Racist Cave Bitch, Shiloh Hendrix, from Rochester MN calls Autistic 5-Year-Old Black Boy the N-Word.

/2 Shiloh Hendrix, from Rochester, MN, was filmed harassing a Black child at a playground.Instead of accountability, she launched a fundraiser on GiveSendGo — the site that also backed Kyle Rittenhouse and Jan 6 rioters.

3 She claimed her “safety” was at risk and asked for donations. Within days, she’d pulled in more than $650,000 and raised her goal to $1 million.

/4 Atlanta activist and entrepreneur Kiandria Demone @kiandria
was horrified — but she didn’t just post a reaction. She used her coding skills to dig in and follow the money.

/5 Kiandria dug into the HTML and JS on GiveSendGo’s page and discovered that the payment processor behind the fundraiser was Square, via parent company Block.

/6 That matters. Square has policies prohibiting hate-fueled and discriminatory fundraising.So Kiandria launched a coordinated reporting effort to flood them with complaints — enough to crash their support bot. Block, Inc. stock subsequently dropped -24.5%

/7 Soon, volunteers joined in. Coders worked in shifts to monitor the fundraiser backend.When Shiloh’s campaign secretly switched processors to Stripe in the middle of the night, they caught it in real time.

/8 The goal? Not just to get the fundraiser taken down — but to freeze the funds in limbo.“No money for her. No refunds for them. Just consequences. Their hate-fueled donations will remain in a digital graveyard.” said Kiandria.

/9 She also filed complaints with the FTC and CFPB and urged others to do the same. She’s now calling for a paper trail to hold platforms like Square accountable.

JAY-Z is connected to Block (formerly known as Square) after the tech company purchased Tidal in March 2021 for $237.3 million for an 86.2% stake. The Brooklyn entrepreneur became a director and was placed on Block's board of directors after the purchase.

KIANDRIA :

THAT IS AWESOME!!!

Made my damn day!!!
 
How so? Making a deal with the nfl while the nfl fucked Kapernick over..

Being the face of the nets ownership basically being used gentrify downtown Brooklyn and displacing a lot of the black residents there so they could build the Barclays center.. dude is the epitome of a slime ball..

Got biggie out the paint by revealing to puff big was trying to leave bad boy.. we all know what happened after that when puff was pressuring dude to go to LA to promote the album..

Wouldn’t be surprised he got puff out the paint as well
No facts or evidence. Just outlandish ideas.
 
/2 Shiloh Hendrix, from Rochester, MN, was filmed harassing a Black child at a playground.Instead of accountability, she launched a fundraiser on GiveSendGo — the site that also backed Kyle Rittenhouse and Jan 6 rioters.

3 She claimed her “safety” was at risk and asked for donations. Within days, she’d pulled in more than $650,000 and raised her goal to $1 million.

/4 Atlanta activist and entrepreneur Kiandria Demone @kiandria
was horrified — but she didn’t just post a reaction. She used her coding skills to dig in and follow the money.

/5 Kiandria dug into the HTML and JS on GiveSendGo’s page and discovered that the payment processor behind the fundraiser was Square, via parent company Block.

/6 That matters. Square has policies prohibiting hate-fueled and discriminatory fundraising.So Kiandria launched a coordinated reporting effort to flood them with complaints — enough to crash their support bot. Block, Inc. stock subsequently dropped -24.5%

/7 Soon, volunteers joined in. Coders worked in shifts to monitor the fundraiser backend.When Shiloh’s campaign secretly switched processors to Stripe in the middle of the night, they caught it in real time.

/8 The goal? Not just to get the fundraiser taken down — but to freeze the funds in limbo.“No money for her. No refunds for them. Just consequences. Their hate-fueled donations will remain in a digital graveyard.” said Kiandria.

/9 She also filed complaints with the FTC and CFPB and urged others to do the same. She’s now calling for a paper trail to hold platforms like Square accountable.

JAY-Z is connected to Block (formerly known as Square) after the tech company purchased Tidal in March 2021 for $237.3 million for an 86.2% stake. The Brooklyn entrepreneur became a director and was placed on Block's board of directors after the purchase.

KIANDRIA :


lol this is bullshit

I’m a block shareholder and I sat in on the earnings meeting
The stock dropped 20% because guidance was lowered because of the upcoming recession

In fact profits and earnings were up

And the app was never brought down

You are too old to be falling for viral marketing
 
its all good..................the wolves are in waiting like....... :hellyea:
so i hope she gets where she's going, then gets robbed.


Digitally intercepted, before the money arrived. No streets work needed :cheers:


Black Woman Leads Effort to Hold Racism Profiteers Accountable Online​


Updated: 2 days ago

Atlanta entrepreneur and activist Kiandria Demone has successfully disrupted a white woman’s attempts to profit from her recent racist attack on a 5 year-old Black boy. The woman identified herself online as Shiloh Hendrix and claims the young boy stole items from her son’s diaper bag while at a playground in Rochester, MN.



Shiloh Hendrix has gone viral for her racist attack on a 5 year old at a Rochester playground.

Shiloh Hendrix has gone viral for her racist attack on a 5 year old at a Rochester playground.

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So far, Shiloh has raised over $650,000 on GiveSendGo, the same crowdfunding site that raised money for Kyle Rittenhouse and January 6 rioters. She has now increased her fundraising goal to $1 million and says, "I called the kid out for what he was."



Thanks to the efforts of Kiandria, Shiloh may never see that money.



Following The Money​




Like many people, Kiandria was sickened by the video of Shiloh's agressive racism, but waited a few days to respond. Known to go toe-to-toe with racists online, Kiandra said as a Black mother, this incident hit different.



"This is not a situation where I just wanna cyberbully [Shiloh] and have people talking about her bad dye job. I want to actually get in this situation and make a difference," Kiandria said. Armed with first-hand knowledge around compliance and payment processors, she put her coding skills to work.



"I cracked HTML web code to expose the payment processor funding the racist campaign that is rewarding a yt woman for calling a Black child the N-word," Kiandria wrote on Threads. "The payment processors and the banks are the real villains here honestly. They are the only ones who win either way. The racist people donating are just the idiots being taken advantage of."




Watch her explain how that works below.



Video caption: Shiloh Hendrix went viral for calling a Black baby the N-word and now she’s racking up donations. But we found her payment processor. If Square pauses payouts (which is what we are pushing them to do), they can hold the funds FOREVER. No money for her. No refunds for them. Just consequences. Their hate-fueled donations will remain in a digital graveyard.

Kiandria identified Square as the payment processor embedded in GiveSendGo's checkout system and launched a coordinated online effort to hold the company accountable for hosting and facilitating hate-based profit.



"GiveSendGo is an online site, they have to have a third party payment processor and these payment processors have policies. 
They have laws, they have regulations that they have to abide by," Kiandria said.



The effort was so successful, it crashed Sqaure's customer service ChatBot.



"For a couple of days, people were just really devastated that she was being allowed to profit off of that. 
So when I initially found the payment processor, I was just excited to have it. I'm like, 'Hey, this is a lead, right?'"



And once Kiandria shared her findings, a decentralized and dedicated network of tech-savvy volunteers began scouring the fundraising infrastructure in shifts, inspecting the site's backend and spotting changes in real time—like a covert swap to new processors in the middle of the night.



Kiandria is calling on the public to keep the pressure on by filing complaints directly with Square and if they've been affected by similar services, with the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) or Federal Trade Commission (FTC). “We need that paper trail,” she emphasized.



As for her role moving forward, she said, "I have to see this through, because I have a Black child. 
I'm a Black mom. I'm not gonna sit back and watch people do things like that with no consequences when I have the skill to help do something about it."



How to Help




  • File a complaint with Square or Block if you've used their services and had issues.
  • Email Square directly, since support chat is currently down.
  • Report to federal agencies like the FTC and CFPB.
  • Follow, tag and credit Kiandria Demone when sharing resources



Despite being the originator of the takedown strategy, Kiandria is finding herself sidelined from the narrative by larger social media accounts who share her templates, strategies, and findings without giving her credit.



"You didn't find it. It didn't just poof out of thin air," said Kiandria. "It came from a Black woman. I'm dealing with the death threats, the sleepless nights. I'm dealing with people doxing me, harassing me, being called racial slurs. I don't think it's fair to expect me to take that on and not give me credit for that. 
I'm getting death threats, so yes, tag me, okay?"



"I don't think people realize that when they don't tag me, when they don't credit me as the source, they are minimizing my platform," she continued. "They are undercutting my ability to make a difference. This is quickly becoming a movement and it is imperative that I be a part of that."



As Kiandria has to fight for the credit that is rightfully hers, she is thankful for the people who have gone online and supported her business Femme Finds. On Threads she wrote,



"Because of you, I’m able to donate a significant portion of profits to the family of the Black child who was harassed by Shiloh Hendrix. Your support doesn’t just fund justice, it fuels the freedom for me to keep doing this work loud, bold, and unapologetically. Every single purchase counts. Now let’s keep the pressure on. Keep filing complaints and keep sharing! If they want to fund racism, we’ll make it EXPENSIVE."




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Shiloh Hendrix raised over $600K after calling a Black child a racial slur. Kiandria Demone is working to make sure she never sees a cent​

After Shiloh Hendrix raised over $600K after sharing a racist rant, activist Kiandria Demone is working to stop the payout and hold platforms accountable for upholding white supremacy.

Kay Wicker
May 7, 2025

Shiloh Hendrix, Kiandria Demone, Square, Block, GiveSendGo, theGrio.com
Kiandria Demone. (Photo courtesy of Kiandria Demone)

Kiandria Demone, an entrepreneur and activist based in Atlanta, Georgia, with a growing online platform, has become known to, in her own words, “bully racists” off the internet or to stop doing whatever it is they’ve done.

So when followers across her platform began to share the story of Shiloh Hendrix—a white woman from Rochester, Minnesota, who has gone viral for launching a GiveSendGo campaign after footage of her targeting a young Black child with racial slurs on the playground surfaced—Demone looked into the matter. As she scrolled late into the wee hours, instead of seeing another potential opportunity to call someone out, she saw something much more sinister: a company profiting from hate speech.


“I was initially looking for things that were red flags as far as their compliance as a company,” she told theGrio during a recent phone interview. “I started thinking like, this isn’t going to be enough, because they’re just going to fix it and they’re going to keep operating.”

That’s when she remembered the fact that, “there’s a bank somewhere.”

“That’s who has some accountability,” she continued. “The bank can’t just do whatever they want to do. A payment processor they cannot just do whatever they want to do. They have a policy and they have regulations, there are laws, there are people who monitor that, there are people that the payment processor has to answer to.”

The 33-year-old social media disrupter has launched an effort to prevent Hendrix from receiving any money from her campaign on GiveSendGo, which has netted over $600,000. (The ask has since been increased to $1 million.) By directing her nearly 50k followers and all who want to help to put pressure on the fundraising platform and payment processor by making complaints, she hopes to hold them accountable for profiting off of hate.

To determine who the payment processor was, Demone used her tech savvy to break down GiveSendGo’s HTML code and found where the payment processor was listed, which she alleged was Square, though the company has denied being the payment processor. After she and many others began to reach out en masse to inquire, the company responded on their social media channels.

“This weekend, we received a significant number of inquiries across a variety of channels related to the fundraising platform GiveSendGo,” a post on Threads began. “GiveSendGo is not a Square customer. We do not and have not processed payments for them.”

In an email to theGrio the company reiterated their message from social media, writing: “We do not and have not processed payments for them.”

On April 30, the footage of Hendrix was leaked, and in the days since, she has alleged she’s facing an onslaught of hate and widespread backlash. She launched the online fundraiser with GiveSendGo, who also hosted fundraisers for Kyle Rittenhouse and January 6 rioters, to raise enough funds to protect herself and potentially move.

Demone noted that when people launch campaigns on GiveSendGo it’s often because their campaign doesn’t fit within the terms of other popular online fundraising platforms like GoFundMe.

“I believe that they know what they’re doing in supporting certain causes, and a lot of those certain causes uphold white supremacy,” she said.

For anyone who is curious about her thoughts on how Hendrix compares to situations like Karmelo Anthony, a 17-year-old Black boy in Texas, accused of murdering a white 17-year-old during a track meet, she doesn’t see them as the same.

Demone, who has a background in web development, said the idea to look into who the payment processor is came from her own personal experience. The activist also runs an online apparel shop selling t-shirts with quippy slogans on them, like “F—the patriarchy,” which she said draws a certain kind of attention from trolls. These trolls have, at times, held up her orders by making complaints against her store to the point where payments are frozen from the online payment processor.

“Y’all don’t tolerate [Demone’s products]. That’s suspicious, but this woman can profit off of calling a child the N word,” she said.

Joining the discourse around Hendrix has also brought its share of hate the activist’s way. She said since she began to post online about her initiative, she’s received death threats, hateful comments, and emails demanding her to stop what she’s doing. In a screencap of an email she shared online, someone told her she couldn’t stop what was already in motion and warned her to “stay safe.” None of it fazes her, however.

“I really don’t give a damn about a troll harassing me on the internet. I just don’t internalize that because I’ve already built, I guess, the stamina and the thick skin,” Demone explained, adding that she’s developed that thick skin through a life marked by trauma.

She realizes she could have just done what had been her usual approach and clowned Hendrix, but she said this situation was much more serious than that.

“This woman attacking a black child with a verbal assault for one, but bold enough to profit off of it, is crazy, so I didn’t want to do that, you know? I didn’t want it to turn this into a ‘he, he, ha, ha’ viral, social media moment. I wanted to actually figure out … a resolution.”

While Square has denied being the payment processor for GiveSendGo, an update to the documentation Demone is using to provide guidance alleges that Stripe has taken over as the payment processor for the donation platform. Stripe has neither confirmed nor denied being the payment processor and for now, she has not heard back directly from GiveSendGo or Square. She’s not deterred as she sees real momentum around this forming into movement to inspire change across the board with these online platforms by actively holding the platforms accountable through mass email and complaint campaigns. Momentum she said that has shocked her.

“This is not about me, this is not about any clout, and it’s not about a viral moment,” Demone explained. “I’m not even just focused on Shiloh Hendrix. I want these payment processors to know that we will hold them accountable.”

 
How so? Making a deal with the nfl while the nfl fucked Kapernick over..

Being the face of the nets ownership basically being used gentrify downtown Brooklyn and displacing a lot of the black residents there so they could build the Barclays center.. dude is the epitome of a slime ball..

Got biggie out the paint by revealing to puff big was trying to leave bad boy.. we all know what happened after that when puff was pressuring dude to go to LA to promote the album..

Wouldn’t be surprised he got puff out the paint as well

Im not even going to entertain rumors that can't be proven especially given the person allegedly impacted is no longer here to confirm or deny. If you know different from first hand talks or not far removed, that's different. In comparison to Puff we not only hear rumors but saw a incident. Jay didn't have to get him out the way. Puff's behavior and arrogance did that to him. Had he gave that girl the money he likely would be free today.

While I share similar views of Jay's mindset, this is a completely separate matter. Even then, Black players continued to play for the NFL and they can represent themselves in addition to those who were retired. As far as the Barclay thing, you are asking alot of a former drug dealer. Again though, we or at least I don't know him to speak of his intent. Respectfully, I don't view Jay as some educated businessman. He's learned what he has through experience and largely depended on his talent to succeed in business. Basically I don't know that Jay is fully aware of potential end results. He could very well believe the positions he takes will benefit Black people. If your advisors give you information, you go with what is being said.

If we heard stories of Jay not caring about the incident or have some coon narrative, I could understand the take. Whatever his opinion Jay has always been a private person. Being a board member doesn't have anything to do with the day to day operations of the company. I look at board members as people who provide guidance or another layer of protection for the company for decisions made. That doesn't even count the board members who really are in name only.
 
Im not even going to entertain rumors that can't be proven especially given the person allegedly impacted is no longer here to confirm or deny. If you know different from first hand talks or not far removed, that's different. In comparison to Puff we not only hear rumors but saw a incident. Jay didn't have to get him out the way. Puff's behavior and arrogance did that to him. Had he gave that girl the money he likely would be free today.

While I share similar views of Jay's mindset, this is a completely separate matter. Even then, Black players continued to play for the NFL and they can represent themselves in addition to those who were retired. As far as the Barclay thing, you are asking alot of a former drug dealer. Again though, we or at least I don't know him to speak of his intent. Respectfully, I don't view Jay as some educated businessman. He's learned what he has through experience and largely depended on his talent to succeed in business. Basically I don't know that Jay is fully aware of potential end results. He could very well believe the positions he takes will benefit Black people. If your advisors give you information, you go with what is being said.

If we heard stories of Jay not caring about the incident or have some coon narrative, I could understand the take. Whatever his opinion Jay has always been a private person. Being a board member doesn't have anything to do with the day to day operations of the company. I look at board members as people who provide guidance or another layer of protection for the company for decisions made. That doesn't even count the board members who really are in name only.

No timors Jay always wanted the #1 spot…
 
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