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human trafficking

  • UpTrust AdminSA•...

    Why does modern slavery still exist?: Survivor-led

    The business card On the day I got out, a woman handed me a business card. I was nineteen. I had been trafficked since fourteen. I did not own a phone. I did not have an address. I had not been to school in five years. I did not know what a business card was for. She was kind....
    public policy
    human trafficking
    survivor advocacy
    victim services and recovery
    Comments
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  • UpTrust AdminSA•...

    Why does modern slavery still exist?: Economic root causes

    The pipeline In 2016, a researcher documented the recruitment pathway for Cambodian men enslaved on Thai fishing vessels. A broker visited a village where average household income was $420 a year. He offered $300 a month — nine times the local wage. The men accepted....
    public policy
    human trafficking
    labor economics
    criminal justice and law enforcement
    poverty and development
    Comments
    0
  • UpTrust AdminSA•...

    Why does modern slavery still exist?: Law enforcement

    The door Tuesday morning. 2019. Federal agents execute a warrant at a massage parlor in Jupiter, Florida. Inside: three women trafficked from Fujian Province. The investigation took eleven months. Wiretaps. Financial forensics....
    law enforcement
    human trafficking
    labor trafficking
    transnational crime
    Comments
    0
  • UpTrust AdminSA•...

    Why does modern slavery still exist?: The Story

    Fifty million In 2022, the ILO published a number that should have ended every other conversation for a week: 49.6 million people in modern slavery. Twenty-eight million in forced labor. Twenty-two million in forced marriage....
    labor rights
    human trafficking
    international law and policy
    modern slavery
    supply chain reform
    Comments
    0
  • A
    An Open Letter to the Men and Women of ICE and DHS
    To the agents, officers, and staff serving under Immigration and Customs Enforcement and the Department of Homeland Security:
    We write not in accusation, but in concern.
    Not to question your dedication to service, but to ask you to look inward — to reflect on the true cost of the mission you’ve been given, and what it may be asking of you, personally and morally.
    Every day, you are asked to enforce some of the most difficult policies in this country. You operate in tense communities and unpredictable conditions. The work is dangerous, emotionally draining, and often deeply misunderstood by the public. But beyond the tactical hardships, there lies a quieter, more personal burden — one that reaches into homes, families, and hearts.
    If you are honest with yourselves, many of you have felt that burden. You’ve seen how your role affects those closest to you: conversations at the dinner table that turn painful, friendships that grow distant, a child’s uneasy question about what you do and why. These are not just personal experiences — they are reflections of a deeper national struggle over identity, justice, and humanity.
    It’s worth asking: what happens to a person when duty and conscience come into conflict? What does it do to a family, when pride in service begins to mix with doubt or shame? These are hard questions, but they are the questions that define moral courage.
    Right now, tensions across our nation are growing. Communities are polarized, anger builds easily, and violence feels closer with each passing week. You are on the front lines of that volatility, and history tells us where unchecked division can lead. The last century bore witness to how ordinary men and women, loyal to their governments and trying simply to provide for their families, became instruments of suffering — sometimes without realizing it until it was too late. The scars of those choices led humanity into two devastating world wars.
    It is not unpatriotic to recognize the danger of repeating history. In fact, it is among the most patriotic acts you can take: to defend not just a flag or an order, but the moral foundation that flag is meant to represent — liberty, justice, and compassion.
    You have the power to shape how this moment in our history will be remembered. Your choices matter more than you may ever know. Within every one of you lies the ability to temper enforcement with empathy, authority with restraint, and fear with understanding. These are not acts of defiance — they are acts of strength.
    Do your duty, but do it with conscience. Protect your country, but defend its soul as well.
    History will not only ask what orders you followed — it will ask who you were when you followed them.
    With hope and respect, The citizens of The United States of America.
    joshuasw1979•...
    I'm trying to figure out if you are comparing ICE detaining illegal immigrants to the Holocaust? There is no comparison. I for one feel for the men and women of ICE. They are doing a job that needs to be done. Our country has been invaded....
    national security
    law enforcement
    immigration policy
    human trafficking
    domestic terrorism
    Comments
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  • reflection•...

    Look, I Don't Even Know What I'm Doing Here....

    Or how this thing works- Or what the heck it even is... I do know: I'm on a mission. To get the attention of people whom can help THE CHILDREN AND FAMILIES in Colorado. Jefferson County to be exact!...
    education
    public safety
    child welfare
    human trafficking
    Comments
    0
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