You're Wrong About - Human Trafficking
Episode Date: November 25, 2019Mike tells Sarah how NGOs, activists and George W. Bush resurrected the 'stranger danger' panic for the modern era. Digressions include Reply All, muffins and Yelp for massage parlors. Mike&...apos;s vocal fry is even worse than usual.Continue reading →Support us:Subscribe on PatreonDonate on PaypalBuy cute merchWhere to find us: Sarah's other show, Why Are Dads Mike's other show, Maintenance PhaseSupport the show
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It's so easy to traffic people on the East Coast.
I mean, like, I have to go to New Jersey for a Michael Bolton concert.
Welcome to You're Wrong About, the podcast where we teach you how to succinctly counter
your relatives' Thanksgiving Day arguments.
Ooh, that's good.
Thank you.
The succinctly is a little ambitious,
considering how long our episodes have gone.
Well, okay, here's how I think this works.
You've probably done, like, 100 hours of research for this.
We're going to talk for three to five hours for an episode that's going to be an hour long.
And the people who hear this episode can boil that one hour down to, you know, five minutes
of impassioned whisper shouting over stuffing.
Yeah, I like that we've turned our listeners just as insufferable as we are.
Yeah, I think they were already insufferable.
Like, we're wanting tools to become even more insufferable,
and that's what we're offering them.
I am Michael Hobbs.
I am a reporter for The Huffington Post.
I'm Sarah Marshall, and I am allegedly working on a book about the Satanic Panic,
although my front burner is all okay.
And if you want to support the show, we're on Patreon at patreon.com slash You're Wrong About,
and we have a merch store.
Yeah.
There's a link in the description.
Can we call it something other than merch?
We should just say chachkies.
I feel like merch is what comes out of a Paul brother when they sneeze.
And today we're talking about human trafficking.
Yeah.
So can you tell me what is your understanding of the term human trafficking?
So I want to try and connect this to a recent news item,
and this is going to be something that I vaguely remember,
and you can help me fill in the holes.
But basically, there was some female conservative politician.
Oh, yeah.
Who was it?
If you're going where I think you're going, it was Cindy McCain.
It was Cindy McCain.
Okay, so it wasn't a politician, but she's obviously part of a political family.
She was on a morning talk show, and she told a story about seeing in an airport or something
like that what she deemed to be a suspicious situation with an adult and a child who she
presumed to be in the act of being trafficked.
Yes.
The evidence of trafficking was that the child was a different ethnicity than the mother.
Okay.
We do not know if it was a mother of color and a white kid or a white mother and a kid of color.
Yeah, or two non-white people of different backgrounds.
But yes, my guess is that that's not what she noticed.
Right.
So my concept of human trafficking is that the posters that you see in airports and stuff,
which is that a white child is somehow being exploited and sold probably for sex or some
other nefarious purposes.
That's my understanding of the Cindy McCain version.
Yes.
Yes.
Okay.
This is going to be a fun episode because this is like a medley of all of our previous
moral panic episodes, like there's some satanic stuff, there's some repressed memories,
there's some bad statistics.
This is like when the carpenters would play in medley.
Take it away, Richard.
Yeah.
Where do you want to start us?
Like what point in time is the best place to begin?
So I think the place to start is that the version of trafficking that Cindy McCain is
describing and that I think a lot of people have in their heads of children being kidnapped,
forcibly taken from one country to the other.
And kidnapped in broad daylight, like sexed away in a public area.
It's not clear there has ever been a confirmed case of that.
So I have spent the last two weeks calling human trafficking organizations,
speaking to sex workers and advocates and people on the Christian right.
I've looked quite hard and I have not found a case of a child being taken against their will
by a stranger on an airplane.
And we'll get into the reasons why.
But I think it's important to note that like when it comes to children,
we are in the middle of a stranger danger panic.
Hooray.
It's evident like Jesus, we just did this.
Like why do we have to go through the same panic that we just had?
So to go through a couple of the statistics, one of the things that's really interesting
is we have these giant estimates of the prevalence of child sex trafficking.
So I saw one yesterday that said there are 79,000 children in Texas alone
who are being trafficked for sex.
Another phrase you hear is sold into slavery, which again, you can never say like there's no
case of this ever happening because it's a big country and literally everything has happened.
One that and that word means a lot of things.
I mean, one of the numbers that goes around is this is from the US Institute against human
trafficking.
There are hundreds of thousands and potentially over a million victims
trapped in the world of sex trafficking in the United States.
Because of the hidden nature of the crime, it is essentially impossible to know how many for sure.
So like we don't know, but it's more than a million.
We have no way of knowing, but it's your worst fear.
Yes, exactly.
And so another number that goes around is that one in seven runaways are likely victims of
trafficking that comes from the National Center for Missing and Exploded Children,
who you may remember from our Stranger Danger episode for propagating all kinds of terrible
statistics on children's disappearances.
And so that claim one in seven runaways was fact checked by a Washington Post column in 2015
that basically found no evidence for the claim.
In response to this fact check, the organization added the word likely.
So they used to say one in seven runaways are victims of trafficking,
and now they say one in seven are likely victims of trafficking.
Well, it's either a statistic or it's not.
That's like saying this milk is likely 2% fat.
Yeah, and then if they're saying the statistic, then what is that based on any numbers of any
kind or is it just a gut thing for someone?
So I called up the National Center for Missing and Exploded Children.
I talked to one of their researchers for more than an hour.
And the methodology behind this statistic is essentially when people call the hotline,
their missing children hotline, if there is any whiff of trafficking,
they mark it as a victim of trafficking.
What is a whiff of trafficking when it's at home?
Well, what's really interesting is they told me 83% of their calls are from foster care
facilities or other state institutions.
These are super at risk kids who have run away for some period of time.
If the person who calls them says James has run away,
we think he might be being trafficked, that's enough.
It seems like this is a system designed to create false positives, which is weird.
And there's no verification whatsoever.
So if I call, I'm a parent, I say my kid has gone missing,
I think he might be a victim of trafficking.
He comes back two hours later.
There's nothing to take that off of the statistics.
So we now have a person who's not a runaway and not a victim of sex trafficking
being marked as a sex trafficking victim.
They also admitted to me that the same kids can be counted infinite number of times a year.
So if I have a really bad relationship with my parents and they're really abusive,
and I'm running away from them five or six times a year and every single time they call and say,
Mike has run away, we think he's being trafficked, that counts as six trafficking cases.
None of what you're confirmed.
God, like flawed data is just like, it's so frustrating to realize that the solution
to our big social problems is just like, well, we need more wants and we need more people who
are just fixated on the details and want to do the grinding, meticulous work of getting things
right. We just cannot skip that ever.
The answer is always more spreadsheets.
I also think it's important to note that these are not all reports of runaways in the country.
These are reports of runaways that are reported to the National Center for Missing and Exploited
Children.
Right. So it's a self-selecting group.
Yeah. There's all kinds of reports of missing children that get filed to various law enforcement
agencies, maybe different NGOs. There's all kinds of places you can report a missing child.
So this one in seven statistic only comes from people who call them.
So it's like, if you have the foreign objects in Muffins Bureau and people are calling and
they're like, I found a foreign object in my muffin or like, maybe I did, it could be.
And then American consumers are like, did you know that half of muffins have foreign objects
in them? And it's like, well, that's just the foreign object muffin bureau statistic.
That's a little bit specific.
That's a better explainer than any of the academic articles I've read on this all.
I just want to say.
I'm just hungry.
One of the things that's really interesting about this is the huge mismatch between the
numbers put out by NGOs and the actual numbers of arrests, reports.
One of the numbers I found is that in 2017, the whole year, the Department of Homeland
Security found 500 victims of trafficking nationwide. And that's adults and children.
So we've got numbers of it. It could be more than one million.
It's 79,000 children in Texas alone. And then we've got 500 actual confirmed victims.
So at that point, it's like, if there's such a disparity between the number of
people being identified by the authorities and the estimates,
then how are you even getting the numbers? It doesn't connect to me based on anything I know
about any other situation of this kind that you would be able to have knowledge of these many
cases but not take action on any of them, especially in a country where we do not have
underzealous law enforcement, especially where border issues are concerned.
One of the things that is central to, I think all urban legends of this type won't someone
save the children, is this idea that we're insufficiently concerned about it. It's like,
nobody's talking about the child sex traffic. And you're like,
actually a lot of people are talking about it.
No one cares about white children. That is the one demographic that we,
I mean, we live in a terrible country for child welfare across the board,
but we do talk about white children a lot. Yes, we do do that.
So I think to be fair, one of the people I interviewed this week was a prosecutor for
King County who prosecutes sex trafficking cases here. His explanation for why there's this huge
mismatch between arrest numbers and estimates of the prevalence generally was that he says
these cases are really difficult to try because a lot of these people come from very vulnerable
families. A lot of them have drug issues. A lot of them have mental health issues.
They have criminal histories that the defense team is going to question them about.
So it makes sense to me that those numbers would be artificially low.
Right. Or that we would have lower numbers for this than for other types of crimes that are
prosecuted. Yeah. Yeah. So I think it's worth taking that seriously. Although I also,
I want to say, you know, this is a prosecutor, right? He is on the other side of the tough on
crime ideological divide than we are. He's someone who believes in trafficking. He believes it's
really bad. I was asking about the kinds of cases that he sees. And first of all, he's never seen
a trafficking case with a prepubescent child. He sees lots of abuse cases, but the idea of
children being sold, you know, trapped in hotel rooms, he's never seen that.
Well, I can see there being cases of that that aren't discovered and that I think there's always
all things are possible. And as you often say, it's a big country. But you know, the issue here
is not that these things aren't happening, but that if you are taking a story of, you know,
this case that is horrific because it is about a prepubescent child, because it is about the
specific kind of trafficking, and then using that to whip up a public sentiment that allows you
to unnecessarily penalize sex workers, then like, that's the issue. You know, not that this thing
doesn't happen, but that powerful people are using the existence of a certain type of crime to
police a fundamentally different type of crime. Another thing he said about this that I thought
was really interesting is that when he deals with underage sex workers, the vast majority of the
clients don't know they're underage because they're lying about, you know, you ask her, you're 18,
right? And she says, yeah, I'm 18, but she's actually 17. Also, if you're soliciting sex,
you're not going to entice someone to do an illegal thing with you by telling them that it's
also illegal in a more dire way. I think, I mean, I think there is, like, you don't want to defend
men who are buying sex with underage people. But it's also the morality of it to me feels
very different than going into a hotel room where somebody's in some way chained or bound
and having sex with that person. It's a completely different order of scale. Yes.
And I think it just is not going to help any of us to see complicated issues
as less complicated than they are. Like, I don't think that ever improves anything.
One of the other really interesting things this tough on crime prosecutor said to me was that
most of the actual cases of quote unquote, trafficking that he sees are actually an extension
of domestic abuse. What this usually is is people that have a lot of vulnerabilities,
they're leaving the home because it's abusive, or they get, you know, they start dating somebody at
17. There's a period of abuse and then escalation of the abuse. I actually interviewed somebody
who was homeless in Portland, and she met a guy who was older than her. And she says he was the
first guy that was nice to me. She grew up in an abusive home. This is the start of so many stories.
And so she considered the guy her boyfriend, and then he said, Hey, you know, do you want to have
a threesome sometime? And maybe we can have a threesome, but I'm not part of the threesome.
And you have sex with this other guy. And then it's kind of like, Well,
maybe you have sex with this guy, like I don't really know him, but I need you to do it. And
I'm your boyfriend. Yes. And so she's still actually not sure if money was changing hands
behind the scenes. At the time, she didn't, but she now considers herself a trafficking victim,
because that's basically what it became. But it was an outgrowth of all of this other abuse
and her extreme vulnerability. So even this tough on crime prosecutor guy said that, you know, most
of the people that he sees are ethnic minorities, they have child abuse in the home, they have
very young drug addiction, one of the victims he's working with now, she was addicted to hard drugs
by 13 because her mother was a drug addict. He says, you know, when he sees sort of suburban kids
like the Liam Neeson myth, it's almost always because they're queer. That creates a vulnerability
for those kids that kind of pushes them out of the home and pushes them into networks,
where they're meeting boyfriends or girlfriends that are able to coerce them because of the lack
of self confidence that they have the lack of support systems that they have. And society kind
of hating them already, which certainly creates a good substrate for being abused in your personal
relationships. Yeah. Well, this is what's so fascinating to me about the way that this moral
panic has perpetuated itself in that if we're thinking of, you know, the sort of quote unquote
real cases of human trafficking where teenagers are coerced or manipulated into engaging in
commercial sex work by their partners, that's a very specific form of abuse. So why would we be
focusing on this one outcome? The outcome of being forced into sex work by a partner?
Well, because yeah, there's now this army of trainers that are going into schools.
What did they tell them about? They just told us to not smoke weed until we were 25. I feel like
I really got off easy. This is from shared hope international. This is their warning signs
that a teenager is being trafficked. Unexplained absences from class, overly tired in class,
less appropriately dressed than before. What? Sexualized behavior. Oh my God. With drawn
depressed, distracted or checked out, brags about making or having lots of money, new tattoos,
tattoos are often used by pimps as a way to brand victims. Okay. Tattoos of a name, symbol,
money or barcode could indicate trafficking. That's so weird. That's so specific. The barcode
one is so hilarious. The barcode one shows up everywhere. Wouldn't you get that iPhone scanner
thing at this point? No one's caring anyway. I do not doubt that people have done this
somewhere. But again, this really plays into the idea that we see a lot in conspiracy theories
that everyone does it the same way and there's some kind of national hierarchy maybe involved.
Also, the barcode thing is really important because it's this idea that the numbers are
so big that you need barcodes to track all of their tubes of toothpaste or something.
So it's the argument that these are functional barcodes and that the pimps have little self-checkout
scanner guys that they're using. I know people at my middle and high school that got barcode tattoos,
but that's because they were anti-capitalist Goths and they got them as a kind of capitalism
type of tattoo. Yeah. So once again, we have to suspect Goths. Also, aside from the barcode tattoo
thing, I think the warning signs of trafficking all sound like being a teenager.
Oh, totally. Yeah. Right? Like you're tired and you look more promiscuous than you used to.
Yeah. You know, Florida just passed a law that every school has to have an anti-trafficking
curriculum. Really? Yes. This really bothers me because I feel like we have this narrative too
that it's like that women and girls especially aren't allowed to care about staying safe unless
the imagined foe is like a scary monster. We're not allowed to talk about keeping safe from
normal straight men, especially like the ones that we marry. We're not allowed to implicate them
in our fears for ourselves. But if it's about a monster, then we can talk about it and we can
try and keep people safe, but only from the monster. Yeah. Yeah. Right? And it's also it's so
telling that these trainings aren't aimed at boys. Yeah. And I was going to ask you,
have you ever seen like an are you being trafficked sign in a men's room?
Oh, no. I don't think so. And like aren't boy children supposed to be being trafficked in all
this? Like is it only girl children on top of everything else that this is supposed to be
happening to? Well, this is the thing. It's like a big sign of moral panic to me is when you hold
all of these contradictory ideas at once. So oftentimes they'll say like, oh, it's usually
somebody close to you that's going to coerce you into commercial sex work. But then the next
sentence they'll say, oh, if there's men standing outside your school trying to recruit you,
don't speak to them. That seems like common sense advice. I will accept that.
Another one of the sourceless statistics that goes around is that 70% of child sex
trafficking cases begin online. This really is Santa's bag. There's something in here for
everyone if you're afraid of the internet, if you're afraid of the migrant caravan. Yeah,
it's great. It's very diverse. One of the curricula that they're going to be using in
Florida apparently is called My Life, My Choice. And it's a 10 session exploitation prevention
curriculum designed to change girls' perceptions of the commercial sex industry as well as build
self-esteem and personal empowerment. How many perceptions of the commercial sex industry do
they have going into this training? Well, this is the thing. It's like some of the articles
about Florida's new curriculum mentioned sort of paragraph 17 that in 2017 there were only
65 human trafficking incidents and there were zero reports of minors being trafficked in Florida.
Oh boy. And so it's like when we talk about what's actually endangering teens, you know,
suicide is now the number two killer of kids under 18 after car accidents. When you ask actual
kids, and there's a lot of activism going on around this, they need help with depression and
anxiety. No, no, depression is a sign that they're being trafficked actually. I remember that from
the list earlier. If we get the trafficking, everything will be fine. I think the sort of
the counter argument to all of this is like, well, what's the harm in focusing on sex trafficking?
What is it really? What's the problem with teaching kids? And when it comes to sort of the
damage of this framing, I think I mentioned on here that my boyfriend manages a cafe in Seattle,
and one of the things they've been dealing with lately is there's this kid that comes in who's
like 17 and he comes in sort of 3, 4 p.m. like after school will be getting out and he just sort
of sits at the cafe and sometimes he's drunk. Sometimes he's drinking something out of a
thermos and they're not entirely sure if it's alcohol or not. They're not comfortable calling
the cops. So they've called the school and sort of tried to get some information about this kid.
It seems he's not homeless, but it seems there's some reason why he doesn't want to go home and
you know, they don't really want to pry. And it's, you know, when you think about kids that are at
risk, what help is it to go up to that kid and be like, are you being sex trafficked?
Is that kid at risk of sex trafficking? Like I guess that's true if that's the way that you
want to frame it, but like that kid's at risk of 100,000 things. Putting him into this binary frame
of like it's sex trafficking or else we don't care is not helpful, right? Because if that kid says,
I have a new partner and he coerced me into sex, well, that's not really trafficking pal, sorry.
Right. Or like my parents are abusing me like that's not really trafficking. So like I can't
really help you like our organization gives gives out, you know, gift bags to trafficking survivors
and like, sorry, your parents are hitting you and you don't want to go home. But like,
it's not trafficking. So it's not really our problem. Like right, it's this very narrow
understanding of like one of the risks. And you think about all of the other constellation of
things that like that kid might be going through, we need to have some way of gathering information
from kids of like, how can I help? What do you need? And we need to care about kids when they're
not the victim of the specific big bad that we've decided to focus on this decade. Totally. Totally.
And it's also, I mean, this transitions very well into the history of human trafficking and
how this is playing out for adults. Act two. Yes. So do you remember the case of Robert Kraft?
No. Do you know who Robert Kraft is? Is he related to the Kraft Mac and Cheese fortune?
Oh, not that I know of. I only know one fact about him because he's a sports person.
And so I have to look up all sports related facts. Yeah. Otherwise, we'll get a bunch of
replies about how you said someone played the wrong possession. Yes. Those are still coming in.
Thank you, everybody. Yeah. Noted. That is noted. So Robert Kraft is the owner of the New England
Patriots. Okay. So last year, Robert Kraft was arrested in a massage parlor in South Beach,
Miami. And this immediately went into the sex ring, trafficking,
evil criminal conspiracy type of framing. So I'm going to read to you from
the New York Times article that came out. There was like a feature story that came out right
after his arrest. Beyond the lurid celebrity connection lies the wretched story of women
who the police believe were brought from China under false promises of new lives and legitimate
spa jobs. Instead, they found themselves trapped in the austere backrooms of strip mall brothels,
trafficking victims trapped among South Florida's rich and famous. I don't believe they were told
they were going to work in massage parlor seven days a week, having unprotected sex with up to a
thousand men a year, said Sheriff William D. Snyder of Martin County. We saw them eating on
hot plates in the back. There were no washing machines. They were sleeping on the massage tables.
Sheriff Snyder said he believed at least some of the women were working to pay off
debt owed for what it cost to bring them to the United States. In some cases, the women's
passports were taken away. Traffickers cycled women in and out of parlors every 10 or 20 days,
Sheriff Snyder estimated. That seems like a lot of turnover. I would never consider them
prostitutes. It was more of a rescue operation, he said. Oh my God. Right. Okay. I'm glad that
this is setting off a wuga noises for you, because it should have for everybody else.
Also note, all of the information in this New York Times story is coming from a single source.
Oh no. Who is the Sheriff? Have they not learned since the Kitty Genevies fiasco in the early 60s?
Right. He also, there's a later CNN interview where they're asking about trafficking and
prostitution and et cetera. And he says, I just don't understand why women would go and allow
themselves to be trafficked. This really speaks to the binary that I feel like a lot of men in
law enforcement believe in about women, which is that the two kinds are like rescue worthy and
prostitute. Yeah. There's also this, this great thing too, where we, we build up these perfect
victims, but then it's like, oh, they went and allowed themselves to be trafficked. Right. So
even when we find those stories, it's like, uh, weren't they kind of at fault a little bit? Like
they let them, right? It's like saying someone got herself murdered. It's very interesting how
volition works depending on the category of person. I mean, I think it's also, so every
factual claim in what I just said is false. Great. Every single one. So first of all,
there's this great Vanity Fair article that comes out months after this, of course,
where they find that none of the women were from China. Oh my God. At least got the country right.
How hard is that? I mean, they were Chinese. Okay. They were already living in the United States.
Yeah. The owner of the massage parlor recruited them through advertisements in Chinese language
magazines and newspapers in, you know, Chicago and LA and all these other places. It was like a
normal sort of Craigslist ad that happened to be in Chinese, like come to Florida, work at a massage
parlor. So none of them were trafficked from other countries. They crossed state lines. So I guess
they, they did violate the Man Act, which people used to get excited about in the 1930s. That's
such a huge spoiler, Sarah. We're going to get to the end. I'm very sorry.
That to me is a really important distinction. Yes. The number of people who are brought to the
United States against their will, vanishingly small. The much more common thing is somebody wants to
come to the United States. They pay somebody to take them into the United States and then
they are charged too much. They are dropped in a place that they didn't agree to. There's all
kinds of structural vulnerabilities with paying somebody to smuggle you into a country and those
people get victimized at extremely high rates. But there is a difference between people being,
you know, clubbed, knocked out in Cambodia and they wake up in Detroit. That doesn't happen.
Again, I think this distinction is important because it's based on our unwillingness to
confront the deepest culprit and all this, which again is economic and security domestically.
When you think about it economically, if I'm running a massage parlor where I'm exploiting
young women in these terrible conditions and they're working long hours and I'm not paying them
very much, why the fuck would I recruit people from other countries? There's so many desperate
people in America. Right. It's based on the idea that there's a shortage of people in America who
would do anything for a decent paycheck, which like, what a weird thing to believe.
It just doesn't make any sense when it's like, you can just put an ad in a newspaper and people
will apply for jobs like when terrible farms, terrible food processing plants, when they have
job openings, they put ads on Craigslist and people apply. I mean, look at the, what was it,
a poultry processing plant in Mississippi that was just raided by ice and that was a raid carried
out, I think, because the boss didn't want to pay his workers and it was cheaper to just
have them all scooped up by law enforcement. I mean, those weren't people who had been
kidnapped and brought to the United States in order to work for insufficient wages.
They were people who had taken those jobs voluntarily because there was nothing else
for them and then had their lives destroyed because of it. And no one had to take anyone
across international borders to achieve that. Right. And if I'm like an asshole poultry plant
director guy, why would I spend money on plane tickets and like reaching tentacles into Guatemala
to like find workers for my low wage, low skilled jobs? You can really tell a fake conspiracy by
the fact that it's just economically impossible. Exactly. Why would you exploit people in a
different country when there are plenty of people you can exploit in your own county?
So I think that distinction is extremely important. Whenever we talk about trafficking,
we need to be really clear that there is a huge difference between people coming here and people
being taken here. And the reason why it's dangerous to come here is because there are no laws that
allow people to come here legally, right? Like, why is there an economy of people that will take
you across the US border for $10,000 because there's really terrible immigration policy?
Again, we're saying we'll solve this problem if we strengthen our border or if we make it
harder or more punitive for undocumented people to come to the United States. And it's like,
no, that's going to make it worse because that means that you will owe more money to someone
who's smuggling you and they will have even more justification to work you to death.
One of the other factual claims that the sheriff makes is that they're
working seven days a week having unprotected sex with 1,000 men a year. It doesn't appear that
there was any sex going on like intercourse. These cops spent six months
surveilling this massage parlor, which is a huge waste of their time, by the way.
They had all kinds of weird hidden camera shit going on. And in six months of surveillance,
they only found 20 people who got any sex acts. The vast majority of them were hand jobs and a
little bit of it was oral sex. There were a couple instances of oral sex, but there was no sexual
intercourse. There's also the women were not living on the premises. Only one of them was living
on the premises. And it was because she was living kind of far away. So the owner of the
massage parlor would actually pick her up in the mornings and drive her to work. And then there
was a car trouble or something. And her boss was like, hey, do you mind sleeping at work for a
couple nights because it's getting harder for me to pick you up. So she's like, yeah, okay.
Maybe that's exploitative. It's not great. We're talking about something that
does connect to things that happen in our world, right? But the version of that event that seems
most likely is supported by America as it is.
Totally. I also, in research for this story, I also found out about something called,
have you heard of something called rub maps?
No. My first mental image is like, what if you had a roadmap or a state map and you could scratch
and sniff different areas to smell like their food specialty. So you could have like, you know,
scratch Kansas City and it smells like barbecue. I'm sure it's not that. Wouldn't that be great?
Yes. So rub maps is the apparently Yelp for massage parlors where people can rate different
massage parlors, talk about their experiences. So there's reviews of this massage parlor on
rub maps, apparently. And half of the reviews are men complaining that the women at the massage
parlor won't give them hand jobs, which implies to me that there's some level of control in what
they're actually doing. Or like, you could look at that and be like, okay, like consent
could very well be an issue here, right? Because we have women who have traveled for this job.
So it is expensive to move. Like, it's an expensive economy to be living in. And this is an illegal
trade that we're looking into. So we could take this seriously and be like, hey, like,
do you feel pressured to give hand jobs? If someone's like paying a couple hundred bucks
to get a hand job, like, are you getting a fair cut of that? Like, how is that?
You know, obviously, the police are not like a union for sex workers, like they are in my
fancy. But, you know, like, these are the questions that are relevant at this point.
So it's like, you don't want to help women. You want to save women. That's great.
Yeah. And there's this, there's this great quote in the Vanity Fair article,
where she's talking about how officers are interrogating one of the sex workers for apparently
hours. And she's the only one who's had her passport confiscated. It's not clear sort of
who has it or why she eventually says that her boyfriend actually took it and that he had pressured
her into working at the massage parlor. But then she later recants that and says,
I just wanted to get out of the interrogation. And I was telling them what they wanted to hear.
Right. The author of the Vanity Fair article is talking about this long interrogation of her.
And she says, it was somehow easier for law enforcement officers in South Florida to believe
that the women had been sold into sex slavery by a global crime syndicate than to acknowledge that
immigrant women of precarious status hemmed in by circumstance might choose sex work.
Oh my God.
All of this goes back to this idea that, first of all, people cannot consent to sex work. Sex
work is inherently exploitative and that they have to be rescued.
We're getting into, like, very weedy territory. But I feel like if we're going to talk about, like,
issues of consent and, you know, can someone consent to sex work? Like, A, yes, I think that
they can. And B, if you are worried that sex workers are unable to meaningfully consent to the
vocation that they're in, then like, make it so that they can have another job. Give them something
to do to reasonably support themselves. Give them better alternatives if you don't want them to go
into sex work. Exactly. And it's also, I mean, I spoke to a really interesting sex worker in
Chicago who's been doing sex work for years. The way that she got into it was she had a kid
right after she turned 18. The kid had asthma. And there was this machine that helps him breathe
that she has to rent on a daily basis. It cost $89 a night. And she was working at Denny's.
She basically just was barely getting by or really not getting by, sort of slowly sinking.
And so one of her customers at Denny's offered to pay her to have sex with him
after her shift was over. And that was how she kind of got by for many years.
And since then, she has ended up homeless at times. She says that was the most
physically dangerous time because a lot of people target homeless people for sex work because they
know that nobody is going to believe you if you say, this guy raped me. This guy was terrible to me.
Since then, she's gotten a day job. She's gotten a more stable place to live. She still does sex
work, but it's a much smaller number of clients. And she also does phone sex, which is a form of
sex work that I had completely forgotten about because there's been so few movies about it lately.
But what's interesting to me is when we think about this myth of trafficking,
you could easily cast that guy in the Denny's as coercing her into sex. This is a guy that offered
money to his Denny's waitress to have sex with him. That's a dirt baggy thing to do.
But then when she talks about the story, she acknowledges that, of course, there's an element
of coercion there. But first of all, it was the medical bills that were coercing her.
Right. And people are vulnerable enough working in legal industries where they don't have unions.
Think about what it's like if admitting to practicing the trade that you're in means that
you get arrested. I mean, it is impossible to have rights in that situation.
Right. I also think taking the right-wing argument seriously that there's no such thing
as consenting to sex work, it's inherently exploitative. Fine. I don't agree with that,
but if that is true, then the question becomes, say you're a sex worker, you're working in this
massage parlor, it's super exploitative. I'm now going to go in. I'm going to arrest your boss.
I'm going to shut it down. I'm going to take away your source of housing because part of the myth
is that they're living there. I'm going to take away your source of income because you're no
longer going to have a job. You're welcome. I've just rescued you. Even if you're this right-wing,
pull yourself up by your bootstraps person, okay, then those people need a bunch of money.
Right. And what if you just taken their only bootstraps away? I guess the assumption is that
they have been forced into sex work and now they don't have to do anymore because this corrupt
organization that forced them to become sex workers is gone now. Now they can skip away
and do whatever they want, which is what? Right. There's a survey of sex workers in Britain,
all of whom are foreigners. Only 6% of them said that they were deceived anyway by coming to the
UK. What they say is that they went to the UK to work at coffee shops, but either they got those
jobs and the conditions were shitty and they couldn't pay their rent or they just couldn't
get those jobs. A lot of them started doing sex work because they didn't have a lot of other
options. Right. But it's also like, well, what do those people need? How do you rescue them from
sex work? It's like, pay more at the coffee shops. Right? Right. Have a lower rent.
Stop complaining about how much your espresso costs. Yeah. I think making an espresso is
that's much harder than giving a hand job to. My God, there's so many levers on those things.
And this goes back to the entire history of this whole thing, that the origin of trafficking
has always been about saving women, mostly white women. Yeah. I've been reading all these
historical documents and they all include the names of old laws of how this works. So there was
the precursors to this. There's something called the 1870 Act to prevent the kidnapping and importing
of Mongolian Chinese and Japanese females for criminal or demoralizing purposes.
But only Mongolian Chinese and Japanese. If you're Laotian, then you can just fuck off.
There's one in 1875 that has in the preamble that it's trying to end the danger of cheap
Chinese labor and immoral Chinese women. Interesting. Which then morphs into the Chinese
Exclusion Act of 1882. So the Chinese Exclusion Act, this is fabulous, began as a sex trafficking
panic law. Yeah. I interviewed a human smuggling expert who I cannot name because he's an old
friend of mine and his university will not allow me to name him because they have like weird
restrictions. I mean, one of the things that a human smuggling researcher told me, because he's
looking into the history of this too, is that every time we've had a resurgence of the trafficking
panic, we've had a crackdown on immigration. That is classic. That is a stone cold classic.
The extremely important reframing of human smuggling to human trafficking is human smuggling
sounds kind of defensible. People are sneaking into this country because they want to be here.
Human smuggling is how some enslaved people escaped back in the day.
And he mentioned this too, that there's also great stories of people smuggling
Jews out of Europe when the Nazis came to power. We sort of understand that to be a much more
complicated concept. But then as soon as you say, oh, there's trafficking, people are being brought
here against their will, then it's like, oh, shit, we really need to crack down on the borders
because they're not migrants. They're not coming here for jobs. They're being kidnapped and taken.
Right. And it's interesting because it doesn't criminalize the person who is trying to cross
the border. It demonizes the person who is theoretically moving them, but then it makes
them into collateral or evidence or something. Yeah, this is what he said too, that the difference
between trafficking and smuggling is that in human trafficking, the person coming into the
United States is a victim, whereas in human smuggling, the United States is the victim.
Right? It's a crime against the United States to smuggle someone in and there is no victim.
So what trafficking does is it allows you to reframe, oh, some percentage of these migrants,
I'm really worried about that they're not choosing to come here on their own volition.
I'm not racist, but I am concerned. What's really interesting is this whole thing gets
wrapped up in this concept of white slavery from the early 1900s. Are you familiar with this?
Yeah, because this idea that, I mean, the classic idea that we have now in different clothing that,
I mean, it's kind of birth of a nation idea almost in a way, right? That white women are
constantly being preyed upon by an ethnic other who wants to kidnap them and smuggle them
and just do something terrible. There was something called the 1904
international agreement for the suppression of white slave traffic. That's one of the first
times the term trafficking is used. I was going to ask when that started showing up. I'm surprised
it's that old. And it's also, it hasn't changed at all. This is the same stuff we see now. So
there's this great article by Janie Chung where she talks about the concept of exploitation creep,
where trafficking has always been a bad thing, but over time, we've expanded the term trafficking
to cover more and more and more human behavior. And it's now this behemoth that covers like
50 different activities. Yeah. So what did it originally mean? It originally meant,
this is what she says in her article, that the word trafficking denoted the cross-border movement
of white women and girls by force, deceit, or drugs for the purposes of commercial sexual
exploitation. Okay. White women and girls by force, deceit, or drugs. It's amazing that we were so
transparent. I guess over 100 years ago, we were like, this is a law about white girls. So now it's
like that's so the unspoken thing at the bottom of everything, but it's the one thing you're not
allowed to explicitly say. Right. And it's, I mean, the DNA is all there. I mean, this is like how
bad it gets is in the actual law, it defines a victim as a white woman who is a victim of the
animal lusts of the dark races. Oh, no, no, no. What's really interesting is, oh my God.
This is what Janie Chung, this really interesting researcher told me was that a lot of this comes
out of the anxieties over slavery ending and a huge anxiety over women's rights,
that you have women who are starting to show up in interracial couples.
Right. And they can't be doing that on purpose.
Right. And so all of these same gut level anxieties are there in the very beginning,
and this initial panic culminates in the 1910 Man Act, the way that Janie Chung puts it is,
which sought to maintain the morality and purity of white women by prohibiting women from crossing
state lines for immoral purposes and criminalized interracial couples. So it's like from the very
beginning, trafficking has been a way of talking about basically like race mingling that makes us
uncomfortable or that interracial relationships can only exist in the context of sex crime.
Right. It's not that we're criminalizing interracial relationships. It has to be a sex crime.
There can't be consent. It has to be someone's being recruited for nefarious purposes. It's
not that we're criminalizing these relationships so that they don't exist.
Right. Jesus. So what happens over time is eventually people sort of accept this framing,
but they think that white slavery is too narrow. And so by 1949, the International Convention
to suppress trafficking in persons and the exploitation of the prostitution of others,
these names. But by that point, trafficking has now expanded to encompass people of all races,
all genders, all ages, and it can also be transnational or domestic. Holding hands under
a rainbow. So we already see this good faith effort, I think, to be like, well, white slavery is a
pretty bad term. Other people can be victimized. So we need to expand the categories of people
that can be victimized by this bad behavior. So I talked to this researcher named Ron Weitzer
about this, and he says there's then kind of this period of dormancy. The term kind of goes
quiet for a while. But then it explodes in the late 1990s and especially in the 2000s.
And what's really interesting to me, because I'm trying to sort of find the genesis of this,
you know, how did we get to like trafficking becoming a thing? And what this guy Ron Weitzer
told me was that it's one of the few times when it's not a bottom up phenomenon. Like,
stranger danger, there really were kids that got murdered in these horrible ways.
Right. But he says one of the unique features about human trafficking as a moral panic
is that it's top down, that there weren't cases of human trafficking that sort of captured the
public's imagination. Right, because we should be able to think like, oh, yes, the Baby Liza case
from 1995 that started, that's the thing. I mean, that's at the beginning of this conversation,
it was like we're trying to open a kinder egg with nothing inside of it. I can't think of even the
cases that would have inspired this. Right. This is what's so interesting is that in the late 1990s,
what started happening was you will recognize this, a coalition between
neoconservatives, the Christian right and feminists to start pushing this. Those never end well.
It's actually fascinating. I mean, this is another example, just like we talked about with victims'
rights, where basically this argument that prostitution is inherently exploitative
came out of this idea that prostitution is fundamentally about the patriarchy,
and it's something that benefits men. I mean, there are ways in which that argument makes
sense to me. I just don't take it to that conclusion. Right. And so a lot of first wave
feminists started pushing this idea of trafficking because they were losing the wars over prostitution
from the 1970s and the wars over porn in the 1980s, that the country was getting much more
liberal, and this idea of abolishing prostitution wasn't really working. The idea of abolishing
porn, especially the internet was starting to exist in the 1990s.
I mean, we'll talk about this in greater detail in another episode, I'm sure, but that
Andrea Dworkin had attempted to pass anti-porn legislation in parts of the US and Canada,
and it had had a couple of little successes, but it had been a resounding flop. So whatever
happened was repealed, and this was a movement that couldn't get off the ground on the terms
that were currently being argued. And it's really interesting because some of the quote-unquote
villains of the sex trafficking panic are the heroes of the early sexual harassment cases that
we talked about in the Anita Hill episode. Catherine McKinnon, for example, who's a really
important feminist. And a very complicated figure legally. Yes, exactly. And I think it's tough to
tell the story of sexual harassment without this as an epilogue, and it's tough to tell
this story without sexual harassment the early cases as a prologue. You know how I feel about
heroes and villains, right? If you start off seeing everyone as just like a person, then you
don't have to become so confused when they have different roles and different movements. Yeah.
I think we're getting into the whole problem with work as historians, essentially, which is that
you're deprived of these nice Star Wars binaries, right? History is a non-binary affair, I must say.
So because they're kind of losing these domestic wars, what they do is they reframe pornography
and prostitution as fundamentally non-consensual acts, and they reframe them as kind of politically
neutral things that, you know, this isn't about prostitutes in America. This is about poverty
in the third world. This isn't messy political stuff. What it really is is most of the prostitutes
in America, they were taken here against their will, they're being prostituted like a thousand men
a year and 14 hours a day, and it's this terrible thing. And all of a sudden, you're not talking
about banning prostitution anymore, right? You've done this shift where all of a sudden it's like,
no, we want to fight poverty. We want to save girls. We want to free people from slavery,
and the prostitution is sort of secondary or tertiary, and people start not noticing what
you're really doing. Okay, so it turns to... That was a very zero sigh.
I mean, I think that what I'm expressing with that particular exhale is that there were good
ingredients that went into that, right? It's like you're watching a YouTube cake tutorial,
and they put cake ingredients in, and then they just put in a bunch of kitchen cleaner,
and then they throw it in the oven, and it's like, what did you think would happen? There was a moment
when it could have been a cake, but then that moment ended, and we can't go back, right? That
it starts off as coming from a place of genuine concern, and like, yes, again, people shouldn't
have to do sex work against their will. People shouldn't have to do any kind of work against
their will, as a matter of fact. But do you care about the demographic that you're claiming this
is about, or are you really just trying to wipe out sex work, and your previous arguments haven't
landed, and you need to cultivate the kind of allies who will be swayed by this kind of argument,
and you're maybe trying to annihilate something that shouldn't be annihilated, and the reason
that you haven't been able to so far is some proof of that. And also to give them some credit,
you know, in the same way that The Stranger Danger Panic illustrated some real needs,
the law at the time didn't really recognize the idea that you could be coerced not through physical
force. Someone can sort of manipulate you into doing something without putting a gun to your
head, right? Or if you're in a really abusive relationship, you might find yourself committing
crimes, or doing other things that you wouldn't do otherwise, because you're afraid of sort of the
long-term consequences. There's no immediate threat, but if your husband is beating you
regularly, like he doesn't have to say, I'll beat you if you don't do this.
Yes. And that humans have tremendous psychological power over each other,
and it doesn't have to be supported by a display of force. It doesn't have to be supported by
the consequences that we like to think we would have to be facing in order to do something we
don't think that we would normally do. Yeah, there's very little legal recognition, I think,
of the fact that our autonomy is a very fragile thing. Yeah. And this also intersects with a
rising generation of evangelicals. They also were losing a lot of battles, right? That the culture
was shifting underneath them. And so what these younger evangelicals did was they started getting
away from stuff like gay people and prostitution and things that were sort of not going to land
anymore. They went to these issues that they could still get moderate. And so what you have in
the late 1990s is Christian groups that start focusing on global warming, HIV, AIDS globally,
and human trafficking. Right. Africa is the center of the innocent victim industrial complex,
really. Right. And so in the way that Weizer was talking about in this top-down push,
they find a very good friend in George W. Bush, who gets elected in 2000.
It's a Bush joint. Oh, it was created to suit his fragile little mind. Yeah. And so they passed
something called the Trafficking Victims Protection Act, which as will not surprise you at all,
there's nothing in there about protecting victims. It extends a bunch of sentences. It creates,
as we've seen with other moral panics, it creates laws against things that are already illegal.
So it doesn't criminalize anything new, it just jacks up sentencing for other stuff.
Yeah, exactly. It's filling a hole that is already filled. So the only actual victim's
protection that it has in the law is the idea of a T visa, which is a trafficking victim visa,
basically. It sounds like a gift card for testosterone. But what's really interesting is,
as usual, nobody digs into the details of these plans. So the actual T visa,
the way that it works is, it's temporary. It gives you a one year extension of staying in the
United States. And it's conditional on participating in the criminal trial against your trafficker.
Oh, Jesus Christ. So this creates an incentive where even if you're not really a victim,
like you weren't really coerced into sex work, there's no incentive to say that you were.
Because that's how you get human rights. Yes, totally. And the thing is, I mean,
everybody brags about this program and how great it is, but a tiny number of people even get it
every year. It's only 600 people get it every year. And the fine print for the T visa is that
it's temporary, but you can also apply for this thing called a U visa, which is permanent residency.
But this is a system for every victim of any kind of crime. So if you're an immigrant and
you're a victim of domestic abuse, like this is the kind of visa that you apply for,
there's 60,000 applications per year, and they only give out 10,000 of them.
There's already a backlog of 150,000 people. Oh my God. So we're 15 years. There's like a
15 year waiting list. It's like trying to get a new liver, basically. And like that's as good
as it gets. Like that is as worthy of protection as you can get as an undocumented person in the
eyes of the law. You know, the thing that I cannot get over, when we talk about trafficking and the
trafficking panic, the issue that gets the most attention is FOSTA-SESTA, these laws that passed,
I think last year or two years ago, that basically took down any online ads for sex work.
And like famously, I think was targeted at back page, right? Yeah. And they're like,
they're awful. There's a really good reply all episode about how bad they are and everybody
should go listen to it. Yeah, I love that reply all episode. But what's really interesting is
there's also local versions of back page that have also been caught up in the last couple years,
not necessarily under SESTA FOSTA, but other basically local laws. So there's one locally
in Seattle called the Review Board, which was essentially Reddit for sex workers and clients
where people could post ads, people could also post reviews. The sex workers that I spoke to who
had profiles there and posted there said that it was, it was really positive in that if a guy
was a total prick, you could post on there with his profile and his information and say,
this is what happened. He showed up drunk. He hit me, whatever it was. And the sex workers would
then of course say, well, we're not going to see that guy anymore. And the men would post and say,
hey, man, you're making us look bad. This is bullshit. There was all kinds of stuff on there
about consent and about it's okay for them to say no, and it's not okay to coerce them into sex.
If they say, sorry, that's not a service I'm offering or I don't really feel like it tonight.
Sorry about that. And then a couple years ago, the cops came in and shut it down.
And so the way that I found out about this and the way that most people in Seattle found out
about this was there's a big trafficking raid. We found a sex ring. It's all trafficking. It's
all terrible. Oh, it's a ring. If you call something a ring, it's automatically so sinister.
So some of the women that were posting on their review board were from South Korea. And so this
of course got wrapped up in the sort of they're being brought here against their will type of
narrative and they're working 14 hours a day and they're not making any money, blah, blah, blah.
It's just so weird when we want to read situations not at face value for kind of what
we're seeing, but we're like, well, we have this thing that we really want to find.
And we're going to take anything that to any degree supports the scenario we want this to be.
And then we're going to say it's that scenario. That's a really bizarre way to be attempting
to solve social problems. Yes. And just like barreling forward without actually showing
any interest in what's actually going on. So what's fascinating is then later, of course,
none of this shows up in the original news reports or the like prime time specials that
ran about this quote unquote trafficking ring is that there was no evidence that anybody was
being coerced into sex that these quote unquote 14 hour days that the women were working.
The only evidence for that was that on their advertisements, they would list their availability
as 14 hours. Okay. They'd say I'm available for appointments between 10am and midnight. Yeah.
Incredibly, there's no evidence that any of the quote unquote pimps were having sex with any of
the sex workers or were providing them with drugs. They were kind of like managers or promoters or
like a book agent. They were placing ads for them. They were helping them with like various
logistics things. They were like actually doing their jobs. Yeah. And also, I mean,
what some of these sex workers have been telling me is that like the whole concept of a pimp
is, I mean, first of all, racialized. Yeah. Secondly, that relationship doesn't really
happen as much anymore because of the internet, that it's relatively easy or easier to set up
dates in places like hotels or places where there's sort of enough people around that if
something bad happens, there is help available. It's not this idea of like exploitative pimps.
Obviously, you know, it happens in the world. But in general, the internet's been really good
for sex workers to be able to have much more independence and a lot of times the power relationship
is actually the other way around now that the sex workers will kind of hire men to do things like
screen clients, to place ads for them, to do things like, you know, drive me to this appointment,
you know, pick me up at the airport when I come back, etc. So yeah, so like to have someone around
as a heavy who you are employing and who is dependent on you. I mean, that seems like a good
system. Yeah. And so in this particular case, the quote unquote brothel owner pimp dudes,
the women were charging 300 bucks an hour and the guys were taking 100. So maybe that's too much,
maybe that's unfair. Who knows, right? Like I don't know the industry, but to me, that doesn't seem
on the face of it like an obviously exploitative number. Right. And so at the end of this whole
thing, what's amazing is the only people that actually went to jail, nobody was charged with
trafficking. Of course, the only thing that they got were these second degree promoting prostitution
charges. One of the guys, one of these quote unquote pimps who of course, tarred as like the
worst, you know, chaining people to radiators, the worst imaginable traffickers. One of them does
60 days in jail and 30 days of community service. You caught the trafficker at the center of the
ring. And yeah, I mean, thank God they didn't bring in a disproportionate punishment just to
save face. I mean, yeah, that's I mean, that's one nice thing about it. One of the other guys that
went to jail for 21 months was a kid who the only thing he's actually charged with is helping the
sex workers post ads and picking them up at the airport when they would travel. So one of the
myths of this is that like the traffickers are moving them around the country and they're being
taken from place to place. There's no evidence that these women ever traveled with another person.
They were going to other places and a lot of the sex workers told me that this is something that you
do because if you're a new face in an area like you go to Albuquerque or whatever, you get like a
wave of clients because they haven't seen you before. Like modeling. Yeah, exactly. So it makes
sense to move around. Also, apparently people pay more in certain cities like New York and LA.
That makes sense. They're used to paying more for sandwiches.
So there's no evidence that they were being taken anywhere. They were just going on their own to
those places to earn more money and then coming back and this guy would pick them up at the airport.
It's just such bad faith, you know? We're like purporting to care about these people's lives
and then we're expressing that by making them harder, which suggests to me that
that's all we really wanted anyway, but we just wanted an excuse to screw over sex workers.
Yes, absolutely. I mean, I think it's important to note that this website, the review board,
people talk about, you know, it was a nice positive place, but it was also, I mean,
it's not perfect, right? That the guy was run by essentially this random dude named Tahoe Ted.
They say he was kind of a dick. Like he didn't allow trans sex workers to post. He would block
people from creating accounts if they were fat, like anyone larger. So Tahoe Ted is a shitty
guy who accidentally made a place better than him. Yeah, that people were able to use in this
positive way. But again, it's like, what is creating the weaknesses and the shittiness
of that website? It's the criminalization. If this was legal, you would have other websites
to choose from that aren't shitty. Right. And Tahoe Ted wouldn't control the pipeline.
Yeah. And one of the weird things, this is incredible. This guy, Tahoe Ted, is caught. He's
in all of the local newspapers. He's a trafficker. He's the ringleader, etc. He eventually pleads
guilty to three counts of promoting prostitution. His sentence is 30 days of work release, 30 days
of community service. He has to go to a post-conviction sex buyer intervention course.
And then the guy ended up killing himself because his name had been dragged through the mud through
the newspapers that he couldn't, he had a day job while he was doing this. And of course,
he lost the day job and nobody was going to hire him because, you know, Google this guy and the
first 50 results are all about how he's a sex trafficker. Which is interesting because even
so the actual legal systems consequences weren't that significant for him, but the way he, you
know, his name had been destroyed by it. So you don't even need to penalize someone that harshly
because the media will do it for you. I don't know. Like again, you don't want to get into a
place where like you're defending this model that I do think has elements of exploitation in it.
And it's a structure that can be used very exploitatively. So I don't think any of this is
like all of this is perfectly fine. Right. But we're saying that it's not the very specific thing
that people are claiming it to be. Which is different from saying it's perfect. Right.
What's amazing about that case is that it was a five year investigation. There were four different
law enforcement agencies involved. So we're talking millions of dollars. I feel like that's
an inappropriate use of resources. Yes. And it's like, what are we spending our money on? Think
of all the like children that are experiencing domestic abuse during that time. Yeah. For what?
For a bunch of misdemeanor arrests and six month sentences and a bunch of quote unquote victims
that left immediately. All of them did not participate in the prosecution. So as soon as
it happened, they were quote unquote rescued and sent to this NGO that was going to provide them
services. All of them ran away within 24 hours. All of them did. Yeah. Wow. So to this day,
we don't know where they are. That doesn't imply to me the Liam Neeson version of this
trafficking story. I would love to see though the Liam Neeson movie version of all this,
where Liam Neeson like raids a fairly stable home that some sex work is being run out of
and then forcibly takes a bunch of women to a safe house and then they all run away and then he
just sits there sadly having made breakfast for everyone. I mean, this is a recurring theme
for us that if we create these sort of bucket categories in public discourse, we're like,
okay, there's traffickers and they're this kind of person. And maybe as the public,
we only want it to apply to this very sinister, very specific kind of a figure that we're thinking
of. But then once we've created that category socially, then legally, it can be used however
people want. And if there's one thing that we've learned, you can take a very scary sounding
charge and then find ways to sort of pull that parachute over like a huge number of defendants.
And this is, I actually read this fascinating report by the Greater New Orleans Human Trafficking
Task Force that was actually like in the way that bureaucrats do, it was like quietly scathing,
but like pretending that it's not scathing, which I love. It was kind of like a salty judge
Yes, exactly. And so what they note is that everything since 2000 has been about victims,
right? Protecting victims, helping victims, like this is the language that we always hear.
What they mention is that in the entire state of Louisiana, there's only 291 beds available for
trafficking victims. And only 46 of those are actually like trafficking beds, the rest of them
are homeless shelters. It's this absurd duality where it's like trafficking is huge, it's growing,
it's the most offensive form of exploitation imaginable, right? It's literally sexual slavery.
But then after we rescue them, we're sending them to a fucking homeless shelter.
Wow. Okay. And that there are no actual resources for this most exalted category of victim.
Yeah. And it's like they talk in there quietly, saltily about how because all the homeless
shelters are full, it often takes five or 10 phone calls to find a homeless shelter for that
night. It's like, can you name 10 homeless shelters in your city? Like how do you even do that?
We can't get the numbers because they're so traumatized that they don't know what happened
to them, but they have to be calling around homeless shelters until they like through sheer
persistence find a bed. Only one of the shelters serves foreign nationals. A lot of them do background
checks and other document checks. The Cindy McCain definition of trafficking is that these people are
not from the United States. Why is this not an emergency to anti-trafficking organizations?
There are no resources being allocated for them. There's no real system in place for like taking
care of them once they're saved from their abusers. Like no one seems to have much of a plan of like
where to put them or how to find resources for them. Like it all goes to criminalization.
Yeah. I mean, this is like the darkest shit that I haven't found in other task force reports,
but I think is really widespread that the only forms of housing available to trafficking victims
are like long term housing. And so all of them have these weird intake requirements where you
have to be in before a curfew. You have to commit to sobriety. If I've been trafficked, I'm not
staying sober. You know, I've got some demons to handle. This is from the task force report.
Required activities include counseling, therapy, life skills activities, religious activities,
and group or wellness meetings for residents. And also two out of three of them cut off your
internet and take away your cell phone. Okay. Isn't that what you're supposed to do to someone
when you're trafficking them, though? I mean, this is the thing. Like you can restrict their
movements and control their life. Like are we rescuing the victims of trafficking by
re-trafficking them? Yes. And I also read about this thing outside of New Orleans where there's a
house for trafficking victims out in a rural area that is run by the New Orleans Sheriff's
Department, where they're also taking away people's cell phones and there's no public transit
out there. Living in a house in rural Louisiana with no public transportation where you're being
supervised by the Sheriff's Department sounds like a spiritual sequel to get out. Yes,
warning signs include that in the training for the kids. Why are we looking at kids in airports?
And like being isolated in a remote location where the people who are restricting your
movements have no sense of accountability because of their own belief and the righteousness of what
they're doing. Like again, this is coming back to our, you know, torch song of all torch songs,
which is the most dangerous people are the people who believe in their deepest heart of hearts,
that they are on the side of what is right and just. The dangerous people are the people who
think they are good and who society thinks are good and therefore who have the kind of power
that lends itself very easily to abuse. Yes, you're gonna love this. I'm gonna read you
something really dark right now. This is the darkest NGO, Christian NGO thing. This is Rebecca
Charleston, who's the director of something called Valiant Hearts, which is a Christian
charity that helps trafficking victims. She identifies as a victim of trafficking herself.
This is from a Christian website. Charleston spoke about working with police departments
who set up sting operations posing as potential clients. They create online posts to lure
individuals to a hotel room. Once the person arrives, law enforcement officers will give
them an ultimatum. Either they can go to jail or accept Valiant Hearts offer to help. However,
many of the trafficked individuals decline the help believing initially that it is their choice.
I'm very curious about the situations that are being described here.
How many red flags did more there in that paragraph?
So the people who are being courted in the sting operations are sex workers.
Yes, and this Christian organization has taken it upon itself to make fake ads and
entrap sex workers. Are they minors? Are they just adult, just random adult sex workers?
It appears they're adult sex workers. There's nothing in here indicating that it's children.
And then it's just like, you know, you can look at the founder of this organization and say,
you have been through real trauma, and maybe that doesn't qualify you to know what these people
in this very broad group of backgrounds and possible situations all need. It's not appropriate
for individuals to be able to join forces with the police in this way either, I don't think.
This is a really weird thing that we kind of accept as normal in the United States because
it happens so frequently and especially because of the severity of the crime,
the knowledge base required of the person collaborating with law enforcement doesn't
need to be as high. This is one of those things that shows up that, you know, I was talking to
this person who has to remain anonymous, who was on a state trafficking task force,
what he found in the state where he was working, that cops would do these quote-unquote
stings, raids on, you know, massage parlors or whatever, and they'd sit down with the sex workers
and say, like, look, you can go to jail or you can say you're a trafficking victim.
Those are your two options. If your choice is between jail and something else,
then, like, the something else would be pretty bad for you to choose jail first.
It's just there's something so corrupt about, like, the cops telling people that they're a
victim of something. Also, then, if you say, yes, I've been trafficked, then, like, what then?
You go to the fucking homeless shelter. This is the thing, like, what?
Okay, so, like, and what if you have, like, a perfectly nice house that you're paying for
with your sex work that you're just trying to do for God's sakes?
Right.
Or, like, if you are in a bad situation, how is going to a homeless shelter gonna make that better?
Right. I mean, one of the really interesting shifts here is that, you know, one of the things
that accompanies the trafficking panic is this idea of ending demand or, like, the Nordic model.
Is that where you criminalize client ship?
Yes.
Okay.
This is, like, the woke sex worker criminalization policy now. You don't want to arrest the sex
workers, but you want to arrest the Johns, right? So, it's like the, you're cracking down on the
demand and you're not going to, like, revictimize sex workers, which sounds great, right?
That sounds better. I think anytime we call something the Nordic model, it's, it might be
because it needs more credibility than it actually has.
I mean, this is what you find is that, you know, there's been all these studies of Sweden and
Norway now where they invented the Nordic model. And what they find is that it doesn't
actually make sex workers any safer because, first of all, by criminalizing people buying sex,
you're essentially taking out all of the, like, law abiding people out of the customer pool.
Yeah. It's like you, you take away, like, normal shoppers and you just have, like, Black Friday
people. Like, that would be awful.
And so the other thing that it does is because it's still trying to abolish
prostitution as an institution, right? So what ends up happening is,
even though the sex workers themselves are not criminalized, the place that they're working,
the brothel, is now a criminal organization. So they're part of a conspiracy.
Exactly. So they can be written up on racketeering charges if they had any financial
relationship. Oh, my God.
There's also what's really interesting is in the definition of trafficking is a sex worker
over 18 that has been coerced into sex work through force, fraud, or coercion.
It's kind of a tautology there, isn't it?
But what's interesting is for people under 18, you don't have to prove anything.
All you have to prove is that they're engaged in sex work because of age of consent laws.
And I feel quite strongly that children cannot consent to sex. Like, I'm okay with the principle.
However.
However, what I've heard from a lot of sex workers is that what happens is the cops will sort of do
a bus, they'll arrest a bunch of sex workers, they'll find one who is under 18. And that's kind
of like the Eureka moment. Oh, God.
Because once you find one 17, 16, 15 year old sex worker, then you have a circle of people
around that person who you can charge with sex trafficking.
Who could all be 19, 20 years old?
Yes. I interviewed a lawyer for a sex worker who is now convicted of trafficking because she
drove another sex worker over state lines. She was 19, the younger sex worker was 17.
Great. Which also means that you penalize offering help.
Yes.
Like, you render it a criminal act to help someone who's trying to survive in an industry
where maybe they need a lot of tips that you might have. Like, it just feels very sinister to me.
This is from a report about the Nordic model and sort of the failure of the Nordic model.
In Sweden, no one can operate a brothel, rent an apartment, room or hotel room, assist with
finding clients, act as a security guard or allow advertising for sex work.
This in turn implies that sex workers cannot work together, recommend customers to each other,
advertise work from property they rent or own or even co-habit with a partner,
since their partner is likely to share part of any income derived from sex work.
Jesus.
You don't get them on prostitution charges anymore, you get them on accomplice charges.
Wow. So it's like, let's be nice to sex workers and indict them for racketeering instead.
So like, aren't we woke? Like, isn't this helping? It's like, well,
really, Norwegian? Like, this is not, this is not cool.
That's the most American you've ever sounded.
Right. And just, I think that we really, just in general, like any kind of legislation that's
brought forth where you look at it, and you're like, now if someone were to use this in bad faith,
you could really destroy some lives. Right.
And it's just so weird because if you're saying, I'm doing this to protect the trafficking victims
who are teen girls. And so in this scenario, I'm going to ruin the lives of all these teen girls
to protect the teen girls. And it's like, well, you're protecting imaginary people
at the expense of real people. And the imaginary people don't even vote.
And also, I mean, what all of this does, whether you're criminalizing the sex workers or the
people who purchase sex, either way, all it has the effect of is driving things underground.
And so, you know, one of the sex workers that I talked to about trafficking,
she was saying that like, you know, there's now signs in hotels that like, no, the warning
signs of trafficking, all of which are warning signs of sex work, right? It's like, oh, they keep
a do not disturb sign on their door. Okay. First of all, I always do that mostly
because I'm making this show in there. But also, if the laws are taking away your ability to
have coworkers and some kind of maybe secure arrangement, then like, if you're if you're
losing access to hotels to them, like Jesus Christ, where else is there? Well, this is what one of
the sex workers I interviewed told me is that like, a hotel is a pretty safe place to be a sex
worker, right? Because you're in a room with we all know how thin hotel walls are. There's
security cameras everywhere. The most important thing is that the client knows
that if you scream, someone will come. Right. And so she says, you know, the harder it gets
to work in hotels, it's like, I'm going to have sex with people in their cars. Yeah. That's where
they have a lot more power over me. Like they can drive me where they want to drive me. I can't
necessarily leave. Like all you're doing is making it harder for people to report this stuff.
And if you scream in a car, then like maybe the police come. Yes. I think you're farther away
from being arrested yourself in that situation, which is also important. So it's like all of this,
I mean, there's now states passing laws, but it's in there that all hotel staff need
awareness raising training of this problem for which there is huge and false awareness already.
Yeah. So what are the signs that people are being educated to look for? It's again, it's like, you
know, young women checking in by themselves and like someone with men visiting their rooms.
Sounds like it's criminalizing spring break more than anything.
But so this leads us to the last aspect of this. And this will be the answer, I promise.
Oh, I'm very happy to, for you to lead me through all the darkness.
The last form of exploitation creep, the last widening of the term trafficking
happens under the Obama administration. Oh, daddy. So the Obama administration comes in,
they, like everybody else notices that the Bush administration has spent eight years saying
prostitution is the same as trafficking and we need to eradicate prostitution. So they're like,
well, you know, the real form of trafficking and exploitation that's going on in the world is
forced labor. There is ample evidence that forced labor is rampant. There are a lot of migrant
workers, like conditions are really terrible. So what we need to do is expand the definition of
trafficking to pull in all of these exploited workers, right? Like Indian construction workers
in Dubai and Guatemalan farm workers in America, like we need to include all of these people in
this problem trafficking that everybody's super concerned about. This seems fairly reasonable
to me. And I'm therefore extremely anxious that in reality, it didn't end up working out as well
as I'm hoping. Well, again, it's like, it's this understandable thing. And everybody seems to be
working from good motives. Yeah. But what they do is they first redefine trafficking. And this is now
the international definition that any form of what's called bonded labor is considered trafficking.
Wow. So for this episode, I had the treat of calling up Joel Best. Joel Best, our hero!
Yes. He is a researcher, a sociologist who studies contemporary urban legends.
Oh, you talked to Joel. I know, it was great. He was like the coolest. And it was really nice in
that, you know, like with researchers, if they haven't looked into something, you want to sort of
be careful. Like, you know, I don't want to make you talk about something that isn't your area of
expertise. And so I called him up and I was like, you know, I'm a little bit concerned about, you
know, human trafficking. Like, I know it's not something you've looked into. And he's like,
oh, yeah, it's a scam. It's like, okay. It's like, okay, Joel, tell me more.
Is his middle name Istha or what? So what Joel Best actually mentioned to me was that,
you know, you're a poor Kenyan 23 year old. You want to move to the United States
to be a domestic worker because you're going to make more money being a nanny in the United States
than you would in Kenya. So you apply for a guest worker visa, you get the visa, great.
But a plane ticket is 1500 bucks. And you don't have 1500 bucks. So you take out a loan
from one of these recruitment agents that you can find locally. And they say, okay,
you have to pay us back, you know, 300 extra bucks a month or whatever. But you'll be making decent
wages. And it's not going to be that big of a deal. That scenario, that is trafficking.
That's bonded labor. You're paying off a debt.
And it's interesting because we talked about this kind of deal before as something that
could be very easily abused. Right.
But also if this arrangement doesn't have legitimate means of existing, then how are
people going to get to the US in the first place? Right. But also what's really interesting
to me is when I started working on this, I thought that scenario wasn't bonded labor that
what then often happens that like you get there and their recruitment agent says like, well,
I said it was going to be 300 bucks, but now it's 1000 bucks a month. And I'm taking 90%
of your salary. Like this does happen. But that actually isn't necessary for it to be trafficking.
Interesting.
The definition of trafficking is simply working to pay off a debt. That's it.
Oh, so it's just it's, it's in dank sure, essentially.
Yeah. So it's it's anyone who has to pay off a recruitment fee. It's bonded labor,
you're paying off a bond. Okay.
But then what that does is adding this huge category of workers. I mean, this is a massive
percentage of migrant workers are operating under some form of paying off debt because
who in a developing country has money for a plane ticket? Like this is how people do this.
01:20:48,800 --> 01:20:53,680
So now you've got these numbers that go around about like 40 million people in the world are
trafficked. But it's like, first of all, 14 million of those are in forced marriages,
which I'm not wild about, but are also very different than sort of modern day slavery.
You also have a huge number of people who are just paying off debts and like,
are some of those people deeply and darkly exploited? Yes. But some of them aren't,
some of them pay off their debts and then they go home or they could abuse in the United States
and like, whatever. Yes. And that what that means is that you lose the ability to get real numbers
on the situation. Yes.
You don't know how many people are being abused. You're not trying to estimate how many people
are in abusive situations because it's just the presence of a contract
is the definition. It's just the contractual form. That's a good way to put it. It's very
clear that they're doing this to get the numbers up and to pitch the problem as much bigger than
it is. And so the second thing that they start doing is that they start talking about modern
day slavery. This is the way that trafficking is now portrayed when it's labor trafficking.
So anybody working under these terrible conditions is considered a modern day slave.
And so in another hallmark of a moral panic, what you now have is the term modern day slavery
being used to describe a huge range of activities, right? That it does include people that are in
the worst working conditions imaginable, right? They're a neural area. They're not being paid.
They're essentially trapped there. Those cases exist. They're extremely prevalent. Like,
that is a massive problem. But then you're also using the same term to describe people as,
I borrowed a bunch of money to go be a nanny in the US for six months and I paid it off and I came
home. Is calling all of that slavery, is this helping? And what's the logic that says that it
is? I think what's happened, what's really interesting is as there is more NGO activity and
more, you know, there's just more awareness raising campaigns of all kinds these days, right?
Like breast cancer, human trafficking. There's all kinds of issues that we are constantly having
somebody tap us on the shoulder and being like, hey, you should care about this. And so that has
resulted in this arms race among NGOs to cast my issue is more important than these other issues.
And so if I say, like, you know, there's Kenyans that are coming to America. They're working as
nannies. A lot of them have to pay off really huge debts. There's not real complaint mechanisms for
them. You're like, hmm, somebody else comes to you and says, there are 25 million slaves in the
world. And we thought we eradicated it in 1865, but it's back. This is a huge component of modern
day slavery rhetoric, comparing it explicitly comparing it to the experience of slaves in
the United States. And so when I say to you, we thought we eradicated slavery, but it's back.
That gives you a specific mental image, right? And I'm telling you, there's more slaves now
than at any time in history, which is one of these numbers that goes around, which like,
yeah, if you're defining slaves as like a huge percentage of the workforce in developing countries,
then like, yeah, slavery is back. If you're explicitly equating it with American slavery,
it's like, those conditions are not common. Does it also speak to our rescue fantasies too?
Totally. We would prefer to rescue someone who's been enslaved to just providing resources for
people who are like, you know, I got here and like, I thought this was a fair deal or like,
I thought I could pay this off, but like it turns out I can't or like the interest on this is really
exorbitant. I mean, I can see how that also would be harder to get attention for because
exorbitant interest is crucial to American economies. So it's kind of rich to be saying that
like, it's not okay when people do it, you know, in this one situation. So it's like you have to
castrify the whole thing that once again, we would prefer to be someone's savior than to be
someone's helper. Totally. And Janie Chung has this great article where she defines exploitation creep
where she says another reason why it emerged was because at the end of the Bush administration,
people were starting to put more emphasis on forced labor and about structural systems
that were creating these problems, right, of that companies don't know their supply chains,
there's really low wages in a lot of countries, there's not a lot of labor inspectors. That was
the kind of consciousness that was happening in the 2000s as, you know, as people really turned
against Bush in his later years of office, they were also turning on the concept of trafficking
and saying like, well, you know, it's not a secret criminal enterprise, it's farms in the United States,
like we know where it is, it's restaurants, and it's hotels, like these hotels that are having
like the warning signs of trafficking, it's like a really big warning sign is that you all use
contractors for all of your cleaning services, and you don't even know what your employees make.
Like your workers are being trafficked. Yes, like that's the warning sign, right? And so there was
this sort of larger consciousness emerging of like, it's us, right? Like it's not mysterious,
we know exactly what's happening, we know exactly how, and we know how to fix it, like there need
to be better procedures, there need to be complaint mechanisms. Yes, the title of the actual spiritual
sequel to get out. I mean, what what Janie Chung says at the conclusion of her article,
recasting all forced labor is trafficking and all trafficking as slavery, exploitation creep
relabels abuses as more extreme than is legally accurate in what appears to be a strategic effort
to garner increased commitment to their eradication. So end modern slavery, that's the phrase you see
all the time. We love ending, we love solving, it's our favorite thing. Totally. And it's much
sexier than being like hotels shouldn't have outsourced cleaning staff. These procedural
things that are like actually how you end forced labor. Or like, you know, you let people unionize.
Yes. For God's sake, yes. It takes us back to this rescue mission. Yeah, it's not about workers
getting rights for themselves. Right. It's about us finding the ones who happen to be being exploited
in this terrible, very unambiguous way and saving them and everyone who's working conditions while
also terrible don't fall into this exact paradigm can just go fly. Yes, I wrote this article last
year about this house painter in Miami who had suffered really bad wage theft from his employer.
His employers basically said like, I'm not going to pay you. It's like a year and a half long
process to sue your boss for fucking wage theft. It was this awful nightmare. And there was finally
a judgment where his boss had to pay him and just didn't. And so we had to start an entirely new
process because one was a civil and one was criminal. And it's like the place where you're
going to find quote unquote trafficking real exploitation is where there are not systems
for accountability. And we know where those places are. We know that maybe better than we
know anything else. Yes. So essentially, it's like we find this problem. If we're to be honest
with ourselves in any way, we have to admit that the problem is a structural one and it deals with
the much broader issue of labor conditions in the United States. And in order to distract
ourselves from that, we have to create a big bad. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. The last thing I want to say
about this amazing Janie Chung article is that she describes this case of 300 Filipino teachers
who came to the United States to work in Louisiana public schools. Wow. And they came under
legal visas. There's an H1B visa where foreign workers can come over. They paid 16,000 dollars
each each. Oh my God. Which is four times what they were earning per year in the Philippines to
come over and work as teachers and to work as teachers in public schools in the United States.
I mean, I. Yeah. Oh my God. Okay. You know, once they once they came, the recruiter charged them
again was like, it's like Ticketmaster where they're like, oh, by the way, there's like an extra
thing you have to pay. Like the recruiter treated them terribly. Yeah, that happened to me with
Michael Bolton. It's not his fault. And like the recruiter then made them work for an extra year
in the United States and up to the percentage they had to pay. Like awful, awful stuff. What's
really interesting is they actually came forward and they filed a case against the schools and
against the recruiter and they were both acquitted because according to Janie Chung whom I interviewed,
she said that the jury was like, this doesn't sound like modern slavery to us. Right. And it's
like, it's not like it's pretty, it's yeah, it's unfair and it's to my mind criminal and it's
shouldn't be allowed to happen. But like, yes, it's not. It's not the very overblown thing that
it has been described to you as and that's not that Curie's fault. So it's like, this is the hole
that we've dug with this term trafficking where it's like we've we've gone to the most extreme
exaggeration of the problem. But then it's like when you describe the actual conditions that people
are working under, which are extremely common, it's like, eh, I don't know about slavery.
I don't know. I mean, I don't get paid enough either. Yeah. Right. But like by any other metric,
this is fucking terrible. Yeah. It's just it's only if you compare it to slavery that it doesn't
seem that bad. Yes. Yeah. Or setting ourselves up to fail. Like is this helping at all? Which
should be the question we ask about all these things, you know, regardless of, you know, of so
many other factors, like is this actually helping the actual people who we claim to want to help?
Right. Or does this feel good to us for some reason? Right. And it's like,
yeah, I'm just going to say the same thing again. I don't know. I want to I want to be really careful
in that one of the things that I really struggle with with this field is that there's a lot of
there's a lot of NGOs and a lot of philanthropists working on trafficking
who seem really nice. Like, oh, yeah. There's lots of very nice people who are who are putting
their energy behind something that might be politically ineffective. And they really care.
And like, it's not evil, but it's just to me, it's really naive. Right. I spent a lot of time on
the phone with this organization, Polaris this week, that has the National Trafficking Hotline.
And I sort of confronted them about this of like, you have all these signs in airports, yet your
website says that like the vast majority of quote unquote trafficking does not involve movement.
And like, you're quite good actually at saying on your website that it's like, it's going to be
someone you know, stranger danger doesn't exist. And I'm saying like, but now you have these posters
saying if you see something say something in airports, and they're like, Oh, but you know,
it has our National Trafficking Hotline on there. We're not telling people to call the cops, like,
you know, cops can be abusive, we get it. But I don't think people are going to see those posters
and remember the number. I think people are going to see those posters. And then a week later,
they're going to see something quote unquote, suspicious. And then they're going to call the
fucking cops. You're feeding into this myth. And you're, you're not taking seriously the
unintended consequences of every person in America feeling empowered to quote unquote,
save the children and like, snitch on random neighbors and getting them into contact with the
police. I think this has to do with the idea of awareness as a universal right. We have to raise
awareness of things. I want you to take me down this rabbit hole so bad. I mean, the first thing
that comes up for me around that is that, you know, we're living in a time of awareness sweeps
weak, perpetually, right? Like to, so to get someone to pay attention to something, you kind
of do have to sell it. Yeah. I mean, first of all, if you're trying to raise public awareness of an
issue, I think we're in a time when you have to think even more than in the past, maybe about,
you know, if I am needing to go to all these rhetorical lengths to get people to even pay
attention to the thing I'm trying to tell them about, am I changing in some way the nature of
the thing I'm trying to describe in order to try and beckon people to listen to me and pay attention
to it? Like, am I doing a hard sell that essentially changes my point? And then if that's the case,
then like, what does awareness become? If you're like looking for something that you're probably
not going to see, and then he just sees on something else that rubs you the wrong way,
but maybe you can't say why. As a little wrap up thought here, one thing that's really difficult
about this is that you don't want to sort of over debunk and take away what really happened to people.
One of the people who is pushing for more of these posters and airports is named Alicia
Kazakowicz, and she's someone who like the worst thing happens to her. Like, she was groomed online,
she was kidnapped from her home, she was confined in a basement, she was abused, she was filmed.
I mean, it's the worst thing you can imagine. It's real.
Yeah, and something that shouldn't be able to happen in a society where children are being raised.
And what's interesting is some of the kind of anti-trafficking, debunking, tight people I
talked to this week, sometimes you get this sort of tinge of, well, you know, doesn't this survivor
story sound a little far-fetched? You're like, you know, this internet sleuthery stuff of like,
well, if she says that she was kidnapped, the windows in her bedroom actually locked, so why
am I, I mean, this type of stuff that I find so gross in general, and especially gross here.
Like the grasping at straws rhetoric of like, let's not admit that any terrible things are
happening. Yes. And also, you know, I interviewed people for this that identify as trafficking
victims and something really terrible happened to them. And I'm not going to take that away from
them. Like the worst thing you can do as a journalist, and especially as a person,
is to tell somebody that their pain isn't real or that it doesn't matter. And so I think we can
all be adults and talk about this in a way that acknowledges the real pain of people who have
experienced forms that sort of do fit the stereotypical narrative, but also that that's not the only
narrative, that we can acknowledge that there are other forms of abuse that we also need to take
seriously. I think that we are struggling to find ways to say that, that all kinds of human
experience and trauma are real, but that there's this certain form of trauma and this certain
form of crime that is being represented in a really disproportionate way. That feels like a
headlock that it's hard to get out of. You're asking me to only think of, of that awfulness
when thinking, when telling you is like some powerful person in society that you can do
whatever you want to maybe these other people. Right. Well, also, I mean, to me,
I think it has to be possible to recognize the trauma of somebody like Alicia Kozakowicz
and acknowledge what happened to her. And it's possible to acknowledge the trauma of someone
whose boss is stealing from them for years and has to go through a long court trial or someone
who is a homeless teenager that has to engage in survival sex to get a warm place to sleep that
night. Or someone who's a sex worker who's getting busted all the time. Yes. I think it's like,
it doesn't have to take away from one person to acknowledge another person's pain. And I also,
I think somebody like Alicia Kozakowicz has every right to advocate for posters at airports. Like,
that is her right. She can use her experience for anything she wants to. I also think that
sex workers have the right to talk about their trauma and the way that this is affecting them.
And I think interracial couples that have the Cindy McCain's of the world calling TSA on them
also have the right to describe their experiences. And all of those experiences are valid. Yeah. And
you know, the purpose of politics and the purpose of sort of adulthood is to look at these different
interests and look at the way, not the way that they compete with each other, but the way that
they intertwine. And there are ways to acknowledge the experiences of people who went through these
terrible things without making other people's lives worse. I think that there's also something
going on where the more dangerous of a country we become for the child, the more we preach about
caring for the child. And it's like, maybe you care about the idea of children, but like,
why don't you give free lunch to the real ones? The real ones are hungry.
I think that this speaks to the fact that if you were trying to get help for someone,
then the best way to do it in the society we live in might to be like, no, no, no,
they're, they're not a criminal and they're not criminalizable because they fall into this tiny
slice of humanity called unambiguous victim. And it's because they're the victim of the crime
of the week. Right. I think, I think you've ruined Thanksgiving. I think that's pretty good.
Yeah. Oh, good. Okay. So everybody ruin Thanksgiving, ruin it.
So when you fly somewhere, if you see something, don't say something.
But if you see Cindy McCain, run.