Montreal Escorts

Trafficking Updates and Helplines

escapefromstress

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I’m posting this thread to draw attention to the human trafficking that is taking place in cities across Canada. Although stats regarding the trafficking of sex workers have been conflated, we can’t deny that it does still happen.

Those of us involved in the industry need to continue to take a strong stand against trafficking/pimping in the sex trade, and the abuse of underage sex workers.

Clients are the ones most likely to meet with a victim, and can be prepared to offer help and/or report the situation when appropriate.

The following is some of the research I’ve done on trafficking on the eastern side of Canada. Many thanks to reverdy who continues to post media articles on forums across the country.
 

escapefromstress

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Recent Media Articles (Sept/2016 – Jan/2017)

Prince George https://ca.news.yahoo.com/prince-geo...225248034.html

Calgary http://calgary.ctvnews.ca/toronto-ma...tion-1.3104466

Fort McMurray http://www.fortmcmurraytoday.com/201...-fort-mcmurray

Winnipeg http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/manito...arge-1.3901804

Saskatoon http://thestarphoenix.com/news/crime...fficking-trial

London http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/windso...king-1.3945026

http://www.lfpress.com/2017/01/19/lo...ictims-charges

Cape Breton http://www.capebretonpost.com/news/l...king-sign.html

Vaughan http://www.cp24.com/news/man-teen-ch...lted-1.3240469

Guelph http://www.guelphmercury.com/news-st...e-sex-workers/

http://www.guelphnow.ca/npps/story.cfm?nppage=2359

Toronto http://www.insidetoronto.com/news-st...o-mississauga/

http://torontopolice.on.ca/newsreleases/36695

http://toronto.ctvnews.ca/three-toro...rade-1.3199873

http://tvo.org/article/current-affai...cking-director

http://www.cp24.com/news/quebec-men-...rade-1.3162160

http://www.680news.com/2016/10/06/1476299/

Montreal http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/montre...ence-1.3891208

Halifax http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/nova-s...rges-1.3850070

https://www.localxpress.ca/local-new...-and-15-433872

http://www.metronews.ca/news/halifax...-old-girl.html

http://www.cbc.ca/beta/news/canada/n...ourt-1.3907219

Ottawa https://ca.news.yahoo.com/ottawa-man...212641775.html

http://ottawacitizen.com/news/local-...stitution-ring

http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/ottawa...ring-1.3802000

Fredericton http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/new-br...cton-1.3808459

Stratford http://kitchener.ctvnews.ca/human-tr...ford-1.3120207

Windsor http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/windso...rade-1.3810304

Niagara http://www.stcatharinesstandard.ca/2...an-trafficking
 

escapefromstress

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HELPLINES

Canadian Crime Stoppers Association 1-800-222-8477 You can submit an anonymous tip by phone, web contact form or text.

BC Crime Stoppers Society has a list of all local chapters of Crime Stoppers by city.

Crime Stoppers Edmonton and Northern Alberta

Ontario Association of Crime Stoppers has a list of all local chapters of Crime Stoppers by city.

Niagara Sexual Assault Centre 24-Hour Confidential Crisis Support Line 905-682-4584

Halifax Police Report Human Trafficking 902-490-5020

Winnipeg Counter Exploitation Unit (CEU) 204-986-3464

Ottawa Police Human Trafficking Unit 613-236-1222, ext. 5005

Toronto Police Service Sex Crimes Report Human Trafficking 416-808-7474

Fort McMurray Police Service Report Human Trafficking 780-788-4000

Manitoba Sex Trafficking Hotline 1-844-333-2211

Guelph Sexual Assault and Child Abuse Unit 519-824-1212 ext 7203

In the USA National Human Trafficking Resource Center’s anonymous hotline at 1-888-373-7888.

Crime Stoppers USA Submit a Tip

USA National Human Trafficking Hotline 1-888-373-7888

USA Polaris Project

Maggie's in Toronto 416-964-0150

Power in Ottawa

Stella in Montreal 1-514-285-8889

Stepping Stone in Halifax 902-420-0103

Pace in Vancouver 604-872-7651

Shift in Calgary 403-237-8171

SWOP-USA Community Support Line: 877-776-2004

(Even if SWO's can't do a rescue, they can probably connect you to someone who can help and be able to support you through the process.)
 

escapefromstress

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How To Identify A Human Trafficking Victim

As a client or SP, you may have an opportunity to identify and assist a victim of human trafficking. These are some red flags:


  • Seems anxious, fearful or paranoid. Avoids eye contact.
  • Tearfulness or signs of depression.
  • Unexplained bruises or cuts or other signs of physical abuse.
  • Appears to be in a relationship with someone who is dominating.
  • Never is alone and/or always has someone translating or answering questions on their behalf.
  • Not in control of their own finances.
  • Presents with secrecy or unable to answer questions about where they live.
  • Inconsistent details when telling their story.
  • Has no identification such as a license, passport or other ID documents.
  • Inability to leave their job or residence. Says they cannot schedule appointments.
  • Being a recent arrival to Canada and does not speak English.
  • Is under 18 and providing commercial sex acts. Or at any age unwillingly providing commercial sex acts.
  • Is afraid of law enforcement or receiving help from an outside entity.


If you can find an opportunity to get he/she alone, ask him/her the following screening questions:


  • Can you leave your job or house when you want?
  • Where did you get those bruises or is anyone hurting you?
  • Do you get paid for your employment? Is it fair? How many hours do you work?
  • (If foreign national) How did you get to Canada and is it what you expected? Are you being forced to do anything you don't want to do?
  • Are you or your family being threatened?
  • Do you live with or near your employer? Does your employer provide you housing? Are there locks on doors or windows from outside?
  • Do you owe debt to anyone?


If you suspect they are a victim of human trafficking,take the following actions:


  • Ask the person if you can help them find a safe place to go immediately.
  • If they need time, create an action plan with them to get to a safe place when they are ready.
  • Call and make a report to a human trafficking hotline or police service
http://www.usccb.org/about/anti-traf...ng-victims.cfm
 

escapefromstress

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Recognizing the Signs

Are you or someone you know being trafficked?

Is human trafficking happening in your community?

Is the situation you may have encountered human trafficking?


The following is a list of potential red flags and indicators of human trafficking to help you recognize the signs. If you see any of these red flags, contact the National Human Trafficking Hotline at 1-888-373-7888 (USA) for specialized victim services referrals or to report the situation. Click here to learn more about reporting potential human trafficking situations.

The presence of these red flags is an indication that further assessment may be necessary to identify a potential human trafficking situation. This list is not exhaustive and represents only a selection of possible indicators. Also, the red flags in this list may not be present in all trafficking cases and are not cumulative. Indicators reference conditions a potential victim might exhibit.

Common Work and Living Conditions:

  • Is not free to leave or come and go as he/she wishes
  • Is in the commercial sex industry and has a pimp / manager
  • Is unpaid, paid very little, or paid only through tips
  • Works excessively long and/or unusual hours
  • Is not allowed breaks or suffers under unusual restrictions at work
  • Owes a large debt and is unable to pay it off
  • Was recruited through false promises concerning the nature and conditions of his/her work
  • High security measures exist in the work and/or living locations (e.g. opaque windows, boarded up windows, bars on windows, barbed wire, security cameras, etc.)

Poor Mental Health or Abnormal Behavior:

  • Is fearful, anxious, depressed, submissive, tense, or nervous/paranoid
  • Exhibits unusually fearful or anxious behavior after bringing up law enforcement
  • Avoids eye contact

Poor Physical Health:

  • Lacks medical care and/or is denied medical services by employer
  • Appears malnourished or shows signs of repeated exposure to harmful chemicals
  • Shows signs of physical and/or sexual abuse, physical restraint, confinement, or torture

Lack of Control:

  • Has few or no personal possessions
  • Is not in control of his/her own money, no financial records, or bank account
  • Is not in control of his/her own identification documents (ID or passport)
  • Is not allowed or able to speak for themselves (a third party may insist on being present and/or translating)

Other:

  • Claims of just visiting and inability to clarify where he/she is staying/address
  • Lack of knowledge of whereabouts and/or of what city he/she is in
  • Loss of sense of time
  • Has numerous inconsistencies in his/her story
Note: According to federal law, any minor under the age of 18 engaging in commercial sex is a victim of sex trafficking, regardless of the presence of force, fraud, or coercion.

If you believe you are a victim of human trafficking or may have information about a potential trafficking situation, please contact the National Human Trafficking Hotline. If you or someone you know is in immediate danger, please call 911.

https://humantraffickinghotline.org/...ognizing-signs
 

escapefromstress

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Mar 15, 2012
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Sex Trafficking

Victims of sex trafficking are often found in the streets or working in establishments that offer commercial sex acts, e.g., brothels, strip clubs, pornography production houses. Such establishments may operate under the guise of:

  • Massage parlors
  • Escort services
  • Adult bookstores
  • Modeling studios
  • Bars/strip clubs
  • Very young prostitutes

Visible Indicators of Human Trafficking may Include:

  • Heavy security at the commercial establishment including barred windows, locked doors, isolated location, electronic surveillance. Women are never seen leaving the premises unless escorted.
  • Victims live at the same premises as the brothel or work site or are driven between quarters and “work” by a guard. For labor trafficking, victims are often prohibited from leaving the work site, which may look like a guarded compound from the outside.
  • Victims are kept under surveillance when taken to a doctor, hospital or clinic for treatment; trafficker may act as a translator.
  • High foot traffic especially for brothels where there may be trafficked women indicated often by a stream of men arriving and leaving the premises.
  • Trafficking victims are kept in bondage through a combination of fear, intimidation, abuse, and psychological controls. While each victim will have a different experience, they share common threads that may signify a life of indentured servitude.
  • Trafficking victims live a life marked by abuse, betrayal of their basic human rights, and control under their trafficker. The following indicators in and of themselves may not be enough to meet the legal standard for trafficking, but they indicate that a victim is controlled by someone else and, accordingly, the situation should be further investigated.

http://humantraffickingmovie.com/how...afficking.html
 

escapefromstress

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7 ways to spot that someone is being trafficked when traveling

Almost every country in the world is affected by trafficking, and traffickers often use air travel to move their victims. Sometimes, victims are flown into another country on the promise of a legitimate job, other times traffickers move their victims within a country, to keep them powerless or to avoid detection.

But you can help. By being aware of the telltale signs that someone is being trafficked, you may be able to keep them from a life of modern slavery.

We asked four organizations involved in anti-trafficking initiatives to share some of the signs that could indicate that a passenger is being trafficked through an airport.

What you should do

It's important to remember that even if you spot a number of these signs, it doesn't necessarily mean someone is being trafficked. But if you do suspect someone is being trafficked, do not confront suspected traffickers or attempt to rescue suspected victims -- instead, call emergency services or alert the airport authorities.

Warning signs:

1 -- A traveler is not dressed appropriately for their route of travel.
You might notice right away that a traveler has few or no personal items. Victims may be less well dressed than their companions. They may be wearing clothes that are the wrong size, or are not appropriate for the weather on their route of travel.

2 -- They have a tattoo with a bar code, the word "Daddy."
Many people have tattoos, so a tattoo in itself is obviously not an indicator, but traffickers or pimps feel they own their victims and a barcode tattoo, or a tattoo with "Daddy" or even a man's name could be a red flag that the person is a victim.

3 -- They can't provide details of their departure location, destination, or flight information.
Traffickers employ a number of tools to avoid raising suspicion about their crime and to keep victims enslaved. Some traffickers won't tell their victims where they are located, being taken, or even what job they will have.
Because victims don't have the means to get home or pay for things like food, they must rely on traffickers in order to get by, forcing them to stay in their situation.

4 -- Their communication seems scripted, or there are inconsistencies with their story
Sometimes traffickers will coach their victims to say certain things in public to avoid suspicion. A traveler whose story seems inconsistent or too scripted might be trying to hide the real reason for their travel and merely reciting what a trafficker has told them to say.

5 - They can't move freely in an airport or on a plane, or they are being controlled, closely watched or followed.

People being trafficked into slavery are sometimes guarded in transit. A trafficker will try to ensure that the victim does not escape, or reach out to authorities for help.

6 - They are afraid to discuss themselves around others, deferring any attempts at conversation to someone who appears to be controlling them.
Fear and intimidation are two of the tools that traffickers use to control people in slavery. Traffickers often prevent victims from interacting with the public because the victim might say something that raises suspicions about their safety and freedom.

7 - Child trafficking
A child being trafficked for sexual exploitation may be dressed in a sexualized manner, or seem to be under the influence of drugs or alcohol.
A child may appear to be malnourished and/or shows signs of physical or sexual abuse, such as bruises, scars, or cigarette burns.

http://edition.cnn.com/2015/07/30/tr...g-at-airports/
 

escapefromstress

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'Anyone can be a victim': Canadian high school girls being lured into sex trade

http://www.msn.com/en-ca/news/canada...cid=spartandhp

Most stories about human trafficking that make it into the headlines in Canada involve women from other countries being brought here and forced into sex work, but those who work with trafficking victims in this country say the majority are, in fact, Canadian-born teenage girls.

Vanessa, 17, is one of them. She was a typical high school student in Mississauga, a city just west of Toronto, until two years ago, when she fell in with a new boy who enrolled at her school. "Right from the beginning, he knew ... I was the one that was, I guess, vulnerable," said Vanessa, who is using a pseudonym to protect her identity. "I'm very kind of submissive to people. He always kinda told me what to do, and I would do it."

One day, a car showed up with two men in it whom she didn't know. Her friend asked her to get in, and she did. "I was still in my school uniform," she said.

As they drove to a motel on a strip of Dundas Street East in Mississauga, one of the men told her she could make a lot of money doing sex work. Vanessa said she was unsure and scared but felt pressured to go along with it because the two men were friends of the boy she knew.

"At that time, I didn't try to understand what was going on," she said. "My friend promised me all these things that I felt that I needed — a stable place, money in my hands. It was kind of part of me wanting to do it and see if I could get something better, and then a bigger part was that I was already there and I can't really say no anymore."

Most trafficking victims are 'domestic'

Peel Regional Police say 60 per cent of all reported human trafficking cases in Canada occur in the densely populated Greater Toronto Area.

Most frequently, girls are recruited at school by young males and taken to local motels or condominiums, where they engage in sex work. Most continue to live at home.

According to police, human trafficking doesn't have to involve the crossing of a border. Any forced recruitment, confinement or transportation of a person for the purposes of exploitation falls under the Criminal Code definition of trafficking. Trafficking for sexual exploitation is just one form of the crime. Others include forced labour and domestic servitude.

More than 90 per cent of the victims of sex trafficking within Canada come from Canada, according to government statistics, Vanessa's story is typical, says Jennifer Keeler, a nurse practitioner at Chantel's Place, a Toronto-area sexual assault support centre. "Human trafficking targets young adolescents trying to fit in," Keeler says. "They are vulnerable to someone giving them attention."

Traffickers know exactly what to say to manipulate girls, says Katarina MacLeod, a former prostitute and trafficking victim from the same area as Vanessa. They're even targeting girls not usually considered high risk. "You have these guys making regular girls feel special, buying them things and taking them shopping," MacLeod said. "And the girls fall for it hook, line and sinker … [The men] know exactly how to build dependence."

MacLeod said traffickers are targeting young and younger girls these days. "Girls as young as 13 are getting recruited in," she said.

'He didn't smell nice'

The men who took Vanessa to the motel first took photos of her to use in ads for her services. They gave her a cellphone and told her to use it to negotiate with her first client as they watched. She settled on $40 for five minutes of unspecified sexual activity. "He was older, probably in his late 40s … He wasn't dressed well. He didn't smell nice or anything," she said. "I just kinda dealt with him because I thought five minutes wasn't anything. But now, I realized how stupid that was."

One of the men ordered Vanessa to turn over the money she made. "He was like, 'I paid for the room so you have to give me everything,' so I just gave him all I made," she said.

Unlike sex workers who have chosen the trade, trafficking victims rarely get to keep the money they bring in. And they have little say over what sex acts they perform.

Peel Regional Police estimate a trafficked girl working daily can bring in up to $280,000 per year. For pimps who have multiple girls, the earnings are often divided among a team of traffickers, minus expenses for motels and the ads they take out to market the girls.

For months, Vanessa would get picked up from school almost every day and be taken to hotels on the Dundas East strip to have sex with clients arranged by her pimp. She was still living at home and under the age of consent. "My parents still somehow didn't know what I was doing," she said.

Vanessa met a network of pimps, recruiters and other high school girls like her. "Most people have no idea something like this is happening in Mississauga," she said.

'Complex and hidden crime'

In 2015, Peel police made 39 arrests and laid 244 charges related to sex trafficking. In the first half of 2016, according to their most recent statistics, they made 25 arrests and laid 149 charges. As recently as last week, Toronto police arrested two young men in connection with the trafficking of two teenage girls at Mississauga motels.

And that's just a fraction of the problem, says Ontario's recently appointed anti-trafficking director, Jennifer Richardson. "The number of how many people are actually being trafficked in Canada I don't think anyone could ever give you because it is such a complex and hidden crime," she said.

Based on data she helped gather in Manitoba, she estimates the number of trafficking victims in Ontario alone to be in the thousands. A former trafficking victim herself, Richardson says victims don't come forward for a variety of reasons, including fear or a dependent relationship with their pimp.

Peel police established a Human Trafficking Service Providers Committee last year and have been working with local organizations toraise awareness and provide support to victims like Vanessa.

"The traffickers control the lives of the victims emotionally, psychologically and financially. Anyone can be a victim," said Const. Joy Brown, who heads up the committee.

A few of the red-flag behaviours to watch out for in young girls, she said include: extended periods when whereabouts are unknown; sudden changes in routine; having more than one cellphone; receiving expensive gifts; extreme tiredness and unexplained absences from school.

One of Vanessa's teachers recognized changes in her behaviour and connected her with a support program, which is how CBC News found her. Now, Vanessa is looking to get out. "I hate doing what I do," she said. "I've been getting sick, my body is tired, my knees are hurting."

She says she won't come forward or testify against her pimp, who's now letting her keep some of the money she earns. "I would feel like such a victim if I came out with no money. I want to have money to live comfortably. And then I plan to get out of it."
 

gugu

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Feb 11, 2009
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Your effort is laudable, escapefromstress, but I see some problems in your posts this morning.

I'm not sure it is useful to magnify the problems as you do in post no 2. Apart from the duplicates, some public relations material from operations like Northern Lights is pure propaganda. The fact is that this operation found very few cases of human trafficking but conflated the girls they "helped" (not sure it was totally voluntarily) with human trafficking victims.

Some of the links provided in post no 3, most USA links, are well known to propagate bullshit statistics on human trafficking, Polaris being the worst of all.

Laura Agustine and Maggie McNeil have made fun out of the USCCB red flag list. For good reasons. They are too general and could be signs of many other reasons. Also, the list encourages intrusive actions. I'd encourage you to be suspicious of all religious organisations in this field. They tend to do what ALL religious organisations do naturally: resort to lies.

The human trafficking movie website (#6) is spreading loads of bulshit stats, just like the human trafficking hotline (#5), linked to Polaris. Both are american, so irrelevant here. Neither, you can be sure of that, would get the approval of sex workers organisations.

Laura Agustine also made some fun about the link in post 7. These ideological freaks expect people to walk around airports looking for signs of human trafficking. That's total non sense.

I will not comment on the last post (#8) except to say that if people are so ill informed about human trafficking in Canada, it is mainly because the media keep publishing this type of articles.


Let's get real. Human trafficking is mostly rebranding of an old phenomenon: vulnerable people, mostly minors, dragged into prostitution. There is nothing new to that and we have good reasons to believe that it is on the decline. If you encounter cases, use your best judgement, the one you would use in any other circumstance in life.
 

gugu

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Feb 11, 2009
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Are you perhaps suggesting that you don't want to live in a dystopian world like this?

http://reason.com/blog/2016/01/14/another-asian-woman-detained-at-airport

Well thanks, Patron. There is an urgent need to correct the list.

Has few or no personal possessions
Is not in control of his/her own money, no financial records, or bank account
Shares an orange juice on a plane
Is not in control of his/her own identification documents (ID or passport)
Accompanies someone to a plane lavatories
Is not allowed or able to speak for themselves (a third party may insist on being present and/or translating)

Thanks to you, the world is a safer place now.
 

CLOUD 500

Well-Known Member
Jan 10, 2005
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Escapefromstress,

What are you someone in the feminist movement or what? I dunno what your agenda is but you certainly got one. I saw almost everyone of your posts are about human trafficking, busts, under age prostitutes, etc... I saw no reviews. So what gives?
 

gugu

Active Member
Feb 11, 2009
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Well, thanks for that much needed clarification. It was clear in my mind that the poster was neither a radical feminist nor an anti sex work advocate. If she is not offended by us being critical of the sources, the plan is a good idea. And it will take some weight off the C-36 thread that is getting obese. Part of the confusion came from the fact that the purpose you just described was not explicit.
 

blkone

Member
Sep 24, 2009
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Let's get real. Human trafficking is mostly rebranding of an old phenomenon: vulnerable people, mostly minors, dragged into prostitution. There is nothing new to that and we have good reasons to believe that it is on the decline. If you encounter cases, use your best judgement, the one you would use in any other circumstance in life..

I left the armed services a year ago, (22/1/16) and... let me tell you, the world is evil. Slavery has gone up not down since about the Bosnian war!

So, you, you get real. When you meet a lady be vigilante. Get to know her and as weird as it is, whisper to her to ask about her situation.

If you believe that slavery was conquered hundreds of years ago... you're wrong.
 

Sol Tee Nutz

Well-Known Member
Apr 29, 2012
7,694
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Look behind you.
About 95% of MERB member will never be in contact with trafficked women, most see only advertised agency ladies. BP, ANN123 and Humpchies are the probable site if someone was to encounter one, my guess would be very young, possible the ones who speak no French and shuffled around from town to town, perhaps some Asians. Just my opinion.
 

escapefromstress

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Mar 15, 2012
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Thanks reverdy. Very well said.

Well, thanks for that much needed clarification. It was clear in my mind that the poster was neither a radical feminist nor an anti sex work advocate. If she is not offended by us being critical of the sources, the plan is a good idea. And it will take some weight off the C-36 thread that is getting obese. Part of the confusion came from the fact that the purpose you just described was not explicit.
.

I appreciate all the feedback. My apologies for not explaining my intent well enough. :smile:
 

westwoody

nice gent
Jul 29, 2016
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Winterpeg
I do not think Merb is the place for that type of thread...I find it naive to think ,if that is the intention,that posting helpline links here will even be seen by a girl who needs it.

This is ,or was? a review boards where people who are not against escorts and sex can exchange and have fun...
What happened to my nice Merb where we were talking about sex related fun topics and not having constantly all the clichés of the ''poor abused escorts who wait for her white knight to be saved'' at every second post?

Strongly agree!!

This is a relaxing place for discussion, and friendly debates. Not a platform for social justice and depressing anti prostitution propaganda. Especially the feminazi kind.

Nobody is going to dig their way through dozens of links to bullshit newspaper articles.

There is a big difference between discussing this and just posting dozens of links and cutting and pasting articles.
 

escapefromstress

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Mar 15, 2012
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When I first heard that the Bedford case was going before the Supreme Court, I wondered if there was some way the entire Canadian online industry could stay informed on the progress of the case ... and I realized that with well over 1,000,000 members nationwide, review boards were a good place to communicate.

I posted a thread on perb first, and reverdy and I began posting all the articles we could find, and reverdy has continued to post in the Sticky there until the present time. When I first posted a thread on terb, they mocked me and told me what a stupid idea it was, then someone else started a thread which has grown to a 132 page Sticky.

I also started the C-36 thread here on merb which is now a 70 page Sticky.

As reverdy explained, this thread is simply a way to separate the trafficking articles from other issues we've posted about in the C-36 threads.

Knowledge is power, the more people we can educate on this topic, the more powerful we are together as an industry.

This is OUR issue in OUR industry, and the government and LE are obviously not doing a very good job of addressing it.

There's nothing wrong with us doing everything we can to deal with it and try to clean it up ourselves.

Sticking our head in the sand, pretending nothing is happening won't change anything.

Covering it up because we want don't want to tarnish our image will only allow it to flourish.

Most of those media articles are about real cases, with real victims, and real criminals facing real charges and some of them are doing real time in jail.

If you don't want to talk about it, just ignore me and ignore this thread. But let those of us who do want to discuss and learn, continue to do so.
 

escapefromstress

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Mar 15, 2012
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'Anyone can be a victim': Canadian high school girls being lured into sex trade

http://www.msn.com/en-ca/news/canada...cid=spartandhp

Pace's response to articles like this latest one:

PACE Society ‏@PaceSociety 23h23 hours ago

"Journalists before writing alarmist #trafficking stories about Canada read #Trafficking in persons report"

(sorry I can't don't know how to embed the tweet or the image, but you can see it in their timeline from yesterday)

https://twitter.com/PaceSociety

http://www.statcan.gc.ca/pub/85-002-.../14641-eng.htm
 

escapefromstress

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Mar 15, 2012
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While I was researching helplines for sex trafficking the other day, I found this article:


On Nov. 10, 2016 the government of Ontario appointed Jennifer Richardson as the Director of the new Provincial Anti-Human Trafficking Coordination Office.

"Ms. Richardson will be responsible for coordinating the implementation of Ontario's Strategy to End Human Trafficking, working across ministries and in collaboration with the law enforcement, justice, social services, health, education, and child welfare sectors.

Quick Facts

  • "Human trafficking” is a criminal offence and involves recruiting, transporting, transferring, receiving, holding, concealing or harbouring a person, or exercising control, direction or influence over the movements of a person, for purpose of exploiting them or facilitating their exploitation.
  • In June, Ontario announced the Strategy to End Human Trafficking, investing up to $72 million in increasing awareness and coordination, enhancing justice-sector initiatives and improving survivors' access to services.
  • Of Ontario’s reported cases of human trafficking, about 70 per cent are for the purpose of sexual exploitation, and the majority of survivors are Canadian citizens or permanent residents.
  • Individuals who are most vulnerable as targets for human trafficking include Indigenous people, young women, at-risk youth, youth in care, migrant workers, and persons with mental health and addiction issues.
  • Ontario is a major centre for human trafficking in Canada, accounting for roughly 65 percent of police-reported cases nationally in 2014."

https://news.ontario.ca/mcss/en/2016...ng-office.html



So now it's February 2017, and if you Google "Provincial Anti-Human Trafficking Coordination Office" or "Strategy to End Human Trafficking" ... you get nothing except press releases announcing her appointment. No website, no office address, no indication that anyone is doing anything yet.
 

gugu

Active Member
Feb 11, 2009
1,741
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These quick facts are terribly misleading.

You'll notice they always provides percentage, not numbers. It's for one obvious reason: the numbers are so low that people would reasonably conclude that the scale of the problem is in no way comparable to what is propagated by organisations whose financing depend on scary numbers.

Financing is provided for awareness (read propaganda), survivors services (without anyone of them having to produce public annual reports) and justice sector initiatives (we have no idea what this is). Most Canadians, I'm quite sure, would simply prefer providing money for more police intelligence if needed in order to increase arrests.

Saying 70% of cases of human trafficking is for sex exploitation simply indicates that LE concentrate their effort there. Most major international organisations will tell you that labour trafficking is way more important worldwide. Within Canada? We have no idea. Numbers are too low.

Ontario is a major center for human trafficking? If there were 100 cases of human trafficking in Canada in year xxxx, 70 of them in Ontario, would that mean Ontario is a major human trafficking hub? Hyperbolic.

Most survivors are Canadians? Sure. And that why I say human trafficking is a brand name for an old phenomenon.

Ontario has fallen deep into political correctness with their human rights tribunals and initiatives.

What about letting LE do their job?
 
Ashley Madison
Toronto Escorts