Posted on 02/26/2006 12:42:01 PM PST by wagglebee
Where would sex trafficking and prostitution be without a john willing to purchase another human being for sex?
We normally approach the topic of sex trafficking from the victims perspective, because the horrors that these tortured women and children endure hour upon hour, day after day, must end. The more we raise awareness about this issue and enact programs to rescue victims, the sooner they have a chance at a renewed life. But in this article, we will look at the problem from a different angle: the demand side.
Most people who pay for commercial sex acts are men. They come from all walks of life and all income levels. The only thing they share is the desire to buy a woman or child like a commodity in order to own a human being for a short time. This man, known in common lingo as the john, wants the woman to make all his desires come true and act like she enjoys it. He doesnt care how she got into prostitution. Was she trafficked from another state or country? It doesnt matter as long as she can perform. Was she or is she a child victim now caught up in this horror? Its not his problem; he likes the way she looks and is willing to pay for it. And besides, whats the likelihood hell get arrested, right?
Soliciting a commercial sex act is illegal in the United States, except in several counties in Nevada. Still, men usually get away with this crime because law enforcement has typically gone after the prostituted women and children. The victims have been punished and the perpetrators are free to use, exploit and abuse them, and then go home.
When President Bush signed H.R. 972, The Trafficking Victims Protection Reauthorization Act (TVPRA) of 2005, into law in January 2006, he said, The bill I sign today will help us to continue to investigate and prosecute traffickers and provide new grants to state and local law enforcement. Yet, we cannot put the criminals out of business until we also confront the problem of demand. Those who pay for the chance to sexually abuse children and teenage girls must be held to account. So well investigate and prosecute the customers, the unscrupulous adults who prey on the young and the innocent. (Emphasis added.)
The United States has led in combating sex trafficking worldwide, and the provisions in Title II of H.R. 972 now direct part of that focus back at Americas streets. Trafficking occurs everyday right here in the United States, and not all victims are from other countries. Yes, many victims are brought into the U.S. from other countries, but it is also true that girls and boys, men and women from cities all across America are trafficked from one state to another. Prostitution rings often transport victims to new states every few weeks to keep the supply fresh for the customers and to keep the victims dependent upon their captors.
The TVPRA of 2005 establishes a grant program for law enforcement to investigate and prosecute traffickers, pimps and johns. If caught, the johns may have the option of attending a john school. The john school was started by Norma Hotaling, founder of the Sage Project in San Francisco, to educate men arrested for soliciting a commercial sex act about the harm they perpetrate on women and girls, risks they face for being involved in prostitution, and the harm they do to their families, communities and society. The recidivism rate of men in San Francisco who attend this school is 2 percent. These school sessions also give the prostituted women and girls a chance to face the johns and tell them that prostitution is not a victimless crime.
In Chicago, those arrested for soliciting prostitution risk a public unveiling on the Internet. The Chicago Police Department and the mayors office now post the names and charges against those arrested for patronizing or soliciting for prostitution. The one drawback is that this method causes pain and suffering to spouses and children of those arrested. However, in the long run it will hopefully make people think twice before they commit this crime.
Where would sex trafficking and prostitution be without a john willing to purchase another human being for sex? Out of business. Dr. Janice Crouse, Senior Fellow of Concerned Women for Americas (CWAs) Beverly LaHaye Institute, has worked for nearly a decade in the nations capital to end trafficking. The demand fuels the industry, she said. Unlike drugs which are only useable once, a human being may be sold over and over again, sometimes 30 times a day, to make money. When a victim is used up in one market, he or she can be sold to another pimp, transferred into another area or moved into another aspect of the criminal activity.
If a john is willing to pay more for a young virgin, a small boy, an Asian woman, an African teenager, or some other special characteristic, the trafficker will acquire the desired victim. The demand is great, the supply is seemingly endless and getting younger.
As a citizen, take action by refusing to accept the pimp and ho culture that television, music and movies normalize. Society must say that prostitution and trafficking are not victimless crimes, and people who pay for commercial sex acts are criminals who should be shamed, held accountable and punished. We cannot continue to punish the victims and normalize the aberrant and selfish behavior of johns.
With the passage of H.R. 972 and the hard work and dedication of the people working on the frontlines to end modern-day slavery, the hope is alive and well that trafficking and prostitution will be eradicated in the United States and worldwide.
Brenda Zurita is Coordinator for CWAs Crossing the Bridge Project.
It has more to do with how they feel about themselves psychologically. Not practicality.
You mean that they're mentally ill? I'd say some are, if they're selling their bodies for self-destructive reasons. I'd also say some are just lazy. But there's help for the former. For the latter, there's the jug. If we decriminalized every crime because a perp might have issues, we'd have anarchy.
You obviously don't have the slightest clue what Concerned Women for America is.
Feminists and CWA agree on outlawing anything that provides men with gratification. The left and right agree on many of these issues.
I don't see how society has anything to be gained from legalizing prostitution. I also think law enforcement has a lot more to worry about than busting prostitutes and their johns.
Let me get this straight. A society under assault from the Muslims that won't make gay bathhouses and abortion illegal and won't punish its murderers is going to throw the book at whores, pimps, and johns. Way to go.
"Men" who have to pay for "gratification" aren't very much of men to begin with.
They wear makeup.
Otherwise, it's pretty much the same, nanny-state, fear mongering agenda.
Like I stated above. Prostitution brings in a more criminal element, even for the prostitute themselves.
This writer is a "victim" of her own hyperbole.
What IS that number, and how about some names...or is this just a rhetorical flourish?
This is a crime and a proper focus of law enforcement, whether we're talking about Ukrainian, Circassian, or Thai teenagers brought in fraudulently as au-pairs or domestic servants and then forced into the sex trade; or an ordinary American streetwalker who's been punched and strangled by a pimp.
If you think this is de minimis, a bunch of nanny-state nannering, you are a disgrace.
If you've read as much on these threads as I have, you wouldn't need to ask.
If you want to know more details, do a search and read the threads.
"Flourish" it is....
Wow, all the way to post 4 before someone was defending it. And here I didn't make the comment about finding someone on this thread who would support prostition before reading it because I thought it sounded too cynical. Silly me.
Yes, abducting children and selling them into sex slavery really doesn't harm anyone now does it./disgusted sarcasm off
well..it is Gambling. Lottery is a tax on the stupid.
Most of the people who buy lottery tickets are the ones who cant really afford it.
And yes...I buy the powerball win it gets big enough
Yes.
FMCDH(BITS)
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