You're Wrong About - Wayfair and Human Trafficking Statistics
Episode Date: August 10, 2020In another "mini" episode that accidentally turned mega, Mike tells Sarah about the Wayfair conspiracy theory and the sketchy statistical screenshots that have shown up in its wake. Digressi...ons include "Inside Llewyn Davis," Miranda Priestley and (sigh) Jeffrey Epstein. This episode contains, we're sorry to say, detailed descriptions of child abuse. We recommend listening to this episode alongside our "Human Trafficking" episode from last year, which contains much more context for understanding this issue: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/human-trafficking/id1380008439?i=1000465289965Support us:Subscribe on PatreonDonate on PaypalBuy cute merchWhere else to find us: Sarah's other show, Why Are Dads Mike's other show, Maintenance PhaseSupport the show
Transcript
Discussion (0)
To be fair, it's a hard position to be put in as a company because you don't want to be the company
that's saying on the record, we are not trafficking in children.
Welcome to You're Wrong About, where we return to topics that we talked about not that long ago
because so much has happened somehow. Oh god, or nothing has happened. Or nothing has happened,
but a lot is happening on Facebook. A lot of long phrases are getting hashtagged.
Welcome to You're Wrong About, the show where I could be having a completely free Wednesday night
if not for Mark Zuckerberg and his quote choices. Yes.
But I'm happy to be here with you, Mike. I'm Michael Hobbs, I'm a reporter for The Huffington
Post. I'm Sarah Marshall. I'm working on a book about the satanic panic, which keeps getting longer.
Just like this endless episode that we're about to do. And we are on Patreon at patreon.com slash
you're wrong about. And we're on PayPal and other places. And we've been designing disco
t-shirts for you guys. Very excited about that. And god, today, I mean, this is like kind of a mini,
another mini episode. It's a mini episode on top of a regular episode. So it's like when you get a
Bloody Mary where they put like a little cheeseburger on as a garnish. So like, this is the little
cheeseburger garnish part. And then once you get through this, then there's like a whole other drink.
Oh, god. So one of the things that we love about our listeners is that oftentimes someone on the
internet will be like saying some bullshit. And then you'll find like one of our listeners
in the replies being like, that's not true. I learned about it on You're Wrong About.
Boom. And then they put a link to our show. And so we've become like ammunition for people like
well, actually, in others, which I love. We're a footnote. We're footnotes. We're dynamic.
Yes, ugly footnotes. And so we thought we would like make a more deliberate kind of primer
on the numbers that you see floating around right now. So we're basically just going to go
through a bunch of the numbers that are on various Instagram posts. All right, let's do it.
So okay, so we have some numbers. But first of all, do we want to talk about the Wayfair thing?
Yeah, I mean, I know, I feel like I know the basics of it, which is that people were looking at
items on Wayfair that were like chests or freezers or like, like large items that cost like $50,000,
like way more than you would think that they would actually cost.
Yeah, they should have been like 500 bucks and they're like 10,000.
Right. And so rather than assuming that like a decimal place got put in the wrong part of
the number somehow, a conspiracy evolved that these items were so expensive because they were
being used to traffic children in, the money you spend on the item includes the cost of the child
who may be either literally shipped to you or like maybe you got them some other way. But I'm
given to assume that the kid was supposed to just be shipped in inside of the furniture.
And what definitely did not help, you know, like cabinets have funky names, right?
Yeah.
It turns out a lot of the products that were being sold, like one of them was called the Annabelle
Shelf and then people started looking around and there was a girl named Annabelle Wilson
who went missing. And so it starts to look like what you're really doing is you're basically
purchasing this specific child. Okay. There was also a cabinet or something called Samia
and there was a girl named Samia Moomin that went missing. And so a lot of the screen grabs that
went around were sort of like this picture of this cabinet and then a picture of this girl
that had disappeared. Wait, when does this start going around? Give us a timeline here.
The first tweet about this was June 14th from a QAnon account. So it started on Twitter and
then it moved to the conspiracy theories board on Reddit. And apparently that's where it like
really caught fire. So the traffickers kidnapped this girl, kept her in lay way and some traffickers
are selling her to some clients using the Wayfair system. Yes. I will also say Wayfair did not help.
So it wasn't just cabinets that were really expensive. There was also these weird things
that the same pillow or the same shower curtain would be on Wayfair for like $50
and then it would be listed elsewhere on the site for like $10,000. Okay.
A couple days after this, like once it really explodes, Wayfair puts out a statement. The
statement says, there is of course no truth to these claims. The products in question are
industrial grade cabinets that are accurately priced. Wayfair is basically saying like, well,
of course the cabinet cost $50,000. It's industrial. It costs $50,000 because of the absence of children.
But yeah, it sounds sketchy. I feel like what people want is like some kind of breakdown of like
why? Like if people could have like an itemized list of where that money is going, I think that's
what I would want. I mean, an actual explanation of why the products were at these bananas prices
would have been way better than being like, oh, the prices aren't bananas. The prices are fine.
Yeah. Because it doesn't do anything for the pillow that costs $50 or $10,000. If your parents
catch you sneaking out to go to Jeff's house, you're not going to get very far by being like,
I wasn't sneaking out. I was checking on the storm window. Like instead you have to be like,
I was sneaking out, but Jeff has cancer. Always use cancer. You know, it's not persuasive to
act like the thing you're doing that is not normal is in fact normal. Like no one likes that.
I mean, I think this is so typical of conspiracy theories where there's something that is out of
the ordinary. And then people jump to an extremely specific counter explanation for the thing.
Because this doesn't have to be child sex trafficking. This could be like drug trafficking.
Maybe these cabinets are $50,000 because they're full of cocaine. Or maybe it's some
weird money laundering thing. I mean, anything. It doesn't have to be like an innocent explanation.
Yes. Other than the kid's names. The only other evidence that this was child sex trafficking
is apparently there is a Russian search engine called Yandex. Okay. And if you type in the sort
of 10 digit product code into Yandex and then you follow it with source USA. So SRC USA, like any
website from the USA, you hit enter. Apparently, I have not done this for very obvious reasons,
but apparently you would get like child pornography photos. Of course, what journalists find out,
hopefully with like an incognito window or something, is that if you type anything into
this search engine with source USA after it, you get images of child porn. Like at like words,
like the word cotton. Yeah, you can type in like cat playing with piece of string and then source
USA, like these weird little letters at the end. Like it's just a really sketchy Russian website
with a lot of porn on it. So it's like a website that has a child pornography search code and like,
okay, there's a great scoop there. Like what the hell is going on with this web with the search
engine? That's the story here. Pearls before redditors, man. And then of course, within days,
people start to figure out that all of these quote unquote missing kids that, you know,
are supposed to be stashed in the cabinets. The vast majority of them came home years ago.
This poor girl, Samia Moomin, she has come home. This girl goes on Facebook Live. And she says,
like, this was actually a really painful period in my life. And it's not fun to go onto the internet
and find all of these photos that like my family was putting around the city looking for me. I
am not missing. I am not trafficked. Take me off of the internet, please. I'm not even this picture
anymore. Exactly. But so what's frustrating about this is it's very similar to me to the
jet fuel can't melt steel beams thing. Oh, with 9-11? What is that again? This is like where
internet sleuthery gets you, right? This idea that there's like the meta explanation that is
baked into a lot of conspiracy theories that like, I, a random person with no specialist knowledge,
can do all of this sort of Wikipedia level research and crack these massive conspiracies.
So the explanation of the jet fuel can't melt steel beams thing was that with 9-11, you know,
the planes hit the towers and the towers eventually collapse. The conspiracy theory explanation
is that apparently jet fuel only burns at 800 degrees or something. I don't know the numbers,
but it's some, it's some number. Some very high number. Yes, it's a very high number. And then
to melt steel, steel has to be like 1200 degrees. Okay. Again, I'm making up these numbers, but
some number higher than jet fuel burns at. You're going to get some hate mail from metallurgists.
Yes, please do not, please do not email us. So as soon as these rumors start going around,
actual structural engineers point out steel does not have to liquefy to lose a lot of its strength.
Like maybe you could crash a huge thing into it maybe then. Yes, if you heat steel up to
whatever it was 800 degrees, it's going to become really fucking weak and it can't hold up the other
floors of the building and the building collapses. So it's all these people without specialist
knowledge who are speculating about these technical things that they do not understand
and coming up with these Baroque theories. So the same thing happens here where people
look into this and they're like, well, why else would the cabinets be $50,000? And then
people who actually work in online retail point out that a lot of the pricing on online retail
sites these days is algorithmic. So the vendors, it's all like these third party vendors that
are posting ads on Wayfair, they'll actually troll other websites and be like, oh, well that
cabinet on this other website is $200. So we're going to price it at $300. Prices change all the
time. And like human beings do not look at these things, right? So sometimes the algorithms
can go a little haywire. There was infamously a textbook, a medical textbook on Amazon that was
priced at $24 million a couple of years ago because there were two companies and each one of them
was watching the other company's website and they would raise their price. So if you go to 100,
I go to 200, you go to 300, I go to 400 and it just kept climbing up and up and up and up before
anybody noticed. Oh my god. There's also a thing that it looks like Wayfair doesn't like it when
third party vendors have items out of stock, like it reduces your rating on Wayfair to like have a
bunch of items that are out of stock. So when you run out of a pillow, instead of saying it's sold
out, what you do is you just change the price to $10,000 and then nobody ever tries to buy it again.
Oh, yeah. But anyway, I mean, I don't know, it's so like perfunctory to debunk these things because
of course it wasn't true. Well, but then, I mean, what it shows us is that there are an appreciable
number of people who do believe, and I think this is kind of getting to our next segment, that like
child trafficking looks like this, like it looks like kids being put into cabinets
and shipped via Federal Express. Yeah. I mean, there's also the thing that is important to a lot
of moral panics, this idea that it's hiding in plain sight. You know, you often see this thing of,
you know, they put zip ties on your car and then when you come over to investigate them,
that's when they kidnap you. It's this idea that after that, every time you see a zip tie,
you're like, the traffickers, like this is evidence. I see it, but other people don't see it. It's this
idea that there's these innocuous things around you that are signs of something sinister. And I
think these high prices on a random website, it's just like those zip ties, right? Where it's like
out of the ordinary, but it's also common enough that it can make you think that this problem is
everywhere because every time you see a high price on a retail website after that, you're like,
the traffickers. This is like Dr. Paster log chick. He's like, oh my god, Michelle has a rash.
Like that proves that Satan wrapped his actual tail around her actual neck.
Exactly. So, um, do you want to talk about some numbers now?
Oh my god. Can we talk about my favorite number first?
I was just about to send you a screen grab of it. Is it the one, the six, six, six one?
Yes.
Here, I'm sending you the screen grab.
So it's funny because this is in that kind of like live laugh love.
I know.
Aesthetic.
Totally.
Of like sort of wall art that you see at home goods.
Yeah.
And so at the top, it has an image of, it's not an image. It's like a stencil kind of cut out
of a hypodermic needle. And underneath that, it says a child in America is 66,667 times more
likely to be sold to human traffickers than die of COVID-19. In addition, your masks assist in
them being transported undetected and unidentified by anyone.
I do love that they said 66,667. Like they didn't, they didn't go all the way. They're like,
no, we don't want to be too obvious.
Yeah. It just makes it look like a more legitimate number, right? You're totally thrown off.
So of course, I mean, this is so dumb, but I did, I did the math on this.
Please give us the math. The math is bound to be spectacular.
The number that I could find, I mean, it's hard to get good numbers on this, but the number that
I could find is that 76 children have died of COVID as of, I think this was like as of July
23rd. So it's not an updated number, but it doesn't matter because this whole thing is
fake anyway. So who cares? But anyway, if you multiply that by 66,667, you get five million
kids. So in the time that we've had COVID, five million kids have been sold to traffickers.
So five million. So like a million kids a month is what that brings down to.
That number is 7% of the total number of children in the population.
I guess that's my next question. Are these being shown to us as the same number is the
same level of direness or are there statistics where it's like the number is used to be lower,
but they're higher because of the masks? The mask thing has become a weirdly prominent
aspect of this moral panic in the last couple of months. It's not clear to me what the logic is,
because I guess the logic is that if you're a trafficker and you kidnap a child, the child
has a mask on, then people will not recognize that as a missing child. But how many members of
the population know what the missing children look like, first of all. And second of all,
if the myth is that a million children are going missing every month, then before I go to Walmart,
I'm supposed to know what all the missing children look like in my area.
Well, there's like 20,000 missing children in Washington state by that math. If you just break
it down to like every state gets the same amount. So say it's like 5,000 in the Seattle area. So
you just have to memorize the names and faces of 5,000 missing kids. Yeah. Just going through my
binder every morning, 5,000 kids. Yeah. Like preparing Miranda Priestly for a gala. I actually
think that there's something really pernicious in this ad, which doesn't get remarked upon.
Okay. The thing that really bugs me about it is this idea that they're being sold to human
traffickers. Yes. That there's this idea that children are being kidnapped and then there's this
international network of sort of shady businessmen who are literally buying and
selling children. I mean, this is what the Wayfair conspiracy was based on too.
Yeah. Two full transactions are taking place here and like three separate abuse events where
like the child is kidnapped, the child is sold to the traffickers, and then the traffickers
then turn around and I guess sell the child to someone else. So it's like- Exactly.
Yeah. It's like an economic world apparently where there are middlemen and brokers and
corporations and like this whole robust economy of child snatching and sorting and selling.
Yes. And I want to be crystal clear that there is no evidence that that has ever happened.
Yeah. What I think this depends on is this idea that there is some rapacious demand for
sex with children. Everyone in society should know that attraction to children is quite rare
in the population. People who are attracted to pre-pubescent children, we know that it is
less than 1% of the entire population. It is actually quite rare for people to be attracted
to pre-pubescent children. And then what are the numbers for people actually acting on that?
Well, this is the thing. We don't know, but we know that it's relatively small because they do
these phallometry tests where they can actually test the amount of arousal that you exhibit based
on certain photos. So they can show you photos and see how aroused you get. And so there's some
debate over like how good this measurement is, but based on the information that we have,
most people who are attracted to pre-pubescent children are not only attracted to pre-pubescent
children. So what we are pretty sure of is that the vast majority of people that are attracted
to pre-pubescent children live their lives. They get married to people. They probably never tell
anyone about it. Maybe they tell a therapist, but like they get married, they have kids,
they live their lives, they don't really act on it. That's it. So it's not the majority of people
who have these attractions who act on them. Or they lead solitary lives. But the point is that
it's possible to harbor these feelings without letting your life be guided by them. But so
the other barrier that I think is also really important. So pedophilia is pretty rare in the
population. Acting on pedophilia is pretty rare. And the number of people who are interested in
purchasing sex with abused children is also very small. I realize this is really disturbing to
talk about, but actual abuse cases, actual abuse of children, which is predominantly done by relatives,
acquaintances, or people in positions of power, part of the grooming process is pedophiles
convincing themselves that these relationships are consensual. That it's actually very rare for
a child molester to identify as a child molester. What they think that they are doing is having a
relationship. And so if you are purchasing sex with a kidnapped child who is in a hotel room or
chained or bound in some other way, extremely upset, that destroys that fantasy. It reminds them
that they are harming children and they do not want to be reminded of that. And so again,
just the market of people who are interested in these kinds of transactions with children
are vanishingly small. It doesn't mean it doesn't happen. But there just isn't a market
for this kind of behavior with prepubescent children. Yeah, like within this very rare
in the scheme of things means of molesting a child. I think it is like still rare to molest
a child or to abuse a child in the way that we're being taught to envision every single
instance of anything like this. Right. And this is also, again, disturbing to think about,
but there's also just the logistics of it that most people who are violating against children,
there's oftentimes substance abuse issues, there's oftentimes mental illness issues.
These are not very functional people typically, the ones who actually offend. And so the idea
that they're interested in paid sex with a minor and they are good enough at the dark web,
they have these networks of international elites, they have enough money to be paying for this on
a regular basis. I mean, that's just like another leap of implausibility. There's not that many
people that are interested in harming a child in this way and capable of purchasing this kind of
activity. Right. I mean, I feel like if I'm someone who wants to harm a child, it's hard for me to
couple that with the kind of like very calculated executive function that you would need in order
to go through this whole complicated kind of dark web transaction process. And then also,
you know, the people who are being envisioned in these conspiracy theories, you know, Q and
on is very much about the alleged misdeeds of the Hollywood elite. Like I think that within
this scenario, it's supposed to be, you know, wealthy, powerful people, but it can't all be the
elites if we're talking about these numbers. Right. And also, I mean, if we look at the real
cases that we know about, right, of people like R. Kelly or Jeffrey Epstein, you know, Jeffrey
Epstein is about as close to this stereotype as you get. I mean, he had a plane called the Lolita
Express, so like he's really a great example of someone who knew what they were doing. But what's
interesting about the Epstein case is that was he buying kids online? No, he was using his power
to make people trust him. This is the same thing that R. Kelly did. I'm going to make you a singer.
When we see real cases of this, it's not people that are just like buying kids off of some shipping
container or using the dark web. It's people with power and without accountability. And that doesn't
mean that they're global elites and they're flying you around on private jets. It can just be a
soccer coach who's very well liked by all the other teachers in the school. The thing that drives
me nuts about all of this like kidnapped kids stuff is it distracts us from the fact that in
real cases, the problem is not that victims don't come forward. The problem is not that nobody sees
anything. It's that they do see things, they do report things, and nothing happens. All of this
is a distraction from the patterns that we see in real cases of child abuse. So even in Epstein's
case, who clearly didn't have a moral objection to sexually abusing children, even Epstein was
not buying and selling kids on some sort of international network. Because why bother? Why
create more work for yourself? Actually, I found a really interesting study of every single human
trafficking case that has been prosecuted in the United States between 2000 and 2015. Do you know
how many of those cases were from organized cartels? Zero? Literally zero. I mean, there were some
that were linked to gangs, like three or four people. There were some that were sort of like
mom and pop, they call them operations. But there was nothing with any ties internationally. There
was nothing with any level of hierarchy or organization. I really don't think we should
use the word trafficking unless it's totally unavoidable, which I don't know when it would be,
because if we mean traffic in terms of anyone engaging in underage sex work for any reason
in any situation is trafficked, people don't picture that when they hear the word trafficking.
Oh, totally. I mean, they picture you being crammed into a wafer cabinet.
Oh, yeah. And also, if you're a queer kid who runs away at age 16 from your extremely abusive
and violent parents, you end up being homeless, you have no options because there's no services
available for homeless youth in America, the only way that you're going to get a warm place to sleep
is by having sex with somebody. So you have sex with that person and you sleep over at their house.
Does calling that trafficking, like, does that help anyone? Yeah.
We're going to send away the guy who purchased sex with a teenager. Maybe he knew she was 16.
Maybe he didn't. He definitely should have known. He's now a trafficker. He goes away for 40 years.
Great. Does that give her a place to stay? Does it make her less vulnerable to that happening
to her again? Does that make her less likely to have needed to run away to begin with? Does it
make families better? Exactly. So it's just, like, fine if you want to call it trafficking,
but it's not clear that that's helping anybody. Yeah. Okay. Next number. Do you want to do
another number? Yes. So another one that we have been sent, I don't have a screen grab of this one.
This is the exact wording. 300,000 times per year underage girls are sold for sex.
Can I choose, like, red, yellow, green for these? Like, a snopescale where, like, red is, like,
totally untrue. Yellow is, like, okay, maybe kind of. And green is, like, yes. I feel like
this is a yellow one where, like, I believe that there can be, like, 300,000 individual transactions
between clients and underage sex workers who are being coerced into sex work and aren't legally
able to consent. Like, that seems possible. This number is actually a sort of game of telephone
version of a number that has been around for years. This is one of the most prominent numbers
that you find that 300,000 children in the United States are at risk of being trafficked.
Which is the vaguest statistic in the whole world. Yes. Because I'm at risk of every fucking thing.
I mean, just on its face, the idea of people being at risk of something is completely absurd,
because we're all technically at risk of everything. I'm at risk of a meteor right now,
and yet I bravely carry on. Also, it is based on a 2001 study where they break at risk kids into
17 categories. So there's, like, homeless children, kids in public housing. One of them is female
gang members. One of them is child victims of unwanted exposure to sexual materials via the
internet. And of course, they're all overlapping, right? Because some of the kids that are homeless
also get sent dick texts. Like, they can be at risk in so many ways all at once.
This is like the trajectory that they go through in the paper. It's kind of amazing.
There's 523,000 runaways, which isn't true, but we'll get to that later. 35% of those
are away from home for more than a week. That also is not true, by the way. And then of that,
30% of them are at risk of being trafficked. No methodology given.
They're just like, ah, it feels like 30%. This is not a recipe. You are not adding nutmeg.
So this is how they get to 300,000, is they just add up all the categories. And the author of the
paper now says that he would not publish it today. So this number appears on anti-trafficking
websites to this day. So I guess we started off with a real number of something.
And then extrapolated that to random numbers of other things. And then the researcher disowned
their own work, and the internet doesn't care. Although this methodology actually shows up
elsewhere. So there's an infamous University of Texas Austin study that says that 79,000 children
are trafficked in Texas alone. And the way that they calculate that number is of the 290,000
children who experience abuse in Texas, 25% of them will be trafficked. It's not clear where they
get the 25% from, but they're just like, okay, a lot of kids experience abuse, 25% of them will be
trafficked, math, math, math, 79,000 kids are being trafficked in Texas. The most amazing thing
about this study, and you find this so much in trafficking statistics, we have the estimate that
there are 79,000 children victims of trafficking in Texas, right? They then note in the same study
that in the previous year, the police in Texas only identified 320 victims of trafficking.
And the implication is that the police are doing a terrible job, which is a weird thing for a
conservative meme to be implying when you think about it. We know that other types of crimes
are under reported, right? Everybody knows that for every rape that gets reported to the police,
there's three or four or 10 that don't get reported. For this number two work, for every
reported case of child trafficking, there would have to be 256 that are not reported.
There is no other crime that has a ratio like that. If things were happening on this scale,
and I think this probably comes back to some degree to the fact that people I think are bad
at visualizing what a lot of an item would look like. You cannot picture, you know, 60,000,
300,000 children. Yes. Yeah. Okay. Next number, I'm just going to send you a tweet. There you go.
Okay. All right. Do you want to read the tweet or I guess read the infographics the tweet contains?
I do. It's also weird because a lot of these have that fuzzy look. I know. Where like you can tell
they've been sort of like screen grabbed and passed around a few times. Right. Like sort of
folded up in somebody's pocket. Yeah. Yeah. Okay. So this graphic says missing children per year,
Spain, 20,000, Australia, 25,000, France, 39,000, which is like a nice specific
not round number that makes it look more credible. Mexico, 45,000, Canada, 50,000, Germany, 100,000,
United Kingdom, 230,000, United States, 800,000. 800,000. And then there is an accompanying image
and it's in that like classic meme look with like impact font. Yeah. Yeah. And it says children,
don't just disappear. Yeah. And then it's images of four red shoes, which I know are like a theme
in QAnon. Yeah. It's very it. Yeah. Yes. So this number goes around a lot. This idea that there's
800,000 missing kids in America. And 100,000 in Germany. I mean, every number on that
infographic is wrong, by the way. I looked up the other countries. Really? I mean, just to pick one,
it says that there's 230,000 kids go missing in the UK. It's actually 112,000. But anyway,
putting that aside, I like the 800,000 number because sometimes you come across numbers in human
trafficking that are like fractally wrong. Like at any level of detail, they're wrong in a different
and new way. So first of all, 800,000 is not the number of missing kids in America. I don't know
why this has, I mean, I do know why this has caught on with people because it's a really big number.
But this number is from a 2002 study and it's based on 1999 data. One thing I really don't
like about these things is that we always see this phrase go missing, right? Of kids go missing
every year. What these big numbers refer to is not kids who disappear. These are reports of missing
children. And there's a huge difference because the same study that found there were 800,000 reports
of missing children that year also found that 99.8% of them returned home. So if you believe
the 800,000 number, you also have to believe the 99.8 number. So that number was based on a survey
that collected all of the reports to the police of missing children plus people that report it to
like NGOs and stuff like there's other agencies that take reports of missing children. So there's
kids that are getting counted twice. Yes, exactly. There's kids that are getting counted twice. And
also that also counts kids that run away more than once, which is actually quite common, like
especially kids in abusive foster care situations or custody battles. If there's like a really
ugly custody battle going on, my husband took the kids for the weekend and he didn't bring them back.
You have to report that to the police as missing for them to go to your husband's house and try to
get them back for you. And oftentimes that will happen a number of times in the year because
you're still legally obligated potentially to give the kids to your husband. So a lot of these
reports are actually being generated by like the same kids over and over again. So if your parents
had like a really nasty custody battle in 1999, you can look at that number and be like, yeah,
like 50 of those are me. Yeah. I'm that good. A much more recent number than that is that in 2019,
there were 421,000 kids reported missing to the FBI. Doesn't sound as good, Mike, does it? And
same thing with this FBI number, over 99% of the kids come home. And so as we have discussed on the
show so many times, we think there's somewhere around 115 actual stranger danger kidnappings of
children per year. Another piece of evidence for this, this is actually interesting, there's only
161 Amber Alerts in 2018. So if there's like this massive wave of missing children, it's a little
weird that there's only 161 Amber Alerts because stranger danger kidnappings are exactly what
Amber Alerts are designed for. Yeah. There's also, have you seen this number that the average
trafficking victim or the average sex worker, depending on which screen grab you look at,
starts commercial sex when they're 13 years old. Have you seen this? I have not seen that one.
I like this one because it's based on the same 2001 article that produced the 300,000 kids are at
risk of trafficking statistic. So it's already debunked by the guy that wrote it. That number comes
from qualitative interviews with 107 sex workers. There's also a 1982 survey of sex workers where
they asked sex workers how old they are the first time they had sex and the average age was 13.5.
Which is a different question. Yes. What I also love about this statistic is that Polaris,
which is one of the biggest anti-trafficking organizations in the country, Polaris itself
has a debunking of this statistic. Really? Good for them. Making good choices.
The anti-trafficking organizations don't even stand by this one. Yeah, that's bad. So please
stop smashing that like button. Okay, next number. Let me send you another screen grab.
Oh boy. So we have the silhouette of a person with long hair, kind of a Rachel.
And the text says, human trafficking is one of the fastest growing criminal enterprises in the
world, which makes it sound like they're trying to recruit you to be a major in human trafficking.
With an estimated 40.3 million victims worldwide at any given time. Victims are young children,
teenagers, women and men. It's people. Those are just all the people.
Not non-binary people. Well, young children, but not adult people who identify as neither women
nor men. They are safe. No, everyone else is fucked. Non-binary. We just want you to know
everything's going to be fine. You're going to be okay. So I'm going to talk about this 40.3
million victims worldwide number. Okay. So this 40.3 million figure comes from the International
Labor Organization. And this is one of those ones where we have to keep zooming in on the number,
because 40 million trafficking victims includes an extremely wide range of behavior. So first of all,
around 16 million of those victims are enforced marriages. So this is a weird thing that has
happened that the legal definition now includes everyone who is in a forced marriage. And how
are you defining a forced marriage while we're on the subject? It includes anyone who was made
to enter a marriage in the last five years, regardless of their age. What is made to mean,
though, even? Well, exactly. I mean, this is the problem with these statistics is that there's a
huge spectrum of forcedness within that. Yes. I don't want to go down a whole rabbit hole,
because I would need to spend a lot of time looking into this issue to discuss it with any
level of nuance. But I think the main thing is that it's not what 99.9% of people would consider
trafficking to be. Yeah. If you want to question the ethics of having or, you know, marriages
arranged by the parents of the bride and groom or what have you that are happening in a country
where you don't live and where you maybe don't know anyone, then you can like sit, you know,
with that and think about, is this something where I can learn enough to determine whether
or not my opinion is helpful here? But it's not as exciting as a number like 40 million.
Right. I mean, I will also say that like as somebody who worked in development for 11 years,
I think that if you're looking for a development issue, some way that you feel like you can be
helping the developing world, don't pick something that's like a deeply entrenched cultural practice
like this that you don't know about. Like if you don't speak the language of a country,
don't start getting yourself involved in its like relationships between men and women type
institutions. I don't want to defend practices and say that like they're good. I'm just saying that
like if you don't know that much about this and you just heard about it on a screen grab on Instagram,
don't get involved, fix things in America where like you actually know how things work.
Right. So once we take out the 15 million that are enforced marriages, we're left with 25 million.
So 20 million of these people, the vast majority are forced laborers. This is anybody who is working
under conditions where they cannot leave basically. They do not have to be moved across borders. So
this can be somebody in the town where they grew up not being paid or they were lied to about
their recruitment conditions. Or they're being paid under the table and they can't go to anyone
to try and enforce being paid a living wage. A huge component of this is undocumented immigrants.
Right. I've interviewed people in America who are undocumented immigrants and their bosses say
if you quit, if you complain that I'm not paying you, I will call ICE on you. So this is actually
like a big problem in the world. Yeah. Although one of the weird methodological things with this,
with all of the numbers that are produced by this ILO report is that there's something in
deep in the footnotes in the methodological appendices that they do this by surveying people.
They talk to people on the phone. It seems there's some sort of in-person component of this.
If they ask somebody whether they're in a forced marriage or they've done forced labor,
if they refuse to answer, they mark that as they are a victim.
Yeah. That's not great. It's not great. They also do a really weird thing where instead of asking
you like are you a victim of forced labor, they ask you are you or anyone in your immediate family
a victim of forced labor. So again, you're getting people who are potentially being counted
multiple times in that for one thing. Exactly. They're deliberately choosing
methodologies that are going to make the numbers as high as possible. Again, so we started with
40 million. We remove everybody that's in a forced marriage. We're down to 25. Then we remove
everybody who's in forced labor. We finally get a sexual exploitation. So according to this study,
there are five million victims of forced sexual exploitation of which one million are children.
So if what you're concerned with is child sex trafficking, you should not be using the 40
million number. You should be using the one million number. What's very weird about this section of
the report is that they don't actually survey people. This isn't based on anything. So what
they're basically doing is they have another dataset of survivors of trafficking, survivors of
forced sexual exploitation. And basically what they do is they just apply the stories that they get
from those victims to the various countries. So if some percentage of their victims are from Kenya,
they'll just be like, oh, well, Kenya has this many forced sex workers. This is actually a really
big problem with any global statistics is that because it's really, really, really expensive to
do surveys in more than 190 countries, what they usually do is this clustering thing. So rather
than doing interviews with people in Kenya, Uganda, Zambia, Zimbabwe, that's really expensive to do
that in all four countries. So what you do is you just interview people in Kenya, you get a sample
there, and then you're like, okay, Uganda has around one third the per capita GDP of Kenya,
so we assume that child sex trafficking is higher there because the poverty rates are higher.
And so you adjust the number upwards and you say, well, Uganda has a smaller population than Kenya,
so you adjust the number downwards. So you basically just take these numbers from Kenya
and then you adjust them upwards and downwards according to various economic conditions in
Uganda. Yeah, I don't think that's good. This is my beef with any of these sort of like the global
slavery index is one of the worst ones. That's another trafficking one. What you're basically
doing is you're assuming exactly the thing you're trying to find out. Yes. Like I was looking at
police violence for our episode last week, right? So if you say like, well, okay, there's police in
Britain shoot about three people a year, and police in Germany shoot about 10 people a year.
Well, US has a bigger population, so let's say police in America shoot 20 people a year. That's
good, right? And it's like, well, no, because the exact thing you're trying to find out is are there
unique social, economic and policy conditions in the United States that would make this behavior
different there. If you're interested in child sex trafficking, you can't just say that Uganda has
more because it has a higher poverty rate, because maybe Uganda has less. Maybe the country has really
good policies that prevent child sex trafficking, or maybe there's something in the culture that
keeps this from happening as much as you would expect, given its population GDP, all of these
other factors. This is the entire point of the exercise. Right, because presumably you are
focused on finding out what the actual numbers would be, because that's the first thing that you
need to know to get an accurate sense of like, what do we need to do for some kind of intervention.
And so if you're not even looking directly at the actual country that you're projecting
these statistics for, then it's like, so you're flying blind, like you don't know anything about
the kind of trafficking that's taking place, you don't know what industries it's clustering around,
like it's, and it seems like you have more information than you actually do if you're
reporting a number. Exactly, because it sounds quantitative, but all of the stuff about sex
in there is not actually based on any survey data. It's not really based on anything, it's just you
applying these numbers of victims that you have already. Does all that make sense? Yes, okay.
You know, to me, what's most frustrating about this is that the phrase human trafficking
essentially means nothing, because it means so many different things, but if we're seeing memes
about it on Facebook and Instagram, then like, you never see or I certainly can never remember
seeing a meme that is trying to show the face of like, human trafficking in the sense of like,
your server might be getting screwed by their boss, like, of course, it's not about that.
You know, even if the numbers were 100% accurate to what they were claiming to describe,
like the phrase human trafficking is just, it's useless at this point, because people don't
understand it as referring to the thing that it is for the most part referring to. So it's just,
like, language becomes unusable at that point. I mean, I've actually had two conversations in the
last week with immigration and labor lawyers who work on trafficking cases. So one of the lawyers
I interviewed actually helps trafficking victims apply for trafficking visas, right? There's a
special trafficking visa status. First of all, they said that neither one of them have ever
been contacted by the National Human Trafficking Hotline. There's this myth now that like, ooh,
the way fair human trafficking conspiracy theory is like preventing the anti trafficking
organizations from doing their work. The trafficking hotlines don't do anything. The only thing they
do is call the cops if that's what you need them to do. They don't actually perform any services.
Like F. Murray Abraham and inside Lou and Davis, they said, I don't see a lot of money here.
What you find when you start looking into the actual problems with forced labor in this country is
that government policy is complicit in it the entire time. So what happens is a lot of people
come to America on farm worker visas, which allow them to work legally, but do not allow them to
change employers. So if you want to quit your job, you have to leave the country. This is a
program that is designed for abuse. The employers know that their employees cannot leave or else
they'll get deported. So they have no incentive to give them decent working conditions, no incentive
to pay them on time, no incentive to follow through on any promises. This is what drives me nuts,
when you talk to the anti-trafficking organizations, you're like, okay, what do we need to solve this
problem? You're telling me this problem is huge. What do we need to solve it? And they say like,
oh, more awareness. More people need to know about it. We need to do like more trainings for cops,
trainings for nurses, trainings for pilots. I do not know how much more aware people could get at
this point. We are wildly like most Americans are more aware of human trafficking than like
antibiotic resistance. Like there's a lot of issues that we should be more aware of.
Yeah. And this idea of awareness, it's like people are being trained to look for the kind of thing
that they're not going to see very much. And we talked about this when we did this episode last
fall, but the thing where, you know, if you're seeing these posters and you're looking for
a child in visible distress who is being stranger, danger, kidnapped in front of you,
then like, if you're looking really hard for that, you might not see other things.
This is another thing that drives me nuts that I've actually asked human trafficking
organizations, like the ones that I have mentioned on this episode, I've asked them,
are there any cases where somebody has called one of your hotlines and a child has been rescued
and they could not give me a case? And meanwhile, one of these lawyers was telling me that when she
helps her clients apply for T visas for these trafficking visas, if they're turned down,
ICE will go and deport them because their address is often on the paperwork.
And we have all these organizations that are saying, oh, we really need awareness,
awareness, awareness, and then you look into it and you're like, no, there's actually some
like pretty specific legal changes that we need. A change to the visa program. If you come here as
a farm worker, if you leave your job, you have six months to find any other job you want, no
questions asked. That would prevent a huge amount of trafficking, ending homelessness,
how many kids are engaging in sex acts because they don't have a place to stay. If we give them
a place to stay, they will not be as desperate. Improving the foster care system for the love of
God. For the love of God, right? It's like it's all right there. But it's not because it's this
invisible, all-powerful cartel and they're shipping kids through Wayfair and they're making billions
of dollars every year and they're hiding in plain sight. And so it's like, I feel like it plays
into just this desire for helplessness. It's like, what can we do? What can we do? No one cares.
And it's like, here's three things. And it's like, no, the cartels are too big and too powerful.
We just have to keep sharing memes. I just have to keep looking for zip ties.
And the Chardonnay All Day font. My sort of main takeaway and the thing that I try to
hammer into people whenever I rant about this at parties, which is all the time back when
there were parties, this is not normal. Which part? There's a lot of random Harris County
human trafficking task force. They'll say human trafficking by the numbers and the list,
all of these numbers that we just talked about, 300,000 children at risk. They'll say 800,000
missing kids. These numbers swirl around and they're old and they're sketchy and the researchers
don't even stand by them anymore. This is not normal. I worked in development for 11 years.
I've been to a million conferences. I've talked to people that work on deforestation or female
general mutilation, income inequality. You ask them about these issues and they can tell you
basic facts. How much deforestation is there in the world? Where is it happening? They don't have
perfect information, but they have a general sense. And then you look at trafficking organizations
and it's like, okay, how many people are trafficked? And they're like, well, there's this number
from 2002, but the person doesn't stand by it anymore. And we had to take it off our website
because it's bad. No, this is a basic fact about your main issue. What is the prevalence?
For the last week for something else, I was looking into gun violence. 3,000 kids are killed
every year by guns in this country. And you go to their websites and it's like, okay,
it was like 2,700 last year and now it's like 2,800, right? And there's like different data
sources and like, they're broken down by sort of suicides and homicides and accidental and on
purpose. And you know, it's like how many black kids and how many white kids and what are the
ages of the kids? And then you look at trafficking organizations and a lot of these trafficking
organizations, if you go to shared hope international, which is like one of the main
anti trafficking organizations, there's no fucking numbers on their website. They do not have a
basic estimate of prevalence. And they don't seem to have any interest in getting better numbers.
This issue has been a major moral panic in the United States for more than 20 years. And in all
that time, millions, tens of millions of dollars in donations, they haven't put together a consortium
of NGOs and a bunch of experts to try to really crack how this is happening, who it's happening to,
where it's happening. The only numbers that this entire field is producing on a regular basis
are the national trafficking hotline figures, which are literally anonymous calls to a hotline.
They reflect nothing. All they reflect is how paranoid random members of the population are
about this issue. It is completely inconceivable that you would want to solve a problem and be this
uninterested in how it's actually happening. And then the mobius strip that you get into is,
I can say, well, we don't have the numbers because the traffickers are so powerful and they cover
up their tracks. And so it's hard to get an exact estimate. And then, you know, the response to that
is like, okay, then why are we so sure that they're so high? Right. There's this family of statistics
where we just want high numbers. And it was the same in, you know, stranger danger in the 80s.
We talked about that, you know, stranger danger was the chestburster from which the trafficking
panic, like, matured. And that seems to have been based on a desire not to calmly assess the
situation and do what needed to be done. Like, I think a lot of people did want to do that. But
the broader cultural tenor of that was like, let's be scared all the time. Let's find a reason
to be in a state of fear and reactivity all the time, no matter what.
And also, I mean, this, this is one of my beefs with like the way that the media covers this,
that go on Snopes, go on Washington Post, Wall Street Journal, there's so many fact checks of
all of the numbers at the heart of the trafficking panic. And it's the same organization's putting
out these bad numbers again and again. And so Washington Post will have like one of these fact
check columns of like, oh, the 300,000 figure doesn't make any sense. The 800,000 figure doesn't make
any sense. But anyway, sex trafficking is like a huge issue. And we don't want to minimize it.
And it's like this massive problem. And you're like, wait a minute, why are we still taking
the fact that this is this huge issue that is worthy of posters in every fucking airport?
Seriously, we don't have the basic evidence. It's like, okay, you cheated on the last test,
and then you cheated on the test before that, and you cheated on the test before that. But
I'm just going to give you the test and like not look at you while you're taking it. It's no big
deal. Like fool me over and over again over the course of decades and like, shame on me.
Can I tell you my theory about why we're seeing so much of this right now?
Oh, do it. Okay. I feel like what this fear reflects, and I feel like what it reflected in
the 80s and what, you know, the satanic panic reflects. So many other panics about children
that like are claiming to be for the welfare of the child, but are like targeting something that
is either like not a problem that many children are actually facing, you know, these panics that
like are about protecting children, but always managed to miss the point spectacularly. And I
think that does reflect the fact that you cannot ignore that America is a dangerous country for
children. They get shot. They shoot each other. And we know how many toddlers shoot each other
per year, and we can look at a chart and it's all right there. But like, it's not exciting to have
actual numbers, is it? And it's not exciting to be like, what if we have to challenge our culture
in this specific way to like make the world safer for our toddlers? Or what if, you know,
just so many things that we need to do for children, and so many of them are like hard and
expensive, and they involve actually listening to children and learning about what they need and like
not just sort of treating them as props for whatever political ideology we may have.
I mean, and the fact that this is coming to a head around COVID and in the summer before
we are going to start sending children back into school, I do feel like there is some amount
of projection and misdirection happening because we know that, you know, maybe kids do die of COVID
at much lower rates than other demographics, but like 76 children is still a lot of children.
And that number is going to get higher, and so it feels like a way of being like, yes,
we are going to sacrifice all these children, but you know who's sacrificing more children?
Human traffickers. Yeah, I also think that there's a thing, and we've seen this before,
for people that are sort of generally on the left, generally progressive to be like, well,
you know, at least we can all agree that we need to ensure the safety of children, right? Like,
a lot of the people jumping on the human trafficking bandwagon are like pretty left-wing
celebrities. There's, you know, one of the fact checks I read had a quote from Amy Klobuchar,
who was using one of these false human trafficking numbers. I think that a lot of people are coming
to this issue from actually a good place. And I think we need to be very skeptical of the fact
that this is a narrative, human trafficking that is extremely important to the religious right,
to conservatives, and to QAnon supporters. And like, if those are the people that are pushing
this right now, and those are the people that keep bringing it up when we're in the middle of a
pandemic for no particular reason, we need to ask ourselves if they are really acting in good faith
for the protection of children. We just need to be really careful with the way that we amplify
and accept the framing of organizations that seem like they share our values, but are not working
toward the same goals, because that's exactly what we did during the Stranger Danger Panic, right?
It was like, well, this is a Reagan thing, but we can all agree that we need to keep children safe.
Did that make children safer? No. All it did was give us like three strikes laws and charging
people with much harsher crimes than we used to, because we've literally done this exact same thing
before and it didn't work out. So I have been watching all of the paranormal activity movies
this week. One of the tropes in horror that I think is silly, but also enjoying in that way,
is that a child thinks that they have connected with a spirit. And then the child is tricked because
it's not a ghost or a, you know, kind or neutral spirit. It is a demon. And the energy that you
give to the demon makes it stronger. And I feel like engaging with false statistics about human
trafficking is like thinking you're talking to a ghost on your wiki board, you know, and you're
connecting with this benevolent spirit and you don't know what you're feeding. Like that might
be too scary of a metaphor, but I do feel like, you know, if you share a statistic that's like
for awareness and saying like, oh my God, like this horrible thing is happening according to this
Instagram post, I'm not going to individually fact check this because even if it's not right
or not completely right, like people still benefit from being more vigilant about children
being abused. Like that can't be bad. But I think that, you know, that statistic, you think you're
feeding the child and you think you're feeding like the child's welfare. But you're really feeding
Cindy McCain. And you're feeding QAnon and you're feeding this idea that, you know, no, like don't
pay attention to what's going on. Pay attention to this story that we are telling you. And I don't
know, if you care about children, there are so many ways to show that. And I think that it's
bullying to, you know, be throwing around these sensationalistic statistics and these very sort
of triggering images and sort of daring people to like not retweet it or to not share it. You're
playing like empathetic chicken with people at that point, right? You're saying like either you
pass on my message, either you further this conspiracy theory I'm sharing, or you don't care
about children. Right. And no one gets to decide how you go about trying to make the world a better
place. I mean, I just think that if you really care about children, you will play them disco.