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by Sarah Ryan · Jan 11, 2012 · HUMAN TRAFFICKING↵ recent storiesRead More »
There are more slaves on the planet today than ever before in history.They are sex workers in East Asia, cocoa harvesters in West Africa, miners in the Congo, factory workers in Latin America and even agricultural workers right here in the United States. Children, women and men of every religion, ethnicity, culture and age. It’s a daunting, scary and seemingly insurmountable issue.
But all around the world, people like you are taking action every day to end modern day slavery. And succeeding.
Here are some campaigns folks started on Change.org over the past year that have won and created incredible lasting change:
Ask 1-800-Flowers of Offer Fair Trade Flowers That Aren’t Picked By Exploited Workers
Tell Target to Embrace the Golden Rules for Responsible Gold
J.C. Penney’s: Don’t Break Your Promise to Families of Workers Who Died Making Your Clothes
Stop Wyndham Hotel Staff From Supporting Child Sex Trafficking in Wyndham Hotels
by Rachel Lloyd · Aug 18, 2011 · HUMAN TRAFFICKINGRead More »
After long week at work, one of my favorite guilty pleasures is Fashion Police on E! with Joan Rivers. You either love Joan Rivers or hate her, and I'm definitely in the fan camp. She's a fearless woman who speaks her mind, isn't scared of offending people and is incredibly self-deprecating -- all qualities I appreciate. She's also frequently side-splittingly funny and while her whole persona, and the concept of Fashion Police is obviously based on criticizing celebrities, mostly women, to the point of mean-spiritedness, it is often very very funny. Like I said, it's a truly guilty pleasure with the emphasis on guilty. But... while I'm sure that most celebrities think Fashion Police crosses all kinds of lines every week, for me they've now crossed the line from funny to incredibly offensive and damaging.Fashion Police has a recurring segment called "Starlet or Streetwalker," which is exactly what it sounds like. The panel, made up of George Kotsiopoulos, Kelly Osbourne and Giuliana Rancic, are shown pictures of women with their faces covered. Based on the outfit, the panel then has to vote if the woman in the photo is a starlet or a streetwalker. If the woman turns out to be a celebrity, her face is shown, if its a woman in the sex industry, her face remains blacked out. The panel, the studio audience and I'm sure the viewers watching at home laugh at these women and their 'tacky, trashy clothing.' The first time I saw the segment, it took me a minute to realize that the women whose faces were covered up were actually real women in the sex industry. I then watched with growing discomfort as I realized that these women, poor women, desperate women, drug-addicted women, women under the control of a pimp, women who are victims of violence and exploitation, were being used to highlight wealthy celebrities' poor fashion choices. Haha.
by Amanda Kloer · Jul 27, 2011 · HUMAN TRAFFICKINGRead More »
Wyndham Hotel Group will become the third major U.S. hotel company, along with Carlson Companies and Hilton Worldwide, to sign The Code of Conduct for the Protection of Children from Sexual Exploitation in Travel and Tourism. Wyndham’s decision to sign The Code comes after nearly 14,000 travelers signed a petition on Change.org, the world’s fastest growing social action platform.San Diego native Tim Rosner launched the campaign after he read a CNN article about a child sex trafficking ring at a Wyndham property in his hometown.
by Amanda Kloer · Jun 30, 2011 · HUMAN TRAFFICKINGRead More »
On June 29th, 2011, The Village Voice joined the war against human trafficking. But unfortunately, they picked up arms and stepped onto the field fighting for the wrong side.I have been a long-time fan of The Village Voice. I can clearly remember leaving the theater where I saw RENT for the first time, screaming “To Absolut, to choice, to the Village Voice” at the top of my lungs, relishing in the progressive ideals they represented. But sadly, a decade later, I’ve lost my faith in The Village Voice because of the choices they have recently made: the choice to disparage and villainize a movement of advocates working to end modern-day slavery, the choice to fight fuzzy methodology with fuzzy methodology, and the choice to put their bottom line above basic human rights.
The Village Voice recently published an article which challenged a statistic often bandied about in human trafficking discussions: 100,000 to 300,000 children in the U.S. are victims of child sex trafficking. Those are gut-wrenching, soul-crushing numbers. And The Village Voice claims they might not be 100% accurate.
by Amanda Kloer · Jun 28, 2011 · HUMAN TRAFFICKINGRead More »
Just three weeks after Kanye West released the official edit of his new video "Monster," MTV and VH1 have both banned the video from air. The ban comes after a hard-fought campaign by Change.org members Sharon Haywood and Melinda Tankard Reist, supported by over 5,000 other Change.org members.Haywood and Tankard Reist launched a campaign on Change.org asking for MTV to refuse to air the video unless Kanye removed the hyper-violent and misogynistic themes, after a teaser to the video leaked back in January. "Monster" is not the usual scantily-clad, hyper-sexualized women washing expensive cars with even more expensive champagne. The video features West, Jay-Z, Rick Ross, and Nikki Minaj surrounded by the "sexy" corpses of women in lingerie. Other women dangle from the ceiling by chains. Behind Jay-Z, a dead, naked woman lies with her mouth wide open, bluntly indicating her last act was a sexual one. And West practically rapes the dead bodies of two women in bed. The message of the video is pretty clear: women are sex objects and it can be erotic when they are killed in violent, sexual ways.
by Amanda Kloer · Jun 20, 2011 · HUMAN TRAFFICKINGRead More »
Earlier this month, the Hartford Advocate published a story about child sex trafficking in Connecticut, citing "pimp-paid sex ads in alternative newspapers like the Hartford Advocate" as part of the epidemic. Yet despite acting on the information that the sex ads in their own newspaper have been critical tools for child sex traffickers, the newspaper continues to profit from them. Will someone at the Hartford Advocate read their own exposé and stop accepting ads for what they have identified as child sex trafficking?For five years, Dennis Paris trafficked girls and women into prostitution in Connecticut. Some of the girls he sold were as young as fourteen, just freshmen in high school. Paris also sold adult women whose heroin addictions he exploited in order to keep the money they earned for himself and prevent them from leaving prostitution. The details of the violence and coercion Paris used to control the women and girls he sold is detailed in the book The Berlin Turnpike, including the detail that Paris's favorite place to advertise for sex with his victims was the Hartford Advocate.
by Amanda Kloer · Jun 16, 2011 · HUMAN TRAFFICKINGRead More »
If you have two minutes to spare while playing around on Facebook today, you can help stop child sex slavery in the U.S. Despite recent high-profile cases of gangs pimping young girls at Wyndham hotels, the company has still not signed The Code of Conduct to Prevent Child Sexual Exploitation in the Travel and Tourism Industry. Will you leave a message on their Facebook wall asking them to sign?Recently, police have busted two gangs for sex trafficking young girls at Wyndham hotels. At one California hotel, Wyndham staff acted as lookouts and accepted bribes from the traffickers, while they sold over a dozen girls as young as 14. At another Virginia hotel, Wyndham staff ignored 6-7 men per night coming and going from a room where a 15-year-old girl was being held in sexual slavery. Gang-run child sex trafficking at Wyndham hotels needs to stop, immediately. Here's what you can do:
by Amanda Kloer · Jun 14, 2011 · HUMAN TRAFFICKINGRead More »
Recently, San Diego native Tim Rosner launched a campaign on Change.org asking Wyndham Hotels to prevent child sex trafficking at their properties, after a sex trafficking ring selling girls as young as 14 was discovered in a Wyndham hotel in California. Now, another sex trafficking ring has been busted using Wyndham properties near Washington, DC. Will this latest scandal finally inspire the company finally do the right thing?Virginia resident and MS-13 gang member Alonso Bruno Cornejo Ormeno was recently indicted for trafficking girls for sex at a Super 8 hotel -- a Wyndham property -- in Manassas, Virginia. At least one of the girls was 15 when she was sold, and Ormeno advertised her as a "high school girl" and "fresh out of the box." According to the indictment, Ormeno rented a room at the Super 8 where he sold sex acts with a number of girls and women for $50 each. He told an informant his business was booming, and his cell phone was ringing off the hook. Six or seven clients a day would stream in and out of the room, but no one at the hotel reported it.
by Amanda Kloer · Jun 14, 2011 · HUMAN TRAFFICKINGRead More »
Apple has developed a reputation for keeping offensive applications out of their online store, including one claiming to "cure" gay people and a game called "Smuggle Truck," which used racist stereotypes to mock immigrants. But another problematic app is about to be added -- the Sugar Sugar app. Not only is Sugar Sugar sexist and heteronormative, it actually facilitates the crime of prostitution and raises serious red flags of exploitation and sex trafficking.SugarSugar is not an ordinary dating service. It uses GPS technology to connect wealthy men with women who are in financial need. If that sounds like a prostitution service to you, you're obviously listening. Facilitating a criminal activity like prostitution is a problem, but an even bigger problem is the opportunity for exploitation this app presents. Anytime a for-profit company sets up a situation in which one partner in a relationship has all the social and economic power, the the opportunity for abuse is huge. For example, mail order bride agencies have high rates of human trafficking because they pair vulnerable women with financially powerful men in situations controlled entirely by the men. Sugar Sugar does the same thing.
by Amanda Kloer · Jun 02, 2011 · HUMAN TRAFFICKINGRead More »
From 2006 to 2011, for at least 16 teen and preteen girls, hell was a Travelodge hotel in San Diego. That's because the staff of that hotel were actively helping members of the gang The Crips to force them into prostitution. For six years, Travelodge staff acted as lookouts, pocketed bribe money, and even let traffickers use the hotel computer to post ads for commercial sex with minors online. Now, the incident has inspired a movement asking Wyndham Hotel Group to prevent such horrific misuse of their property by signing the Code of Conduct to Protect Children from Sexual Exploitation in Travel and Tourism.The Crips gang in San Diego ran a child sex trafficking ring of at least 16 girls out of various area hotels, two of which were owned by the Wyndham group -- a Travelodge and a Howard Johnson. At the Howard Johnson, hotel staff neglected to take any action to protect the long parade of children who were being ushered in to be raped, but the Travelodge staff actually assisted the pimps. Two members of the Travelodge staff, both of whom were indicted for their crimes, allowed the gang members to use the hotel computer to post online ads advertising sex with minors. They also knowingly rented rooms for use in prostitution, charged higher rates for rooms to be used for child sex trafficking and pocketed the difference, and warned the pimps if police were nearby.
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