Fightingkids.com Website – Free Access

I stumbled across a ghost today. Not the kind in a white sheet, but the digital kind. It was a URL redirect. A dead link. An abandoned relic of the early internet.

If a child fights today, what is your role? Are you the parent who separates them and talks about feelings? The coach who teaches controlled sparring and respect? The stranger who walks by? Or the person who reaches for their phone? Fightingkids.com Website

We don’t know which version is real. The domain is parked. The history is scrubbed. And that ambiguity is precisely the point. Let’s be honest: for a brief, ugly period in the 2000s, there was a market for this. Remember Bumfights ? The rise of shock video aggregation sites? The phrase "World Star Hip Hop" becoming a verb for watching someone get hurt? I stumbled across a ghost today

We told ourselves we were just "curious." But curiosity is often just a well-dressed voyeurism. A dead link

The other interpretation is that Fightingkids.com was something much worse. A shock site. A forgotten corner of the early web where anonymity allowed the grotesque to flourish. Videos of real child fights—schoolyard brawls, bullying caught on flip phones—presented as entertainment. The domain name, stripped of context, becomes a horror film title.

But Fightingkids.com isn't from today. It’s a fossil. Domains are digital real estate, but they are also psychological mirrors. When someone registered Fightingkids.com —likely in the late 90s or early 2000s—what were they thinking?