Most Americans don't have a clue that this phenomenon is taking place right under their noses - thank God for Nick Kristoff:
I went on a walk in Manhattan the other day with a young woman who once had to work these streets, hired out by eight pimps while she was just 16 and 17. She pointed out a McDonald's where pimps sit while monitoring the girls outside, and a building where she had repeatedly been ordered online as if she were a pizza.Alissa, her street name, escaped that life and is now a 24-year-old college senior planning to become a lawyer -- but she will always have a scar on her cheek where a pimp gouged her with a potato peeler as a warning not to escape. "Like cattle owners brand their cattle," she said, fingering her cheek, "he wanted to brand me in a way that I would never forget."
After Alissa testified against her pimps, six of them went to prison for up to 25 years. Yet these days, she reserves her greatest anger not at pimps but at companies that enable them. She is particularly scathing about Backpage.com, a classified advertising Web site that is used to sell auto parts, furniture, boats -- and girls. Alissa says pimps routinely peddled her on Backpage.
What is Backpage and who owns it?
Backpage accounts for about 70 percent of prostitution advertising among five Web sites that carry such ads in the United States, earning more than $22 million annually from prostitution ads, according to AIM Group, a media research and consulting company. It is now the premier Web site for human trafficking in the United States, according to the National Association of Attorneys General. And it's not a fly-by-night operation. Backpage is owned by Village Voice Media, which also owns the estimable Village Voice newspaper.
That's right - The Village Voice is responsible for child sex trafficking in this country. It's not the only publication making money off of this despicable and illegal practice, of course, but it's by far the largest. They should follow Craig's list from two years ago:
Let's be honest: Backpage's exit from prostitution advertising wouldn't solve the problem, for smaller Web sites would take on some of the ads. But it would be a setback for pimps to lose a major online marketplace. When Craigslist stopped taking such ads in 2010, many did not migrate to new sites: online prostitution advertising plummeted by more than 50 percent, according to AIM Group.
FIFTY PERCENT! Let's give The Village Voice a shove, shall we? Make sure to sign the Change.org petition demanding that they stop selling sex trafficking ads to pimps.
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Tags: child prostitutes, pimps, sex trafficking, Village Voice
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