged, and drained.The price is far higher than the subscription fee. More than just photos, OnlyFans sells dreams. Visions of one's future peace, future privacy, future opportunity, and, most damning of all, future dignity. One day. Maybe one day soon.But the women who join for short-term relief end up trading away long-term hope.The spiritual corrosion is slow but sure. What begins as a side hustle becomes a shadow that follows them everywhere. The digital trail never fades. It clings to job applications (those that OF girls still bother to submit). It lingers in background checks. It echoes in dating conversations. It stains marriage prospects in communities where character still matters.A decade from now, many of these women will want real things — a husband, children, meaningful work — and they will discover that the internet never forgets what the heart desperately wishes it could erase.The great irony is that many of these creators are earning less than minimum wage once time is counted. Yet the cultural machine sells them the fantasy of being “entrepreneurs,” when they’re really just the inventory. It’s empowerment dressed like exploitation and exploitation pretending to be liberation.OnlyFans is arguably worse than prostitution. Not because of what it shows, but because of what it destroys.RELATED: ‘Jesus loves all of you’: Charlie Kirk’s powerful message to OnlyFans creators BENJAMIN HANSON/Middle East Images/AFP | Getty Images Traditional prostitution, for all its evils, stays out of sight. OnlyFans turns intimacy into endless reruns — downloadable, screenshot-able, shareable, permanent. A mistake made once in real life becomes a scar. A mistake made online becomes a monument.Add to that the spiritual damage — the slow destruction of the inner life, the steady erosion of self-worth, the growing sense that once you’ve sold pieces of yourself, you never fully reclaim them. And if anyone doubts evil still works in the world, remember the devil’s oldest trick was convincing people he didn’t exist. OnlyFans is proof that he does.Most heartbreaking of all is that these young women aren’t evil. Some, of course, are reckless hedonists. But many are simply victims of a society that promised them everything and delivered nothing: rising rent, worthless degrees, sinking salaries, and a culture that treats young women as disposable entertainment.Of course they’re looking for a way out. Of course they’re tempted by something that pays now, because everything else pays later, if it pays at all. Quick cash begets a slow crisis. The glow of instant income fades into the grim awareness that no one wants to build something lasting with a woman whose past is present on a server farm in California, waiting to be rediscovered by anyone with a wi-fi connection.And this is where the tragedy deepens. Because the very thing that lured them in — visibility — becomes the prison they can’t escape. At 19, visibility feels thrilling. It feels catastrophic at 29, when HR departments are Googling you, in-laws are searching your name, and your own children, God help them, might one day stumble onto the digital debris of your 20s. The internet is merciless that way. It preserves everything, except innocence.Meanwhile, the platform keeps expanding its reach, scooping up more and more young women who would never dream of standing on a street corner but will film themselves for strangers online. The stigma feels less severe when it’s filtered. Digital danger, at your fingertips, feels paradoxically distant. But the consequences are exactly the same and sometimes worse.The truth every influencer-economy evangelist avoids is simple: The body isn’t a business model, and desire isn’t a pension plan. An entire generation of young women are being urged to monetize the very thing they’ll one day wish they had guarded. OnlyFans sells them the illusion of independence while turning them into sexual serfs — dependent on strangers’ attention, uncaring algorithms, and a market that gets bored faster than it pays.This ends the same way every false liberation ends. A decade from now, when these women want stability, the past they broadcast will come roaring back. And the same culture that shouted, “You go, girl,” will look away, pretend it never egged them on, and then mercilessly judge them for believing the lie. View Article →
Suspected package thief, homeowner engage in shootout — then suspect fires at officers, police say Philadelphia police said a suspected package thief engaged in a shootout with a homeowner and then soon fired at officers Sunday, WPVI-TV reported.Police heard gunshots coming from the 400 block of East Rockland Street in the city's Feltonville section around 5:30 p.m., the station said.'So everyone missed. Someone needs more training.'Police rushed to the scene and found a man firing a gun, WPVI said, adding that the man then fired toward officers.A nearby homeowner told police he saw the suspect stealing packages and confronted the suspect, the station said.With that, the pair engaged in a shootout, WPVI said. There was no indication who fired first.RELATED: Atlanta police make arrest in connection with homeowner who cops say shot 2 teenage porch pirates The suspect ran away, but police recovered a gun from the scene, the station said.No injuries were reported, WPVI said, and no arrests were made.The incident remains under investigation, the station said."They'll do anything but get a job," one commenter remarked.Other observers were just as disgusted:"So everyone missed. Someone needs more training," another commenter quipped."Thank God no one was hurt," another user said. "And hopefully the other person that was protecting the packages [won't] be charged.""Damn, he lost the gun — probably worth more than the packages," another commenter added."But, but, but [Democrat Pennsylvania Gov.] Josh Shapiro said crime is down!!" another user observed.Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here! View Article →
Knife-wielding person advances toward homeowner who complained about car vandalism, cops say. But homeowner is wielding gun. Investigators in Arizona said a homeowner and his family member confronted an individual after 1 a.m. Friday after discovering knife damage on two of their vehicles, InMaricopa.com reported.With that, the person reportedly advanced toward the homeowner while holding a knife, the outlet said.'I love it! That’s justice!!! He definitely found out!'Unfortunately for the person reportedly holding the knife, the homeowner was holding a gun — and used it.When Maricopa Police officers arrived at the scene on West Thornberry Lane in Homestead, they found an individual shot in the leg, the outlet said.That person was taken to a hospital and was awaiting surgery as of Friday morning, police told InMaricopa.com.RELATED: Armed male allegedly stalking his ex forces entry into her Florida home. But victim's husband is there — and also has a gun. Image source: Maricopa (Ariz.) PoliceTurns out that officers later found other cars in the area with similar knife damage, police added to the outlet.The homeowner who pulled trigger is not being charged with a crime, as it appears he was acting in self-defense, the outlet noted.However, the wounded person is facing charges, InMaricopa.com said, adding that the investigation remains ongoing.Commenters reacting to the outlet's story on Facebook appeared solidly behind the homeowner's actions."F'd around and found out," one commenter said."Lucky it was only his leg shot. Just saying. Good for the homeowner!" another user noted."I mean, torturing my horse would get death — so why wouldn't touching my vastly improved horse replacement that, at one time, took years of my life to pay for and develop into a usable vehicle?" another commenter quipped."I love it! That’s justice!!! He definitely found out!" another user declared."Sounds like the criminal deserved it — but will probably still sue homeowner for his injuries," another commenter predicted.Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here! View Article →