Showing posts with label LGBT. Show all posts
Showing posts with label LGBT. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 17, 2013

Rev. Dr. Nancy Wilson: Say No to Slave and Sex Trafficking

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/rev-dr-nancy-wilson/say-no-to-slave-and-sex-trafficking_b_3085527.html

Source: The Huffington Post

4/16/2013 2:19 pm


Rev. Dr. Nancy Wilson






What does modern slavery, also known as human trafficking, have to do with you or me? Everything! Whenever the cotton in our shirts is picked by children in Uzbekistan, whenever metals in our smartphones are mined by children in Congo, and whenever the coffee we drink is harvested by child slaves in Ivory Coast, we are supporting slavery.
Why should lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) people care? Don't we have enough on our plates? In my time as the moderator of Metropolitan Community Churches (MCC), I have learned that all social issues are LGBT issues. In the case of human trafficking, around 10 percent of the millions who are trafficked are LGBT. As citizens of the world, we cannot just care about issues that we think are "ours." If we are human, then human trafficking is about all of us. We are in this together. We must fight this together.
There is an abolitionist movement that has been growing for over a decade, but it has to come out of the closet. Abolitionists must become visible in order to eradicate human slavery. I only learned about this movement in 2011, when President Obama appointed me and many others to the Advisory Council on Faith-based and Neighborhood Partnerships. Together we produced the report "Building Partnerships to Eradicate Modern-day Slavery," released April 10, 2013. (You can read the full report here.) The faith council included conservatives, moderates and liberals with diverse perspectives, but we were unified in the need to challenge slavery in our time. Our differences paled as we were educated by professionals working every day to end modern slavery.
The stories from survivors of human trafficking were even more powerful. Who is not moved by the story of a 5-year-old fish diver in Southeast Asia who was beaten with oars if he surfaced too quickly? When he finally escaped to a shelter, he did not know how to smile. I was stunned when I learned that single mothers in Texas were targeted through their children's daycare and forced into prostitution. I weep for the teenage girl prostituted in New York City who was repeatedly mistaken for a criminal rather than seen as a victim. And families grieve for missing girls who are promised a night on the town and find themselves raped in a strange hotel. In less than a day they are on the street in high heels and a miniskirt, shamed and wondering if they can ever go home.
The report makes the connections between homeless youth, 40 percent of whom are LGBT, and domestic trafficking in the United States. With LGBT youth at risk and over 77 percent of victims being persons of color, our mandate is clear: Prejudice makes people vulnerable to hate, violence and being enslaved, so we must challenge prejudice wherever it is found.
Labor and sex trafficking of adults and children is at least a $32-billion industry, and it's being fought with meager resources. This must change. Currently, human trafficking is a low-risk, high-profit business. It must become a high-risk, low-profit enterprise.
The Obama administration is seriously engaged in the issue. All of us on the faith council became converts to the urgency of this problem, which has a direct impact on more than 21 million people in bondage and countless loved ones and community members. Our report calls for a White House summit and a Global Fund to Eradicate Slavery that is modeled after the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria.
2013-04-16-MCCNancyWilsoninCouncil.jpgIt has been an honor to serve on the president's faith council, hear the stories of survivors and work with diverse council members as we set aside our differences to make a difference in the world. Working side-by-side with a Buddhist, a Roman Catholic nun, a Mormon leader, a Greek Orthodox archbishop, the head of the National Association of Evangelicals, a Rabbinical leader and other religious dignitaries who have given their lives to working for justice and good causes has changed me, and I believe I changed them. Being an out lesbian and a global religious leader of MCC, I believe I helped my colleagues grow into a fuller understanding of the diversity of the global faith community. The mutual respect was palpable and powerful.
I was also changed by brave and determined survivors, and by people who are modern abolitionists. Survivors say, "I was a victim of slavery, but it is not who I am." Abolitionists are voices crying in the wilderness. We need to listen. We need to act.
And if you have never taken the slavery footprint test, take it today. Each of us took the test before our first council meeting, and it challenged everything we thought we knew. May it change and challenge you, as well. You can find it at slaveryfootprint.org.
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Thursday, February 28, 2013

Violence Against Women Act: House Passes Broader Senate Bill, Sends To Obama To Become Law

Violence Against Women Act 
 House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) speaks at a Jan. 2013 press conference on the Violence Against Women Act. (Win McNamee/Getty Images)

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/02/28/violence-against-women-act_n_2781433.html?ncid=edlinkusaolp00000003
 
Source: Huffington Post
 
 WASHINGTON -- The Violence Against Women Act is finally heading to the president's desk this week after a dragged out political fight over expanding protections to Native American, LGBT and immigrant victims of abuse.

The House voted 286 to 138 on Thursday to pass the bipartisan Senate version of VAWA.
The vote came just after the House rejected its own GOP bill, 166 to 257, which drew loud cheers in the chamber. Sixty Republicans voted against the GOP bill.

Throughout the debate, House Republicans maintained that their bill would have covered all women. But the reality is that it didn't go as far as the bipartisan Senate bill. The House bill stripped out protections for LGBT victims of abuse, it didn't give tribal courts new authority in certain domestic violence cases and it added new eligibility restrictions for U Visas for abused immigrant women. The House bill also entirely left out two separate measures attached to the Senate bill: the SAFER Act, which helps law enforcement address a backlog in untested rape kits, and the Trafficking Victims Protection Reauthorization Act, which targets human trafficking.

The House Republican bill appeared doomed before it hit the floor. It had zero support from Democrats, and a growing number of Republicans were saying they couldn't support it. Seventeen House Republicans sent a letter to House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) and House Majority Leader Eric Cantor (R-Va.) last month urging passage of a bipartisan bill. Ahead of Thursday's vote, Rep. Shelley Moore Capito (R-W. Va.) said she planned to vote for the Senate bill, as did Rep. Tom Cole (R-Okla.), a leading voice on tribal issues.
The GOP bill "does not adequately recognize sovereignty" and fails to give tribal courts "the tools they need to combat violence against women," Cole said in a statement, read aloud on the floor by a Democratic colleague.
 Act: House Passes Broader Senate Bill, Sends To Obama To Become Law
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