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Her crime? A single, poorly timed tweet.

In the humid August heat of Atlanta, 23-year-old Mira Farrow sat cross-legged on her studio apartment floor, surrounded by the debris of a life she was trying to rebuild. Six months ago, she had been a rising junior copywriter at a boutique ad agency. Now she was a cautionary tale whispered in its glass-walled conference rooms. Fansly.2022.Littlesubgirl.Busy.Public.Fuck.And....

The comments were a war zone. “You’re a liability.” “Finally, someone said it.” “Why didn’t you just make a finsta like a normal person?” But the direct messages told a different story. Junior designers. Freelance writers. A senior art director at a Fortune 500 company who had been quietly suspended for a Slack message about “performative diversity.” They all wanted to talk. Her crime

“Hi. I’m Mira. I got fired for a tweet. And before you feel bad for me, let me tell you what I learned in the six weeks since.” Six months ago, she had been a rising