Friday, September 08, 2023

Human trafficking: So it's not a Q conspiracy if international orgnizations admit it is a problem?

when the same group that gave you the Chosen released an independent film about the trafficking of children to the international sex trade, the powers that run the internet and media were quick to condemn it as a Q conspiracy and did their best to pretend it was all lies.

Sigh

Alas human trafficking goes on and is getting worse as the anti family forces are pushing sexualization of chilren as a policy, and not just in the USA: See this article about Mexican parents burning these textbooks in protest. And of course, one of the unreported stories is that many of the countries backing BRICS are doing it partly out of protest against a US State department who pushes promiscuity population control and gay rights as human rights and will punish the country if they don't go along with this agenda.

Witch hunts are always a worry here: When abuse goes on, we also see people pushing an agenda by exaggerating the problem for their own reason. 

but child porn and the exploitation of street kids, both boys and girls, for sex or for cheap labor, is a huge problem in poorer countries nor is it a new problem: but outside of reports by missionaries it is rarely noticed in history: one exception: it is the plot behind Dicken's Oliver Twist for example, which exposed the dirty underbelly of Victorian London,

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But human trafficking goes beyond prostitution: it includes exploiting workers and encouraging people to migrate. Because do gooders see this as a charitable thing to help these desperate people who merely want a job to support their families, many of these organizations overlook that they are helping criminal organizations and ignoring the seedier side of the migrant surge.

So I am happy to see Dr. C talking about the problem, and including links to the original articles to back up his claims:

watch the entire video, and check his list of websites that cover the problem for the source of his data.

some of it sounds crazy, but it is documented in his notes, so check out the stories.

Another place that publishes the stories of the problems of legal (and illegal) migrant workers: Migrant Rights.

many of the stories are about legal workers in Middle Eastern countries.

And of course, missing is any data from China. Wikipedia article.

the UK Guardian posted an editorial by the exPM of the UK about the problem last week:

Business is booming for human traffickers because they know they’ll get away with it

Business is booming for the criminals who engage in human trafficking, forced labour and modern slavery, not just across Asia, Africa and the Americas, but in mainland Europe and across the Channel into Britain too. Every day, traffickers are pushing desperate men, women and children into the hell of modern slavery in the knowledge that their crime is almost cost-free. There should be no hiding place for criminals who trade in people, but the likelihood of criminal exploiters being put behind bars is remote. While there are 50 million people living in modern slavery worldwide, only 15,159 traffickers were prosecuted in 2022 and just 5,577 guilty verdicts were returned, equating to one conviction for every 8,965 victims.

Sigh.

Mr Wilberforce, call your office. We need your voice to publicize this evil. 

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update: 

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From the Phil Inquirer: Cyberporn in the Philippines... article from 2014.

Cyberpornography is prevalent throughout the country that law enforcers consider it the No. 1 crime in the Philippines—more menacing even than the illegal drug trade.

“The data speaks for itself. It is now the No. 1 crime in our country. We have to act on this,” said Senior Supt. Gilbert Sosa, director of the PNP Anti-Transnational and Cyber Crime Division of the Criminal Investigation and Detection Group (ATCCD-CIDG). This practically makes the Philippines among the top 10 countries where cyberpornography is rampant, he said.

 

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From the SunStar Sept 2023:

Half million Filipino children exploited in livestreams, new abuse images, videos in 2022

MANILA – In 2022 alone, nearly half a million Filipino children, or roughly 1 in 100 children, were trafficked to produce child sexual exploitation material (CSEM) for profit, according to estimates from the pioneering Scale of Harm prevalence study by International Justice Mission (IJM) and the University of Nottingham Rights Lab.

Complementing other studies that broadly investigated online sexual abuse and exploitation of children, the Scale of Harm study specifically measured the prevalence of the production of CSEM, especially livestreamed child sexual abuse, for profit. In this crime, a local trafficker sexually abuses a Filipino child in person while a foreign offender, typically from Western or developed countries, watches the abuse happen in real time

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