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ursulaklegun
https://ursulaklegun.tumblr.com/post/652832851008585728/goldhornsandblackwool-goldhornsandblackwool-im
:
goldhornsandblackwool
https://goldhornsandblackwool.tumblr.com/post/652830984796012544/im-sitting-in-a-climate-summit-rn-and-i-really
:
goldhornsandblackwool
https://goldhornsandblackwool.tumblr.com/post/652830732638732288/im-sitting-in-a-climate-summit-rn-and-i-really
:
I’m sitting in a climate summit rn and I really need to remind people that
agricultural trafficking is a bigger issue than sex trafficking AND sexual
assault happens to trafficking victims in EVERY field to the point that
it’s kind of disingenuous to call it/focus on ‘sex trafficking’ the way
it’s disingenuous to complain about sex work being ‘exploitative’ or the
source of sex trafficking as if hotel workers, restaurant workers and so on
aren’t known to be exposed to extremely high amounts of sexual harassment
and assault.
anyway apparently some 70% of the children trafficked into child labor in
the US are in the agricultural fields to put veggies on shelves and
houseplants in home depot.
just something to think about.
I also want to remind you that the vast majority of farm workers are Black
and Indigenous. Like down here it’s mostly Mexican & Haitian workers.
Working the fields for pennies a unit with no breaks, in the heat.
This is the legacy of slavery. This culture forces people who know the land
to feed them, and gives them NOTHING in return.
They did it with Africans and Indigenous people up and down the east coast
and into the Caribbean and they’re STILL doing it.
For those who don’t know the context behind what OP’s saying, I recommend this
interview
https://www.opendemocracy.net/en/beyond-trafficking-and-slavery/how-we-got-here-story-palermo-protocol-trafficking/
with a long-time researcher and consultant on human trafficking. A relevant
quote:
What we should have done [instead of separating “sex trafficking” from
other forms of trafficking] was talk about forced labour, including forced
sexual services, slavery-like practices and servitude. We should have used
concepts that describe the living and working conditions in which people
find themselves. These are concepts that are defined in international human
rights law, and they’re kind of neutral. But at that time we weren’t aware
of all that, so we ended up falling back on the 19th-century Victorian
concept of trafficking with its focus on the purity and victimhood of women
and the protection of national borders. In doing so, we unwittingly
imported a highly biased concept, dividing women into innocent victims in
need of rescue and guilty ones who can be abused with impunity, but also
with racist and nationalistic overtones.
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