

The bad guys: Barack Obama, Ellen DeGeneres, Lady Gaga, Chuck Schumer, Tom Hanks, Oprah Winfrey, Hillary Clinton. “We are digital soldiers, fighting the greatest war the world has never seen,” the voice-over explained. I watched the rest of the video a few minutes later, on my own phone. As I started to take notes, she pulled the phone away and wondered aloud if she had done something she shouldn’t have. “From the time we were little kids we revered the rich and famous,” the voice-over began, as images of celebrities and of battered children flashed on the screen.


It was called “Open Your Eyes,” and Gonzalez pulled it up in the Telegram messaging app. The women were busy dealing with festival logistics, but during a brief lull another volunteer, Ericka Gonzalez, drew me over to a corner of the tent to show me a video on her phone, which she thought might be called “Death to Pedos” but wasn’t. “Oakdale has been so welcoming,” Enos-Forkapa told me. She was wearing an official Festival of Hope Benefiting Operation Underground Railroad T-shirt and earrings shaped like red X’s, a symbol often paired with the anti-trafficking hashtag #EndItMovement. Shellie Enos-Forkapa had planned the day’s event with help from three other Operation Underground Railroad volunteers, two of whom she had originally met through the local parent-teacher association. The air was filled with the perfect scent of hot dogs, and with much less wildfire smoke than there had been the day before.Īt the OUR information booth and merchandise tent, stickers and rubber Break the Chain bracelets were free, but snapback hats reading Find Gardy-a reference to a Haitian boy who was kidnapped in 2009-cost $30. A man with a guitar played “Free Fallin’ ” and then a twangier song referring to alcohol as “heartache medication,” which was notable only because it was so incongruously depressing everyone else was enjoying a beautiful day in the Central Valley. (They paid a fee to participate, a portion of which went to OUR, as did the proceeds from raffle tickets.) Miniature horses with purple dye on their tails were said to be unicorns. Vendors sold crepes and jerky and quilts and princess makeovers and Cutco knives. on a Saturday in late summer, more than 100 booths lined the perimeter of the rodeo arena. Oakdale, a small city near Modesto, is set among ever-dwindling cattle ranches and ever-expanding almond farms. (The nonprofit group is known for taking part in overseas sting operations in which it ensnares alleged child sex traffickers it also operates a CrossFit gym in Utah.) Supporters commit to “shine OUR light”-the middle word a reference to the group’s acronym-and to “break the chain,” which refers to human bondage and to cycles of exploitation. It is beloved by parenting groups on Facebook, lifestyle influencers on Instagram, and fitness guys on YouTube, who are impressed by its muscular approach to rescuing the innocent.

The event, called the Festival of Hope, was a fundraiser for the anti-child-sex-trafficking group Operation Underground Railroad, which was founded in Utah in 2013 and has achieved immense popularity on social media in the past year and a half, attracting an outsize share of attention during a new wave of concern about imperiled children.
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