Comments by "Kair Idon" (@kairidon3363) on "‘ALL GLORY TO GOD’: Hollywood rejected this movie, became a ‘miracle’" video.
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May be a fine movie, but it doesn't show people what REAL trafficking looks like.
In two late-night Venmo transactions in May 2018, Rep. Matt Gaetz sent his friend, the convicted 5-x trafficker Joel Greenberg, $900. The next morning, over the course of eight minutes, Greenberg used the same app to send three young girls varying sums of money. In total, the transactions amounted to $900.
The memo field for the first of Gaetz’s transactions to Greenberg was titled “Test.” In the second, the Florida GOP congressman wrote “hit up ___.” But instead of a blank, Gaetz wrote a nickname for one of the recipients. (The Daily Beast is not sharing that nickname because the teenager had only turned 18 less than six months before.) When Greenberg then made his Venmo payments to these three young girls, he described the money as being for “Tuition,” “School,” and “School.”
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@patriotpatrol3709 Sudden abductions of children as depicted in the film do happen, she says, but that’s not typical. Traffickers in the US usually traffic people that they know, according to statistics from Polaris, an anti-trafficking organization that runs the US National Human Trafficking Hotline. Polaris describes the “top three recruiter types” as family members or caregivers, intimate partners, and employers.
“We’ve had survivors say to us, ‘I didn’t know I was trafficked because it didn’t look like what it looks like in the movies,’” said Beck Sullivan, the chief program officer at Restore, an anti-trafficking organization that works in New York City. “It’s important for people to get educated on what it looks like in their town.”
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I wish it focused on what REAL trafficking looks like:
In two late-night Venmo transactions in May 2018, Rep. Matt Gaetz sent his friend, the convicted 5-x trafficker Joel Greenberg, $900. The next morning, over the course of eight minutes, Greenberg used the same app to send three young girls varying sums of money. In total, the transactions amounted to $900.
The memo field for the first of Gaetz’s transactions to Greenberg was titled “Test.” In the second, the Florida GOP congressman wrote “hit up ___.” But instead of a blank, Gaetz wrote a nickname for one of the recipients. (The Daily Beast is not sharing that nickname because the teenager had only turned 18 less than six months before.) When Greenberg then made his Venmo payments to these three young girls, he described the money as being for “Tuition,” “School,” and “School.”
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