The noise around AI has never been louder, and for once it isn’t coming from tech evangelists but from the people being burned by it. Paris Hilton has been one of the most vocal critics, calling deepfake pornography an epidemic and describing it as a new form of victimisation targeting women and girls at scale. View this post on Instagram A post shared by ALL ANGLES UK (@all_angles_uk) Her warning lands at a moment when trust in AI tools is already wobbling, especially after the recent backlash against Grok X, whose safeguards against generating explicit deepfakes were reportedly easy to bypass. The conversation is no longer theoretical; it’s happening in real time, to real people, and the consequences are deeply personal. View this post on Instagram A post shared by ALL ANGLES UK (@all_angles_uk) Even the home of .ai hasn’t escaped the fallout. Anguilla’s own Farrah Banks recently revealed that a video of her had been doctored and circu...
‘He Tried to Help’: Community Rejects Official Story of Alex Pretti Shooting
The killing of ICU nurse Alex Pretti has ignited a wave of grief, anger and disbelief across the US and beyond. Tributes have poured in for a man widely described as gentle, principled and deeply committed to protecting others. What has struck many people hardest is the contrast between the compassionate accounts shared by friends, colleagues and witnesses, and the early narrative pushed by some federal agencies and media outlets that framed him as the aggressor. As more details emerge, that framing appears increasingly hollow. People are now demanding to know why a nurse who stepped in to help a distressed woman ended up being fatally shot by those sworn to protect the public.
The public outcry has only intensified in the wake of the recent death of Reneé Nicole Good (correct spelling), another case that has raised serious questions about the use of force, accountability and the treatment of vulnerable individuals. The proximity of these tragedies has fuelled a broader political debate about policing culture, institutional power and the ease with which official narratives can overshadow lived reality. Many are calling for independent investigations, transparent reporting and a shift away from the reflexive criminalisation of victims—especially when those victims are people of colour, healthcare workers or individuals in crisis.
For Alex Pretti, the tributes flooding social media paint a picture of a man who embodied service. Colleagues describe him as the kind of nurse who stayed late, who advocated fiercely for patients, who believed in humanity even on the hardest days. That such a person could be misrepresented so quickly and so publicly has become a rallying point for campaigners who argue that the system is too quick to justify violence and too slow to admit wrongdoing. The public is demanding not only justice for Alex, but a reckoning with the structures that allowed this to happen.
This story is no longer just about one man’s tragic death. It has become a symbol of a deeper crisis—one that blends politics, policing, media responsibility and the value society places on truth. As vigils continue and pressure mounts, Alex Pretti’s name has become a call to action: a reminder that compassion should never be met with violence, and that those who step forward to help deserve protection, not suspicion.
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