QAA Podcast - Episode 109: QAnon Makes Human Trafficking Worse feat Michael Hobbes
Episode Date: September 15, 2020The 1980's Satanic Panic has many similarities to the 2020 "Save the children" QAnon movement — which is broadening its reach to members of the GOP (and Tulsi Gabbard). We explore how these religio...us freakouts and conspiracy theories harm actual efforts to combat human and child trafficking with Michael Hobbes, who writes for the Huffington Post & co-hosts the 'You're Wrong About' podcast. ↓↓↓↓ SUBSCRIBE FOR $5 A MONTH SO YOU DON'T MISS THE SECOND WEEKLY EPISODE ↓↓↓↓ https://www.patreon.com/QAnonAnonymous Follow Michael Hobbes: https://twitter.com/RottenInDenmark Listen to You're Wrong About: https://twitter.com/yourewrongabout Merch / Join the Discord Community / Find the Lost Episodes / Etc: https://qanonanonymous.com Episode music by Doom Chakra Tapes (https://doomchakratapes.bandcamp.com/) and Nick Sena (https://nicksenamusic.com)
Transcript
Discussion (0)
What's up QAA listeners?
The fun games have begun.
I found a way to connect to the internet.
I'm sorry, boy.
Welcome, listener, to chapter 109 of the QAnon Anonymous podcast.
The Q&N is wrong about human trafficking episode.
As always, we are your host, Travis View.
And Julian Fields.
This week, we do not have Jake with us.
He's had gum surgery after being shot in the mouth with a paintball gun.
Tragic.
Yeah, so, you know.
He's at home.
He's recovering.
He's a little high on opiates, but we wish him a quick recovery.
Yeah.
Please, America, keep feeding people synthetic heroin when they have, like, gum grafts.
There are signs all around us.
A new wave of satanic panic is gripping the United States.
This time, firmly attached to the soft QAnon Save the Children Move.
And they are wrecking havoc on real efforts to combat child sex trafficking.
This belief in an invisible supernatural war between good and evil is nothing new.
It manifested strongly in the 1980s when many Americans posited that the forces of darkness
were actively corrupting, kidnapping, trafficking, abusing, and sacrificing children on a mass scale.
Right under the noses of Christian parents.
In 2020, this intensely misguided belief system is back with a vengeance under the banner
of America's favorite catch-all conspiracy theory,
QAnon, which often feels more like a research and development project,
finding new ways to freak out suburban moms.
But the proponents of satanic panic have come a long way
from xeroxing pamphlets in their church basement
until the contents go blurry.
They can now copy-paste them for free
and share them easily through a web of social media platforms
like Facebook, YouTube, Instagram, and TikTok.
So first Travis will be taking us back to the Halcyon days of the Reagan era
and trace modern satanic panic all the way to QAnonon.
Then we'll be sitting down with Michael Hobbs, a reporter for the Huffington Post, and the host of the You're Wrong About podcast.
He'll be helping us separate fact from fiction when it comes to child abuse and trafficking.
So, yeah, be warned.
We will be discussing these topics.
But before all that,
Q&On News.
First up, we have owner of QDrop aggregator site, QMap.Pub, revealed to be New Jersey Man.
Ah, New Jersey Man.
So, yeah, this was some really great investigative work from Logically.
A.I. So just
for some background of why this
is important. Like the majority of Q1
followers, they don't read the Q-Drops
right on the source on Aikun.
Instead, they use these Q-drop
aggregators that collect all
the Q-drops into a much more sort of
friendly user, easy-to-read
format. And they even title the post,
so they kind of guide your thinking. Yeah,
they also add tag. So if you want to
like see all the posts just on Seth Rich,
you can filter all those really easily.
So it's like, it's basically like the Q-1
Bible. It regularly receives about 10 million visitors a month. The developer of QMap.p. Pub was someone
only known as Q. Apanon. But the investigation revealed that the true identity of Q. Apennon
is Jason J. Galinas, an information technology specialist from Berkeley Heights, New Jersey.
He has also worked for Citibank since 2013. Nice. Dude, he sounds like he's part of the cabal or
something. Yeah, right. He's an elite banker. I highly recommend that you read the report from
yourself to see how they all they connected the dots because it was a really a great thread that
they followed. One of the facts that led to this discovery was a since-delead Facebook post from
February of 2019 seeking translators for QMap. That post said this.
Q is looking for someone who can translate English to Hindi. Now is your opportunity to serve mankind.
Now a couple of interesting things about the post. Firstly, it reveals that like QMAP actively sought
employees or contractors.
So this might be like a bigger operation
than maybe, you know, it might appear.
And secondly, it says that
Q was looking for someone rather than saying like
QMAP or he just thinks that
they all think they're digital soldiers in the service
of Q. It feels like we are all Q
fair enough. I don't know. I wouldn't read
too much into it, but I did find it interesting.
Bloomberg News reached out to
Galinas for comment, but he
only said that QAnon is a patriotic
movement to save the country.
Okay. He's super
pill. But hours
after that comment was made,
QMAP went down.
Damn. And it's still down this morning when I checked.
So this is actually a pretty big
development. I mean, the fact that this site
is down actually does hamper
the ability for a lot of QLN
followers to access to drops.
There are other Q drop aggregator sites,
so it's not like, it's not that bad.
But this was the main one.
This was the big one. They might have to, you know,
start for the first time inventing stuff
out of thin air, Travis. You think they'll
be able to? I think I think they'll manage. I love that this guy was also involved in a new project
called The Armor of God, which was supposed to be basically a replacement platform for your
social media. And yeah, it just makes me laugh, the idea of digital armor that God gives you
to fight your online crusade. For my next story, Democratic opponent of Q&on congressional candidate,
Marjorie Taylor Green, drops out of the race. He's like fully, I mean, his Twitter is no longer
up. Yeah. He is disappeared. This is very sudden and shocking. Uh, yes, Kevin Van Osdahl, the long-shot
challenger to Marjorie Taylor Green, dropped out of the race very, very suddenly. Uh, his dipping
out all but guarantees that the next session of Congress will include a Q-Anon promoting 9-11
truther unhinged maniac. What are you saying? Are you saying that within like two months they
can't present a new challenger and somehow sway that district blue? No. We're doomed.
No, no, no. I don't think that's going to happen.
Oh, it's actually time to start worshiping Marjorie because we will be serving under her control in the citadel of the future.
I mean, yeah.
I'm going to start with worshiping her feet. I think she's into Jesus, so I'm going to clean her feet first.
Yeah, Kevin, I'm sorry that, I mean, it was reported that the reason that Kevin had to drop out is that he is going through apparently a very difficult divorce that required him to move out of state.
So very sorry to hear that.
It's always rough, but I don't mean to make you feel even worse than you already do,
but your divorce may be accelerating the rise of fascism.
That's unkind to him just demographically.
You know, even if he had had the support of the DNC or something overt or even decent coverage from the media,
which he didn't have.
I think he would have been, like you said, a long shot.
Fair enough, fair enough.
Poor Kevin of being in league.
but yeah I guess rest in peace that campaign and our hopes that anyone will stand in front of Marjorie
even temporarily even in a long shot even the slimmest of odds are now gone so just no great
yeah Biden's going to do this right like a month out for my next story uh Mike Pence cancels
fundraiser with Q and followers after report from the Associated Press are you happy I am happy
Oh, actually.
So this past week, Vice President Mike Pence was scheduled to attend a fundraiser in Montana.
Now, normally, there's nothing that wrong with that.
But AP reported that this particular fundraiser was being hosted by a couple of QAnon enthusiasts named Karen and Michael Borland of Bozman, Montana.
So after that report was published, the Trump campaign told the Associated Press that Pence wouldn't attend the fundraiser after all, but they didn't provide a reason.
No, because it has nothing to do with that.
Yeah, sure, sure, sure.
I mean, I really like this development because it shows that even the Associated Press, they're taking seriously how cozy the Trump administration of the White House is with QAnon and Q&N followers.
And they're trying to expose when they try to like, you know, nuzzle up to them.
I mean, this kind of thing.
For example, when a Q&N follower, you know, enter the White House in like 2018, that was an associated person.
press story. But now it feels like the mainstream media are like, I don't know, they're doing
the kind of work that I like to see. For my next story, Connecticut State Legislator defends
QAnon. So this past week, Twitter user Young Nutmeg, which a great name, shared a photo of Connecticut
state senator Eric Bethel's car. And this car displayed a where we go one, we go all sticker on
the rear windshield. Nice. So this naturally raised questions about whether Bethel is into
QAnon and in a statement to Connecticut public radio, Bethel confirmed that he is a Q&M believer,
but he claimed that he holds to a more moderate version of saying this.
I don't believe in many of the wild-eyed theories reportedly associated with the Q&ON movement
about pedophile conspiracies or satanic cults. However, stopping corruption in politics,
holding government accountable and protecting individual freedoms are values I do believe in,
which the movement has come to represent. Like many movements occurring across our
nation today. I think it is allowed for people who have previously felt disconnected from public
policy and government to be part of the conversation. Like, you don't need to believe in the
military intelligence letter on Ait Koon in order to be against government corruption. I mean,
this is, this is worrying that people's like, oh, oh yes, the satanic pedophile stuff. I'm not
on board with that. But yes, I think QAnon is good. No, no, no, no. You don't get to shake off
that baggage at all. That's coming with you, you fucking moron.
This is back to The Old Him.
According to Alex Kaplan at Media Matters, Bethel is actually the third known incumbent state legislator nationally who has expressed support for QAnon.
Oh, great.
The other two are Florida's Anthony Sabatini and Tennessee's Susan Lynn.
That's three state legislators who are right now pro Q&O, not in the future, right at this moment.
That is really inspiring.
For my last story, Oregon police beg public to stop calling.
and false reports blaming Antifa
for wildfires. Yeah.
And for putting together fucking homemade
barricades and stopping cars.
To do what? Scan them for
Antifaness? And then what?
Drag a mountain. Citizens
arrest? We are really
fucked. It's very worrying.
So yes, as you may know,
like the West Coast is a fiery
infernal right now. It's
miserable to breathe. The
sun is a blood red.
It's very, has all the aesthetics.
of dystopian apocalypse now.
It looks like what Ted Cruz has always thought Los Angeles looks like.
That's true.
It's true.
Yeah, normally I resent the idea that, oh, that California is some sort of hellhole.
I'll give it to you now.
Right now it is.
A living hell.
Now, as public officials are trying to contain the flames and the chaos that is causing,
they're also trying to fight the rumors that the wildfires were caused by Antifa arsonists.
At least six groups have issued warnings about the false rumors.
For example, the Douglas County Sheriff's Office in Oregon wrote a Facebook post on Thursday, which said this.
Rumors spread just like wildfire, and now our 911 dispatchers and professional staff are being overrun with requests for information.
And inquiries on an untrue rumor that six Antifa members have been arrested for setting fires in Douglas County, Oregon.
And there were, weren't there like journalists stopped by a militia who had come to take photos of the fire?
and they were stopped because they were suspected of being Antifa.
So we're just going to now look at someone, and if they look a way that we don't like,
we can be like, Antifa or just pedophile.
And then we can decide if we do citizens' arrest, execution.
Trump is fine with either.
I mean, yeah.
The sheriffs in Jackson County, Oregon and Mason County, Washington posted similar warnings,
begging locals to stop spreading unsubstantiated claims.
A firefighter's union in Washington State called Facebook, quote,
an absolute cesspool of misinformation right now.
Wow.
On Friday afternoon, the FBI's Portland Field Office tweeted that reports about
extremists setting wildfires were untrue.
Yeah, because lost in all this is that now we have news items that just accept that
Antifa members is a category of person.
And so the question is, did Antifa not do or do this thing?
Not, is it a fucking imaginary scare from the beginning?
So we're now, the Overton window is now who is this,
Titanic child trafficker.
Is this a valid way to categorize somebody?
You're right.
A lot of these reports and these statements work on the assumption.
Like hypothetically, the roving gangs of Antifa could start the fires.
But they didn't do that.
In this case.
They did something else, you know, like held up a 7-Eleven.
And they made sure that you don't have the vapes with the special flavors anymore.
Of course, the Q&N community was deeply involved in spreading this false rumors, as they are with a lot of information.
but the police publication law enforcement today also played a role.
Oh, yes, blessed they are.
They published an article titled Sources, series of wildfires on the West Coast may be coordinated and planned attack.
Insane.
We are really on the brink here.
We are.
People are losing their mind.
So that post went viral and fueled rumors about Antifa involvement.
But it was later changed to, quote, arson arrests made across the West Coast as fires rain.
on yeah and then it was a it was also uh they also appended a editor's note but of course by then
it was too late these rumors were making people insane it was you know millions of
shares on Facebook across you know different platforms and stuff so yeah I mean
it seems like the one of the strategies for defending your community against
fascism is setting it on fire Travis of course you want everyone to burn down
including your neighbors your loved ones well you don't have one you have
like an underground bunker and you're all, you know, equal, uh, they, them's, uh, you know,
and you don't have parents. But, but if you did, you would want to set them on fire, set
mom and dad on fire. Of course. I mean, this is such a fucked problem because like, like, like
the worst things get during disasters, during these sorts of times, that's when accurate
information is most crucial. Like spreading false rumors is bad, you know, uh, you know, uh,
during normal times. But it's like even worse, uh, during, when you're trying to
manage a crisis. And now, like, we have all of these public offices who are forced to push back
against nonsense because the stress of the chaos that we're living in is forcing people to
push baseless rumors or make up baseless rumors or just descend into this weird fantasy world
in which their political enemies are causing all of these disasters.
Meanwhile, we could be saving, and this is a fact, 8.2 million American lives every year
if we just abolished gender reveal parties.
Yeah, that's true.
Satanic panic
Forever
Whenever I explain Q&ON to somebody
for the very first time
A response I often get is
I just can't believe
that someone would think
that something so ludicrous is true
And I agree it is ludicrous
But whenever they say that
I always think to myself
Like how have you managed to reach adulthood
While being so optimistic
About the human capacity
For believing true things
People just they don't believe true things
Like normally.
They believe whatever makes them feel less lonely or less powerless or makes them feel less terrified of mortality.
Why would you limit yourself to stale facts when you could instead dine from the buffet of wild stories that are much, much more enticing?
Yum.
In fact, I would say that if you see someone spouting obvious batshit nonsense with a totally unearned sense of confidence and moral superiority, rest assured, that is normal human behavior.
That's right.
what they do. And if you expect any better of them, then really that's your fault for having
unrealistic expectations. I feel like we just started the lesson and you've already hit my fingers
with a ruler. I want to make sure that you need to have, it's important. When we're dealing
with people have high standards, but low expectations. Now, on one level, I get what it's like
to be grabbed by an irrational worry over the well-being of children. I have a 15-year-old daughter
whose phone I have turned into a surveillance and monitoring device
to ensure that she is not kidnapped or groomed by some predator.
Now, like, I know.
You're running like a domestic prism?
I mean, yeah, yeah, of course, my fucking house.
There's no one to blow the whistle.
Who's the Edward Snowden?
The dog?
So, like, I know statistically, like, per me,
I'm more likely to kidnap my daughter than, like, someone else.
But that's so worried kind of like creeps up on me,
where she be doing, someone might be doing harm for her, because like, it's just our instinctive
concern about children. It's not governed by math or reality. It's just, and that's just the way
it'll always be. So with that in mind, I think it's important to remember that there's actually
little about the QAnon community that's totally unprecedented. People often compare the Q&O movement
to a satanic panic of the 1980s. Now, for those who aren't familiar, this was a nationwide moral
panic that made worried parents convinced that Satanism and ritualistic child abuse was on the
rise in America. Parents, the media, law enforcement, and even some members of Congress were
convinced that there was a satanic cult in every neighborhood just looking for an opportunity
to snatch up their children to perform depraved rituals. Researchers usually argue that this mass
hysteria was caused by two factors. First, the rise of the two-income household in the 80s
meant that there was an increased demand for daycare services.
The anxiety of being separated from children more often than the previous generation
meant that parents were more open to paranoid stories of stranger danger.
Secondly, Christian fundamentalism was on the rise.
Evangelists like Jerry Falwell promoted a version of Christianity
that depicted the forces of good and evil battling in our world.
This gave rise to Christian anti-occult crusaders who claim that
Dungeons and Dragons or rock music were introducing children to Satanism.
This was the era of the chick-tracked.
Yeah.
I love how they played records backwards to find satanic messages.
Yeah, it turns out if you play music backwards, it sounds pretty satanic.
It's not how you're supposed to do it.
For the purposes of this study, we will focus on the number 666 and it's used in the universal product code.
Most people don't realize that 80% of all toys on the market have a cultic influence, and these are the most popular.
When these forces met, it worked people up into a frenzy and arguably did even more to damage people's lives than QAnon has.
It's true that people were baking rock songs.
Yeah.
For symbols.
No, they went out to the forest to try to find evidence of, you know, it's like if sticks were arranged in a certain way, that was evidence of a satanic ritual.
Yeah.
Fear over preschools led to several closing.
In Chicago, a jander at a child care center was accused of boiling and eating a baby.
That sounds like a bad choice of cooking.
It sounds like old-fashioned.
Like British cooking.
In North Carolina, children said that teachers had tried to feed them to sharks, I guess.
What do you mean?
So not chop them up and feed them in bits.
But like, no, feed them whole.
And they didn't succeed.
No, no.
Oh, they escaped, I guess, the sharks.
Okay.
Thank God.
Wow.
You know what?
That sounds like a pretty fun cartoon to make.
Sometimes children said that they had been taken to graveyards to kill baby tigers or to dig up and stab corpses.
Why were their baby tigers in the graveyards?
They often talked about sacrificing animals.
This was a big part of the satanic panic.
But baby tigers?
I don't know.
Okay.
Before the panic subsided, approximately 190 people nationwide were charged with the ritual abuse of children, often in daycare settings.
83 were convicted, and many of those convictions.
evictions were overturned.
For example, in 1985, a teacher's aide in Massachusetts named Bernard Barron was wrongfully
convicted of multiple counts of rape and was given three life sentences.
After hundreds of flaws were discovered in that trial, Barron was granted a new trial in
2006, which resulted in him being exonerated and freed.
That is 21 years.
Wow.
21 years in prison because of a insane moral panic.
I want to go over some of the parallels I personally know this between the, I guess,
classic satanic panic and the one we're kind of going through right now with Qaeda on and other stuff.
Let's start with the fact that back then, like now,
there were actually marches from people who protested child abuse
because of their own confused understanding of the issue.
In the 80s, demonstrations were inspired by probably the most famous story to come out of a satanic panic era,
the McMartin preschool case.
In 1983, the director of that preschool, Peggy McIntyman.
Martin Bucky and her son Raymond were accused of hundreds of instances of child sex abuse.
Those allegations included creating child porn, engaging in satanic rituals, and animal abuse.
The allegations first arose after a mother of a McMartan student named Judy Johnson
claimed that a McMartin teacher sodomized her son.
Now, there are lots of reasons to doubt the credibility of her claims.
For example, Johnson first started to suspect her son was abused after he started to have painful bowel movements.
Seems like there are lots of possible explanations for that besides, you know.
She also made a number of other bizarre claims, such as that the people at the daycare had sex with animals
and that the accused teacher flew in the air.
Oh, there we go.
He's a flying sodomizer.
Yep, terrible.
That's a terrible type of wizard, the flying sodomizer.
Now, Johnson herself was at one point hospitalized for paranoid schizophrenia.
The accused teacher was questioned but never prosecuted due to lack of evidence.
Sir, please.
Fly before us.
Show us.
Now, the matter might have ended there, but the police officers investigating the case made the very stupid decision to send out a form letter to parents of 200 McMartin preschool students.
Oh, God.
It's bad.
Yes, yes, yes.
A call to, uh, for submissions.
We have a zine we're putting together.
It is.
So that form letter said this.
Records indicate that your child has been or is currently a student at the preschool.
We are asking your assistance in this continuing investigation.
Please question your child to see if he or she has been a witness to any crime or if he or she has been a victim.
Our investigation indicates that possible criminal acts include oral sex, fondling of genitals, buttock or chest area,
and sodomy, possibly committed under the pretense of taking the child's temperature.
Also, photos may have been taken of children without their clothing.
Any information from your child regarding having ever observed Ray Bucky to leave a classroom alone with a child during any nap period
where if they have ever observed Ray Bucky tie up a child is important.
Wait, what?
This is like you're just feeding them the story.
Exactly.
This is a well-thought-out Stephen King novel.
This is like, yeah, it's like they're feeding them details.
It's not even like, oh, hey, we're investigating criminal activity.
So ask your children.
No, he's like, oh, here are some examples.
Here are some things that your child might say back to you.
On a scale of 5 to 10, how many times did this man, Bucky,
sodomized you. I know. I mean, God, like, if I received this letter, I'd be freaked the fuck out.
Of course you would. Losing my mind. What the fuck is this letter? So this naturally made the parents
extremely concerned. A social worker named Key McFarlane was brought in to interrogate 400 students.
This is such a bad snowball now. McFarlane operated under the theory that children wouldn't disclose
abuse they had endured without special techniques designed to encourage that disclosure.
My God. In practice, this big.
basically meant badgering the children until they provided the answers that the interviewer
wants to hear.
So this was, yeah, the way the snowball is a single person making bizarre claims and then
the police sending the form letter and then this person who basically has this technique
of basically how the interviews worked is that they taught the child that no is not an answer
I want to hear.
I don't want to hear no there was abuse.
I want you to keep talking, keep talking, keep talking.
I'll leave you alone when you start telling me that there was abuse happening.
I'll be very happy as the adult who's like speaking to.
It was a really fucked sort of thing that she did.
There's a really good movie with Mads Mikkelson in it called The Hunt about this
happening in a small Scandinavian village.
And it's just an incredibly made movie.
I recommend it.
In the end, hundreds of children made coerced allegations.
Peggy and Raymond Bucky were tried in the longest and.
costliest trial in American history.
Yes, and it was during the Super Bowl
at halftime. Peggy was acquitted
on all counts. A ray was acquitted
on most of the charges.
The jury deadlocked on the others.
His retrial resulted in
a second hung jury, at which point
the state declined to pursue the matter any further.
Now, after the matter was
finally put to rest in the courts,
many residents of Manhattan Beach
were not happy. Of course.
In fact, they staged a, we believe
the children march. Oh, God.
In protest, here's how the LA Times reported on that march in 1990.
Several hundred residents, some pushing strollers and carrying signs and bumper stickers declaring,
we believe the children, marched through the streets of downtown Manhattan Beach Saturday evening
to protest the not guilty verdicts 10 days ago in the McMartin preschool case.
Organizers said they planned the children's rights protest soon after a superior court jury
ended the six-year-old case by clearing Ray Bucky and his mother Peggy McMartin Bucky of 52 child molestation.
charges. Quote, the crime that occurred inside the courtroom was almost equal to the crime
that occurred outside the courtroom. Tim Wheeler, the father of two former McMark and pupils,
told about 500 cheering supporters at a rally after the mile-long march.
Man, eat your heart out, QAnon.
I know, right? Let's build up the numbers. I know. They can only do like 200 or so.
Joggers and bicyclists on the Strand and patrons of the crowded cafes along Manhattan
Beach Boulevard shouted encouragement to the marchers. The dozens of children in the group
tied pink and yellow ribbons on fire hydrants, street signs, and car door handles along the
route.
Christina Rorke of Redondo Beach said that even though she does not have children, she attended
the march because she is tired of young people being mishandled by the courts.
Quote, when I heard this verdict, I could hardly breathe, O'Rourke said.
This march is not aimed at putting this case behind us.
We're ensuring that it doesn't happen again.
I mean, when I read this story, I think, thank God they didn't have social media then.
Because it's like, this sort of thing, a 500 person.
protest in March, that would have spread nationwide, obviously.
For sure.
Another big parallel I know this between Q&N and the satanic panic is the mainstream media
failing to properly report on what's really going on.
Both then and now, the media worked to validate the hysteria rather than treat it with
the kind of skepticism that deserved.
Most recently, local news outlets generally, they did a terrible job covering the nationwide
save the children rallies that took place in over a hundred cities nationwide.
wide last month. Like we discussed on last week's episode, these rallies were the brainchild of a
Q&on promoter named Scotty the Kid. And the people who attended these rallies were overwhelmingly
PizzaGate and Q&N believers. And these were Q&Rallies. And if you're reporting on them, I think
that's worth mentioning at least once, you know? Well, some local news outlets, they did the right
thing and talked about their Q&O roots. Most of these news outlets and these reports, they dropped
the ball. For example, here's how the news station KVUE in Austin, Texas,
reported on the Q&N on rally there.
The organizer of today's march says she plans to organize another one in September.
She decided to make these marches happen now because she believes more people are
paying attention on a larger scale due to the COVID-19 pandemic and Black Lives Matter movement.
So there was, you see in that report, an obvious cue sign, not mentioned once during the report.
Interesting.
Back in the satanic panic days of the 80s, it wasn't just local media doing more harm than good.
national media also pitched into help.
For example, in 1985, the ABC News investigative program 2020 aired an episode called
The Devil Worshippers.
Throughout history, Satan has taken on many different shapes and disguises.
He's widely considered by conventional religions as the embodiment of evil on a mission
to tempt man to sin and destroy God's kingdom.
Today, we have found Satan is alive and thriving, or at least plenty of people.
people believe he is. His followers are extremely secretive, but found in all walks of life.
I mean, this is insane. It is, it's like a promo clip for fucking Satan. Yeah, it is. It is.
ABC did a great job hyping up Satan for the paranoid parrots. Yeah, and that pivot, too,
he's everywhere. Or some people believe. Yes. Of course, back then, a
Daytime talk shows also promoted wild stories of satanic cults.
In one episode of Oprah Winfrey's show, she invited on a woman named Lauren Stratford,
who claimed that she was part of a satanic cult.
Stratford in her book, Satan's Underground,
purported to tell the true story of her upbringing as a baby breeder,
and these babies were supposedly used for sacrifices.
My next guest was used also in worshipping the devil,
participated in human sacrifice rituals and cannibalism.
She says her family has been involved in rituals for generations.
She is currently in extensive therapy, suffers from multiple personality disorder,
meaning she's blocked out many of the terrifying and painful memories of her childhood.
Rachel, who is also in disguise to protect her identity.
You come from generations of ritualistic abuse?
Yes, my family has an extensive family tree, and they keep track of who's been involved
and who hasn't been involved.
It's going to break my mind.
I got something worse.
How about the fact that Laura,
Stratford was not her real name. Her real name was Laurel Rose Wilson. And in fact, all of her
claims were bullshit, 100%. Her publisher subsequently withdrew all of her books after this was
discovered. Wilson then changed her pseudonym to Laura Grabowski and began falsely claiming that
she was a Holocaust survivor. Damn. My girl is resourceful. I got to say, I don't, I don't think
that Oprah deserves to be falsely called a sex trafficker just because she fueled.
this moral panic, but I don't know, something worth considering.
Karma?
Now, flash forward to today, so perhaps you have heard of Oprah Winfrey's protégé, Dr. Phil McGrath.
Yeah, fuck that guy.
On Dr. Phil's show, just last week, he invited on a woman named Sherry, who believes that
her daughter was killed by a cult in order to extract endocrine.
My investigation has revealed that this is all linked to a ritual.
I believe somebody in an occult was drugging my daughter, Jesse.
for a year before she went missing.
I believe that she was killed June 20th, 2016,
because it was a full moon
and the summer solstice at the same time,
and then the next day was Lilith.
Lilith is a holiday that the occult does celebrate,
and it requires a human sacrifice.
Just showing demon horns with, like, fire behind it while she says that.
Oh, yes.
Smart, Dr. Phil.
I don't know, exactly.
There's, yeah, it's like totally exploiting this woman's grief
and the poor way that she's handling it with her wild stories of satanic cults.
And there is a responsible way to cover this sort of sort of thing.
I mean, Dr. Phil and Oprah Winfrey are succubi that feed on the trauma of others.
They are essentially trauma pornographers.
Now, in the segment like Dr. Phil does push back on her claims, I guess a little bit more than Oprah did.
But honestly, he didn't push back very effectively.
I mean, when talking to her claims about Andrina-chrome, he just sort of repeats things.
He apparently heard from the town sheriff about Sherry's claims.
Now, the police captain also told us that we have never had a case involving the drug adrenachrome.
We've never even heard of it until Dr. Phil producers brought it to our attention.
Now, the gang presence in Wenatchi is currently active, but a very low boil.
And they say there is no cult presence.
in Winachi area whatsoever.
So essentially calling the police
to ask if QAnon is real.
Yeah, that's fantastic.
That's great work.
Amazing, Dr. Phil.
Yeah.
I mean, so fucking lazy.
I mean, I can't imagine the budget
they must have for this goddamn show
and like their research
consisted of a phone call.
Can you imagine if just above the set
one of those incredibly heavy lights
just kind of was detached by a thread of fate
and then it was dangling for a moment,
the audience gasps.
Dr. Phil continues to talk and talk.
And then it falls.
Say no more.
Say no more.
I've got the rest.
You've set it up.
I can see the rest in my mind's eye.
Like a kinder egg punched by a child.
His skull...
And inside, there's beautiful gifts that come out, little toys.
Another parallel is a pilled police officers, you know, problem then and now.
Remember a few weeks ago on the show, we discussed about the prevalence of Q and on
believing cops. I mean, officers have been spotted pushing Q&N on in the states of Washington,
California, Florida, and Illinois. Honestly, it's weirds me out that this problem hasn't gotten
more attention because it's fucked that they're QNN unbelieving police officers.
Q cops are just a smaller natural outgrowth of them already believing in replacement theory.
Yeah. I mean, the Ku Klux Klan is essentially a conspiracy theory organization, and they had a
nice overlap with the cops. And sure enough, cops in the 80s were also
totally pilled on dumb stories
about Satanist performing child abuse
rituals. Actually, now that I
think about it, at the same time,
a lot of these people were worried, their husbands
would be going to fucking Ku Klux Klan
meetings, dressing in fucking robes
and calling each other purple dragon and shit.
Being part of a real secret society.
Yeah. It had devious evil plans for the country.
Plans to sacrifice people.
Yeah. If possible.
For example, in February of 1985,
an FBI agent
held a four-day seminar titled
daycare center and satanic cult sexual exploitation of children.
That just sounds like you're running the exploitation.
It's very badly worth.
It sounds like a how-to.
It was attended by police officers, lawyers, social workers, and academics from across
the country.
One pamphlet told investigators to look for signs of cultic abuse, including the
presence of candles and jewelry.
Yeah, that's pagan.
One handout listed 400 supposed occult organizations, and it seemed pretty easy to
get on the list. It included a collective of feminist astrologers in Minnesota. So you'd have to
wait to 2020 for them to go queue. I mean, fair enough. In 1994, a police officer and pastor
named Gordon L. Coulter hosted an instructional video called the Law Enforcement Guide to Satanic
Cults. Maybe you think your community is immune to these satanic crimes. Well, it's not. The next
victim might show up tomorrow on the beat. It could be in your community or it could be in a major
city or a small rural area. Could be a member of your family. Could be someone you know. I challenge you
to investigate each crime just a little bit deeper. Let's stop this heinous crime that's going on
in the name of the devil. Wow. Very, yeah, very calm. It was. Love the music. Very joyful as you
talks about this. Fortunately, this video was produced in the tail end.
end of the satanic panic, so it didn't catch on very much in the law enforcement community.
Fucking losers.
Well, what about the fact that now we have members of Congress getting in on the mass hysteria?
I mean, we have, for example, Q&N promoter Marjorie Taylor Green is going to be in Congress
next year.
And of course, we have current members of Congress.
They're pushing, like, a soft version of Q&ONON.
And we already have, like, three state legislators, apparently, who are Q&NOM promoters.
Sure.
So it's rife with the people who make the laws, which is.
is bad. Well, turns out there's also precedent for that. In 1985, Senator Jesse Helms introduced an
amendment to an appropriations bill, which was designed to deny tax-exempt status to satanic
cults. Like Protestantism. So here's what that amendment said. No funds appropriated under this
act shall be used to grant, maintain, or allow tax exemption to any cult, organization, or other
group that has a purpose, or that has any interest in the promoting of Satanism or witchcraft,
provided that for the purposes of this section, Satanism is defined as the worship of Satan or the powers of evil and witchcraft is defined as the use of powers derived from evil spirits, the use of sorcery, or the use of supernatural powers with malicious intent.
So you believe these people have these powers?
Yeah, that's right.
How does that jive with Christianity to believe these people can have their own belief system where they get amazing power?
No, they believe that they're, no, the Bible includes, you know, stories of, like, evil sorcerers.
Apparently, if you make fireballs with your hand, you can't get tax-exempt status.
I've been reading too much Dragon Ball Z and not enough, the Bible.
The best part of that is that that amendment was agreed to with a voice vote, and there is no record of debate or dissent over it.
However, of course, the obvious problem with the amendment is that the United States government can't make a law that discriminates based upon who they worship, even if it is the devil.
And so the ACLU and some pagan groups got involved and the amendment later died in a Senate committee and was subsequently never made into a law.
Confirms what they believe about the ACLU.
The furor over the McMartin preschool case also stimulate congressional hearings.
Keymark Farley, remember the woman who coerced all those sorts of allegations from the children, said this to the House Ways and Means Subcommittee on Oversight.
I believe that we're dealing with a conspiracy, an organized operational.
of child predators designed to prevent detection.
The preschool in such a case
serves as a ruse for a larger
unthinkable network of crimes against children.
If such an operation involves child pornography
or the selling of children, as is frequently alleged,
it may have greater financial, legal,
and community resources at its disposal
than those attempting to expose it.
So these totally made-up allegations
that I sort of like bullied children
into giving me are just the tip of the iceberg.
That's right.
We're just getting started, ladies,
and Jets. That testimony was
uncritically reported in the New York Times
and elsewhere. So, I mean, this
is going to be like, you know, praying medic is going to give
congressional testimony and like, you know,
the Washington Post and New York Times
will just repeat it without like, you know,
giving it context. Yeah.
So it could get much worse and it probably will.
I mean, we're just the beginning. To be clear, I'm
not saying that these are like
totally perfect analogies. Obviously
social media is a big difference in the way
these things spread. And also,
I think a major important difference is the
that the Republican Party and Trump are promoting it. And since, you know, QAnon is just
gearing up, it's impossible to tell whether this mass hysteria will eventually fade like the
satanic panic did. Fade or just go into a cycle of dormancy preparing for the next wave.
Right. Yeah, it never, it never fades. It's going to only be dormant. It's just locked underneath
our feet. It's her. You always have it. It just flares up sometimes. Exactly. But probably
the most clear parallel between Q&N and the satanic panic is that the people who buy into this
nonsense love not actually understanding the issue the claim that they're passionate about. Instead
of dealing with the real facts around child abuse, they make up statistics and stories that
sound right to them. And today, this kind of misunderstanding is causing real-world harm.
Jesselin Cook of the Hoffman Post recently reported that QAnon conspiracy theories about child
abuse are making it harder for nonprofits to help real victims. For example, when the
Wayfair conspiracy theory was popular, people flooded the human trafficking hotline with bogus
tips. Karen Benjamin, the chief communication officer for the Polaris Project, which runs
the hotline, was quoted as saying this. Handling these redundant reports was extremely
time-consuming and meant that other people reporting new, actionable information, or seeking
emergency assistance or other services, were forced to wait longer than was acceptable. One employee
at an international child welfare agency
even complained that pushing back
on QAnon comes with its own costs.
What we've seen is that Q&ON is a force
to be reckoned with. For organizations
that do choose to speak out about it, it's going to
require a lot of resources to deal with the fallout,
especially dealing with trolls.
Taina Bienname, the executive director
of the Coalition Against Trafficking and Women,
said this.
You're not going to protect your kids from trafficking
by listening to what QAnon says,
because that's not the way child sex trafficking
works at all. So this is something we see
again, they say they care about the problem, but they're making it worse because they don't even understand the problem in the first place.
Of course.
That's why we're going to try to get to the truth of the matter with our guest today.
I'm joined by Michael Hobbs.
He's a journalist for the Huffington Post and a host of the podcast you're wrong about.
Mike, thank you so much for coming on the show.
Thanks so much for having me, big fan.
So I'm really excited to talk to you today because you do really fantastic work, dispelling myths around child sex trafficking.
You've been talking to prosecutors and other experts who directly deal with this topic.
You've been diving into the research.
And Q&N, they have just been an engine for misinformation about this.
So hoping you can help dispel some myths for us.
Yes.
So let's talk about, let's start by defining our terms.
Like, how exactly does law enforcement define child sex trafficking?
The central problem with human trafficking and what brings us all of these conspiracy theories,
and what makes it so easy to twist this issue into whatever you want it to be is the vast gulf
between the legal definition of the term human trafficking and the societal definition of the term,
what people think when they hear human trafficking.
So when most people hear human trafficking, they think of Liam Neeson.
They think of his daughter being kidnapped by like Armenians and they're going to put her in a shipping
container and she's going to be in this like shady international network that's being sent around
the world.
that is a straightforward moral panic.
That is an urban legend, that form of trafficking, of children being kidnapped, sold
into these vast international networks.
That is fake.
It's a conspiracy theory all the way down.
The problem is the legal definition of trafficking, and when you hear about, you know,
there's been this many confirmed human trafficking cases or there's been this many
prosecutions of human trafficking this year, the legal definition encompasses things like
forced marriages in South Asia, it encompasses anyone who is doing any work of any kind to
pay off a debt. So if a woman from Kenya moves to the United States and she has to borrow money
to pay off her plane ticket and she does that with her nannying job, that is under the law
human trafficking. And when it comes to children, human trafficking covers anyone who trades a sex
act for anything of value. So a pimp is not required, recruitment is not required,
coercion is not required. If you are a homeless teenager and it is cold and raining and you're
desperate and you agree to have sex with somebody so that you can sleep at his home, that is
human trafficking. Technically, he is your trafficker. Legally speaking, that is an act of human trafficking.
So we have this vast array of legal acts that are happening, none of which are good. But all of those
get boiled down into this pop culture Liam Neeson understanding of the term. And they're just
not the same. I mean, so it sounds like, you know, the problem is that like when, I guess,
when law enforcement tracks this stuff, their definition is like so incredibly broad, like,
that it can encompass like lots and lots of things that are bad to varying degrees, but it's like,
but when people hear sex trafficking, they just, they go exactly to like the worst case,
most dramatic scenario. Yes. I mean, I should say, I have spoken to the kind of the two
major human trafficking organizations in the United States that are perpetuating a lot of these
sort of stranger danger myths of human trafficking, neither one of them can provide me with a single
example of a child being trafficked by a stranger on an airplane. This is something that we do not
have a single confirmed case of. And yet, we have posters in every single airport being like,
oh, look for, look for children with these signs. Make sure you call this hotline number. They're in every
single rest stop in America. And we don't have examples of this form of trafficking actually taking
place. Isn't this something that John McCain's wife fell into? So she called somebody. Yeah,
she saw a child and an adult in an airport and called security on them. So this stuff was
already in the making, man. The Republicans were ready. Yes. She literally saw an interracial family.
and she thought that it was trafficking
and she called the cops and then
even more disturbing the way that we found
out about this is that the next day she was on a local
radio show talking about how
she rescued someone from
being trafficked. Even though
all she did was call the cops
they confirmed it was just an interracial
family and everyone moved on with their lives
and yet in her head she has
rescued a trafficking victim. Right.
This is the problem with this is it's all this sort of
like shadows and sort of a friend
of a friend of an uncle of a brother
And then you get these wild stories that nobody can confirm.
I mean, it's like, you know, flash your high beams at a gang member initiation and you get killed.
It's exactly like the fucking email forwards that we got in the 1990s.
What about the missing children?
I keep hearing like Q&N people talk about the epidemic missing children.
So I assume that every time a child is missing, it means that they are basically on a, you know, on a plane to the cabal or something.
That's very fortunately not the case.
So this is, it's hard to get, it's easy to get wrapped up in all this conspiracy stuff,
but it is in fact extremely good news that this is not happening in large numbers.
And if it was, there would be many, many other signs of it than like whatever, you found
zip ties on your car in the Whole Foods parking lot, right?
So the thing to keep in mind about every single statistic regarding missing children,
and there's a lot of different ones that go around, is that these are not the number of
children who disappear.
These are not the number of children who, quote, unquote, go missing.
These are the number of reports of missing children in a year.
So one of the numbers that goes around a lot is 800,000 children, 800,000 children disappear every year.
That's more than 1% of all children in the country, by the way.
So just on its face, we should be skeptical of these kinds of large numbers.
Secondly, this particular number comes from a 2001 report from 1999 that the author of the report has now disavowed it and has instructed people not to use it.
So that's with that specific number.
But the biggest problem with these large numbers in general is that more than 99% of missing kids come home.
They come home within days.
They come home within hours.
More than half of reports of missing children are custody disputes.
It's like dad takes the kids for the weekend.
Sunday night rolls around.
He hasn't brought the kids back.
Mom freaks out.
Mom calls the cops.
It takes him a couple more days to bring the kids back.
She has to threaten him.
It's a really ugly situation.
Eventually the kids get brought back to her.
That happens extremely frequently in America as part of custody disputes.
It's really sad and it's really awful, but it's just something that happens quite a bit.
They're called custodial kidnappings.
It's very common in America.
Another really common thing is kids who run away.
There's a lot of kids who live in abusive homes.
There's a lot of kids who are queer or trans and their parents are rejecting them.
There's a lot of kids in foster care facilities who end up running away because they're awful.
And so these are things that happen.
of the time the cops are called and the cops find the kids and the cops
return them to the abusive situations like we do not have a good system for
dealing with runaways we don't have a social safety net to help kids in these
situations so in some ways they're highlighting like a real issue but they're
completely missing the real issue and they're fast forwarding to this fake
shipping containers Liam Neeson version of the issue in actual real cases such as
Epstein's we actually had a lot of victims coming forward and we had a lot of
lot of the families of those victims coming forward. And we had authorities not doing anything. Right.
Right. So at the same time, it's this conspiracy theory, but it's also, it's profoundly
deferential to power in some ways, right? It's questioning some forms of power, but it's also saying,
oh, we should trust law enforcement, right? As long as we come forward, everything is going to be
fine. And what we've had in so many of these cases, like R. Kelly is another one, Bill Cosby is
another one. I mean, we've had people serially treating women terribly. And over and over again, we've had
people come forward. We've had people express concerns and nothing happens because oftentimes
they are blinded by the power that is making them not trust their gut or the authorities
don't give a shit because it's a wealthy and powerful and connected person. I mean, most of the
actual prosecutions of human trafficking are people who have bought the services of a sex worker
without realizing that she's underage or maybe he does realize that she's underage and doesn't
care. Or it's somebody who is a manager sort of what is colloquially known as a pimp who is actually
managing a number of sex workers. But this is typically something that happens after people are
sex workers. And again, I don't want to minimize this. These are all terrible things that are
happening. But the extent to which actual trafficking is real, it is a problem that is concentrated
among poor people, people of color, otherwise vulnerable people who are being exploited by
someone who is manipulating the fact that they do not have other recourse to any other social
services or support. It's a targeted problem among particular populations that the same people
squawking about QAnon stuff do not give a shit about, right? If you really want to end this form
of trafficking, end homelessness. Like having actual options for kids who are under 18 to go sleep
in a shelter rather than sleeping on the streets, that would do way more to prevent trafficking
than a million prosecutions. So again, you don't want to minimize this and you don't want to
take away anybody's individual experience because there really are like some terrible experiences
that people have and this is a problem in the United States. But the conspiracy theory version of
it puts all of that under the law enforcement system, right? They think that we can prosecute
our way out of it. They think that we can take the same approach that we took to the war on drugs
of just, oh, let's mass incarcerate our way out of this problem rather than solving the underlying
vulnerabilities, which are mostly homelessness and the foster care system. You know, it seems like
like the, sort of the real version of this problem is less dramatic than the QAnon version,
but it's also more depressing because because in the Q&N fantasy is like the idea is like
there's going to be a solution.
It just involves raising awareness or possibly arresting the right people or exposing the right
people for the evils that they have committed.
Like once that happens, then the problem will be over.
But it seems like the real solution is going to be half to, is more complex.
because the problem is so complex.
It's going to have to be systemic, you know, providing support systems for these vulnerable people.
And one thing that I haven't heard anybody mentioned so far is Satan.
It's almost like it's completely fucking unrelated to that.
The way that my podcast co-host Sarah Marshall put it was that we have this desire for helplessness.
We actually know what the solutions to these problems are.
Like we've known for decades that poor and abused and marginalized kids have a lot of problems
and they need as much social support as possible.
They need safe places to sleep.
They need safe adults to go to where they can tell them about abuse and have something
actually happen.
Like they need accountability mechanisms.
We know all these things.
But we haven't fixed them.
Like how long have we known that the foster care system is completely broken for decades?
But it's something slow.
It's something boring.
And it's something that primarily benefits marginalized populations.
Like these are populations that we don't want to think about very much.
You know, people who are poor, people whose parents are on drugs.
these are not people that were interested in actually helping. And so this is where we get this
construction of the sort of white suburban teenager who's like kidnapped from her upstairs bedroom
of her parents' home when, you know, the entire myth of trafficking depends on this idea of like
it's happening everywhere. It could happen to anyone. It's all around us. And that really isn't
true. It's a problem of specifically vulnerable populations who we know what they need and we are not
giving it to them. So this is my central frustration in this is that it's not that this is not a
problem. It's not that it's completely made up. It's that it's just much more boring and less
exotic than they want it to be. Are you saying that when I go on to Facebook into my favorite
Facebook group and share memes that I'm actually not helping? You're actually, unfortunately not.
The impact font is not the only thing you need to know to solve a social problem. It's right in the
name impact. I mean, I do think one of the most harmful myths of this,
is this idea that we constantly need to be raising awareness of human trafficking, that this is something
that goes around. This is the same Coney 2012 bullshit that we've had for 15 years. I used to work
in development. I worked in development for 11 years before I became a journalist. There's actually a
pretty limited number of issues on which awareness alone will actually do anything meaningful.
There's actually very specific legal changes that we need in America to solve the problem
of commercial sexual exploitation of children. Like, we know what we need to do.
about those things. And it's not awareness. It's specific changes to law. And we're just not
doing them because we're getting distracted by this Liam Neeson bullshit.
I want to keep talking about these numbers, these statistics that I keep hearing from Q&N people.
One of them is that one in four trafficking victims are children. In fact, Representative
Tulsi Gabbard recently pushed this number.
Christ sake. She straight up said it was child porn. Yeah. People are losing their
fucking minds right now. I know. I just saw another Congress
person. There's multiple Congress people now calling to get this cuties movie named Child
Porn. I had someone tell me, because I pointed out that like if you just frame taxi driver
by just having Jody Foster on the cover alone, that that would be like horrible, obviously. And so
it's a framing issue with cuties, especially if you see the French cover of it. And it's like,
it's an A24, like indie film. You can question whether or not you like what's in it. But that's
what it is, essentially. And they're calling it child.
the pornography and I had I had a person say well you know would it be okay if in a snuff movie
you also became aware of how bad it is to kill people it's like well but but cuties is not
a filmed exploitation of girls right these are people on a fucking set right this is fiction
and this country will literally kill people over this shit eventually because they can't tell
fucking fiction from nonfiction anymore and also it sounds to me as one of the many people weighing
in on this who has not seen the movie but it sounds like
the movie is actually a critique of this.
Like the movie itself is making the same point as all of the critics of it.
Like it was extremely bad marketing.
I mean, the marketing posters were indefensible.
But also...
Netflix is so, so profoundly stupid.
Yeah, it was unbelievably stupid.
But also, it seems like the actual movie is not promoting child porn.
Like, it seems like the movie...
Not even remotely.
Yeah.
I mean, I was telling people, go cancel, Gaspar, No.
or some script, man.
His movies are all about exploitation
and they feel almost like
he might actually be exploiting
his actors in some way.
I'm sorry, but this doesn't fucking stick.
It's about, you know,
a conservative young woman of color
is from the person's experience,
the director's experience.
And then she's caught in between these worlds
of like, you know,
this kind of conservative family past of hers
and this new kind of exploitative,
like, dance thing that she gets into
with these other children.
And so, yeah, no, I wouldn't,
I mean, again, I'm not promoting,
quoting this movie. I don't even particularly think it's a good movie. I don't care. I don't care if it's a good movie or not. I'm just saying we have to know the difference between exploiting children and filming a movie in which children are exploited. Like that's, I'm sorry, we have to make a difference at some point. We're going to go back to fucking banning Dungeons and Dragons, aren't we? That's the thing. We are going to ban rock and roll. I mean, really a baffled me about this panic. It seems like there were, there are like worse things going on in America. Like, for example, child beauty pageants, which are like,
Yeah, they love it.
Yeah, they wish they make, you know, series abouts and they think it's a fun, quirky thing.
And it also was a fucking predatory ground for Donald Trump to fucking go and walk into rooms full of girls without their clothes on.
Right.
Like he would do that to these Miss America beauty pageants and stuff.
So that shit is like straight up set up for exploitation.
There's not even a question.
That is actually what's happening in those pageants.
Like a billion times worse than what people are freaking out about now.
That's right.
Honey boo boo boo.
I should also say on the thing that really stuck out to me about Tulsi Gabbard's tweet and other tweets about this that I've seen is the statistic of one in four victims of trafficking are children.
And I think it's a really good example of this huge difference between the legal definition and the societal understandings.
So that number comes from the international labor organization that is a study of all human trafficking, right?
So this is the entire legal definition that encompasses forced marriage, which is mostly in South Asia, forced labor and commercial sexual sexual.
So it's actually true that according to those statistics, one in four victims of trafficking broadly are children, but the vast majority of the trafficking that the international labor organization is identifying is actually forced labor. And that is a huge problem in the world, especially for people like undocumented migrants, people who, people who can be threatened to be deported by ICE if they complain about their working conditions. This is something that is all over the place in America.
go to restaurants, go to any farm.
You can find people who are working under conditions of debt bondage and do not have access
to their passports or they will lose their visa status if they quit their job.
So they're basically tied to their job if they don't want to get deported.
And again, it's like we're using this broad definition of something, all of which is bad.
Like it's really bad that farm workers are working under conditions that amount to force labor.
But the people that are saying, oh, you know, one in four victims of children and it's linked to this child,
porn stuff. It's like, what are they doing about the forced labor? Like, again, we know
exactly where it's happening. We know how it's happening. We know exactly what we need to do
to solve that problem. We need to reform the immigration system. But what has the trafficking
panic contributed to that? Q&N would basically be like, if we kick out all of these migrant
workers, then we wouldn't, there wouldn't be any exploitation anymore. And so we should kill
all pedophiles. Like, those are their actual answers. You're right. I'm being unfair. They do
have actual policy positions.
One thing I also would like it, Clary Young, like the exact nature of the relationship
between traffickers and their victims.
So, again, by myself, sort of reading through QAnon memes, it's my understanding
that it's a simple transaction in which the abuser purchases the child, like someone
might buy a slave in the antebellum self, the trafficker, they might browse cabinets on
Wayfair.com, they like, you know, pick what they like best.
Yeah, they pick the name.
Yeah, pick the name.
They put their credit card.
maybe they have PayPal and then the delivery of the of the of the victim just comes straight to
their door yeah yeah well depends depends which service because I've had some issues with
some of these private companies FedEx not as good as delivering children as UPS you need to have
child prime that means the child comes the next day what can you even say it's like it's so
outlandishly fake it's you know there's no there's just no evidence of this ever happening
there's actually a study that looked at every single human trafficking case that was
prosecuted by the federal authorities between 2000 and 2015, and it did a typology of every single
case. And one of the categories was international cartel, right? So the criminals had links
overseas. Do you know how many cases were linked to international cartels between 2000 and
2015? Was it zero? Zero. It was literally zero. There's no evidence of this. I mean, when you find
quote-unquote networks of human traffickers, what that often is, is it's four or five sex workers who are all
working together and like two of them are like 19 and 20 and two of them are like 17 and 18.
And if one sex worker is under age, all of the others can be charged with conspiracy to commit
human trafficking. Because that's how our human trafficking laws work. So what oftentimes
happens when law enforcement does these quote unquote human trafficking stings, they don't
actually know beforehand that there's any human trafficking going on. They'll just go out and
they'll arrest like 20 sex workers in the sort of sex worker neighborhood that every city has.
and then it'll turn out that one or two of them is under age
and then all of a sudden bingo the cops can say
oh we just busted up a human trafficking ring
and it's like either those sex workers might not have known each other
if they did know each other it was more like well you know she's broke
she's addicted to drugs I'm helping her like not get murdered
doing this line of work and that can be prosecuted as a quote unquote
facilitator of human trafficking so a lot of the actual arrests
that we're seeing for human trafficking are not what the public understands
as traffickers. Right. And I had a question about the project underground railroad, which is
a kind of pro-Trump guy running it. It's been around for a few years now. And he has kind of given
a head nod to Wayfair where he was like, oh, we've got that under control kind of thing. Don't
worry about it. Not denying, you know, it's factual basis, basically. And this is a guy that also,
yeah, was appointed by Trump to a board recently dealing with this stuff. So,
I mean, what's your take?
Because I've seen Q&N on people straight up say, oh, we're fans.
Like, we think it's great.
Yeah.
You need to contact them.
They're the people to hit up if you want to save the kids through Trump.
Yeah.
Oh, yeah.
I mean, on their website, they say, I think it's like 4,130 rescues.
Like, this is how many sex workers they've rescued throughout their operations.
And like so many other sort of conservative law and order type organizations that work on this issue,
the best way to debunk what they're doing is to ask, and then what?
Right? It's not clear what happens after these people are rescued. This is actually one of the big problems with the whole sex trafficking myth is this idea that people can be rescued from sex work or rescued from their trafficker and then everything is okay. If you're talking about somebody underage who's homeless and who's maybe doing what's called survival sex, like exactly what it sounds like they're having sex to survive. They're doing it for a place to stay or for drugs or not to get beat up or whatever. Great. You've rescued them from their trafficker. Awesome. Are they not homeless anymore? Are they not?
addicted to drugs anymore? Is there a place for them to sleep tonight? It's these very elemental
questions that people are not asking of organizations like this. What happens the next day
after you rescue them? And he also, I mean, the head of it is a Mormon who has said in
Latter-day Saint publication that he was called to do this by God. Great, good sign, great
sign. A lot of, I've actually interviewed people that run organizations like this, that a lot of
the quote-unquote rescue sort of sanctuaries or victim rehabilitation centers.
for trafficking victims.
A lot of these are actually run by Christian organizations.
So a lot of the trafficking victims help NGOs are there.
It's like a building.
It's located in a remote area.
They take trafficking victims out there.
They'll often take away their cell phones.
They'll take away their internet access.
They won't let them leave the grounds.
They'll have, you know, day-long programs of education and group therapy and oftentimes
religious instruction that the people have to sign up for to continue staying there. And oftentimes
they'll sort of sign up for an entire year and they effectively can't leave for an entire
year and they don't have contact with the outside world for that entire year or they can
sort of earn contact with the outside world like an hour of internet access if they behave
well. Kind of problematic and like a little bit like trafficking to me. Like you're literally
confining somebody to this space. You're forcing them to go through all of these motions that they
that may not actually be all that good for them, right?
And yet, that is not trafficking because we're saving them, right?
We're doing it for their own good.
And so, again, I don't know how much he's involved in this, but a lot of the sort of rescue
industrial complex follows this model of like, let's put them in a home, let's do all
of this religious instruction, let's turn them into this idea of like the perfect victim.
And then, of course, after the year is over, we just put them out into the streets.
We just put them out, you know, it's not clear they're providing any ongoing.
support after this. So again, just like rescuing somebody from being a homeless sex worker,
there's nothing for them after that, right? There's nothing, you know, it's the lack of housing
options. It's a lack of food stamps. It's a lack of all these other supports that are causing
this problem because none of it is addressing the underlying issue. Why aren't there posters in
airports saying, you know, here are the signs of domestic abuse. Here are the signs that a kid is being
abused by her parents. Here are the signs that a partner is being abused by her boyfriend. These are the
signs, here's the number to call. It's actually interesting to me that we don't have those because we
know that domestic abuse is actually relatively prevalent in our society. Like, that's pretty
well established. And yet, I don't know if it feels like an imposition to be sort of looking
into other people's families and we're only interested in like the stranger danger version of
this. But it is very odd to me. Yeah, I don't know. It's just, it's just there people are more
generally concerned about, you know, outsider threats. They want to believe.
believe that, you know, the, you know, individual families, I guess, nuclear families are, like, you know, are fine and they're the only big problems are something that comes from outside them, from some sort of malicious force.
For the Huffington Post, you recently reported on how the federal government has been touting their missing children rescue operations.
Yes.
The press release for one of these read, U.S. Marshals find 39 missing children in Georgia during Operation Not Forgotten.
these press releases and subsequently the news reports there were a little light on details so i
imagine that this operation involved like a daring midnight raid and the which officers bust down the door
of a double-white trailer and discover the there are like dozens of six-year-olds chained together so is that
like roughly what happened or i mean i looked into this this this thing this drove me nuts it went
around first is like they did a big trafficking bust and they found 39 kids and then somehow that
morphed into they pulled 39 kids out of a
trailer in Georgia, like a double-wide trailer with these kids. Like, you imagine kids like,
you know, chain to radiators in these horrible squalid conditions. And I kept waiting for other
journalists to debunk it. I was like, well, this is obviously bullshit. And like somebody's
going to get to this, right? And then like a day goes by, another couple days go by. And
these very credulous stories come out on like NBC and CBS and the New York Times, just like
trafficking raid in Georgia, trafficking raid in Georgia. And then it took me like two emails to email these
authorities. And I was like, hey, can you just provide me with some details on what the actual
operation was? And 39 kids were not rescued. There was no trailer. The operation took place
across two weeks. There was no raid at all because it was like 39 completely separate
incidents. It was across 15 counties in Georgia and six additional states, right? So we're not even
talking like the same people doing this. And the vast majority of the kids surprised
twist were foster care kids. They were runaways from foster care. And it's like, yeah, this is
just a tragic situation of like kids who are maybe in abuse situations, maybe they have mental
health situations. A lot of them ran away fleeing a terrible situation. And the cops found them
and potentially gave them back to their shitty abusive situations. Of the 39, six were transferred
to a trafficking victim rehabilitation center, one of these Christian organizations outside of
Atlanta. This was not this sort of rescuing kids from a basement type of operations. It was literally
just looking for missing kids. And the vast majority of the kids turned out to be either runaways or
kidnapped by one of their non-custodial parents. But it does show that they're willing now to do
these. It's basically a version of those cop photos where they'll put all the drugs and weapons on
the table to show you what they captured. They were so close to just putting the kids on that
table. Oh, yeah. And just being like, look. And it's like, that's it. It's a, it's a, it's a
photo op, right?
Yeah.
You put together 39 separate cases.
You stitch it all together and then you pretend there's a raid.
The wording of the press release was very careful because they said nine suspects were arrested on charges
including sex trafficking.
So that could mean all nine of them were arrested on sex trafficking charges or as the case
actually is, only one of them was arrested for sex trafficking.
Right.
So all of the rest are arrested for existing warrants.
One guy was a felon and he had a firearm and he shouldn't have.
Two of them were custodial interference, meaning the parent kidnapped the child.
It's like mostly low-level stuff or existing warrants.
And then one of them is arrested on suspicion of sex trafficking.
We still don't know what the situation was.
But that's somehow a sex trafficking rate.
There's one person charged with sex trafficking.
We have 39 kids.
I got to say, yeah, this whole thing, it sounds like it requires a lot of, you know, nuanced understanding to actually help vulnerable people.
And I got to say, I'm not too interested in that.
I like the Nguyenneeson story a lot better.
It's so cool.
Yeah.
That's fascinating and, you know, kind of weird and a little depressing stuff.
It's a bummer, dude.
Where could someone go to learn more about your work?
We have two episodes on human trafficking that goes much more into the forced labor stuff
and also into the history.
It's a really, it's like an old, like racist term.
It basically comes out of white slavery.
Like, surprise, surprise.
It has racist roots.
So they can check that out on, you're wrong about just Google that.
That's wherever podcasts are.
And then you can also look at my work at the Huffington Post.
I've written quite a few articles on this for Huff Post now.
So you can just Google to that too.
Thank you so much, Michael.
Thanks for me, guys.
Thanks for listening to another episode of the Q&ONANANANIS podcast.
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Listener, until next week, may the Deep Dish bless you and keep you.
It's not a conspiracy, it's fact.
And now, today's auto Q.
While CNN wants you to believe, there's nothing to see here.
Children suffering so deeply at the hands of these sick fucks who worshiped Satan for,
freely picture surface their bad luck.
Tick-tok.
Tick-tok.
Tick-tok.
And where is RBG?
Rumors say she's got a double.
Some say she's packed on ice and she'll die when Demerats want to.
Because they really are that evil.
They eat you for adrenaline-chrome.
They monitor your breathing and invade you in your home.
They're running out of time and we're winning in this fight.
Not a thing can stop.
us now, we will take up arms and fight. Yep, the rats are running scared. Obama and his
dike look to Clintons for advice. But the foundation dried last night. And pictures they keep
coming, you had them all along, holding back and we'll release them when we're singing the same
song. Evil bushes, crooked killery, laundered money, erased history, snatched the children
for their car, tunnels, book deals, sex, and art.
Thank you.