POP Program

POP Program

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Same Fight, Bigger Force

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P.O.P. Join the movement that’s arming parents with truth, tools, and the power to fight back against exploitation—one school, one family, one child at a time. You might’ve known us as P.O.P. Power Over Predators. That name carried us through years of life-saving work—bringing education, prevention tools, and hard truths into classrooms and communities across the cou

03/24/2026

⚠️ AI is changing the way predators target children online.

Today, predators don’t always need access to a child in person to cause harm. With the rise of artificial intelligence, images shared online can be manipulated, altered, or used to create fake photos without a child ever knowing. Even an innocent photo posted to social media can be downloaded, edited, and used in ways families never intended.

This is why it is so important to know who has access to your child’s photos and personal information online. Talk with your kids about privacy, monitor who they connect with, and be mindful about what is shared publicly. Protecting children online starts with awareness and open conversations at home.

Predators rely on anonymity and access. When parents, caregivers, and communities stay informed and involved, we make it much harder for them to operate.

Protecting children isn’t paranoia. It’s love in action. 💜

Photos from POP Program's post 03/16/2026

Online predators rarely start with obvious or threatening messages. Instead, they often begin with simple, friendly conversations that seem harmless. They may compliment your child, ask about their hobbies, or pretend to be someone their age. Over time, they build trust, slowly asking more personal questions, encouraging secrecy, and sometimes trying to move conversations to private apps or messages.

The best protection is open communication. Teach your kids to never share personal information online, to be cautious about who they talk to, and to come to you if something feels uncomfortable. Remind them that not everyone online is who they claim to be—and that their safety always comes first.

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02/21/2026

Protecting children isn’t overreacting.
It isn’t being dramatic.
And it definitely isn’t paranoia.

It’s love in action.

In a world where risks are real and access is constant, being aware, setting boundaries, monitoring screens, asking hard questions, and having uncomfortable conversations isn’t fear-based — it’s responsibility-based.

Love doesn’t look the other way.
Love pays attention.
Love protects.

When we choose to stay involved, informed, and intentional, we aren’t limiting our children — we’re empowering them to grow up safe, confident, and strong. 💛

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