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"Teenagers and younger kids are learning coded predator phrases like ‘MAP’ online..."

Posted: Thu Apr 16, 2026 4:21 pm
by BLueRibbon
When I checked my 10-year-old daughter’s TikTok messages in early February 2026, I expected to find the usual mix of dance challenges, school jokes and anime clips. Instead, I saw a stranger ask her, “Do you like children?” She responded to the stranger: “I’m not a MAP.”

I had never heard the term before. When I asked her what “MAP” meant, she simply answered that it stands for minor-attracted person. In that moment, I realized something unsettling but important: Children are encountering coded language online long before many parents even know it exists.

...

• Adult-Minor Sexual Contact, or AMSC: A term used by people who believe children should have sexual autonomy and can decide whether they want to engage in sexual activity with an adult – a position widely rejected by child protection experts.
Contains links to Mu articles.

https://theconversation.com/teenagers-a ... -it-277460

Re: "Teenagers and younger kids are learning coded predator phrases like ‘MAP’ online..."

Posted: Thu Apr 16, 2026 8:18 pm
by OnionPetal
MAP is a 'predator phrase'??

Another self-important professor, asserting 'expertise' over a word she just learned last month. For someone whose bio boasts a PhD, she really is clueless.
I saw a stranger ask her, “Do you like children?” She responded to the stranger: “I’m not a MAP.”
Wait until the mum finds out about the term AAM.
Young people are remarkably good at picking up meaning from context.
Yeah, much better than Criminal Justice professors with PhDs, apparently.
Yet they still view children as incompetent. :roll:
BLueRibbon wrote: Thu Apr 16, 2026 4:21 pm Contains links to Mu articles.
Lol, I think your example for 'AoA' confused her. She cites MAP-Union, writing:
AOA: [sic] A term used by MAPs to relay their age preference – typically starting at 11 years old.
She's clearly the type of 'researcher' who barely skims her 'sources.' I guess becoming a PhD 'doctor' does not require such a keen attention to detail. But then, if you're a 'Criminal Justice' professor with an agenda, do the details really matter?