Meredith May Interview Questions

Sunday, we will have our first formal Interview with Reporter Meredith May!  Mel and Teeny have put together the questions below.  But first!

A little about Ms. May: 
“The San Francisco Chronicle’s four-part series on sex trafficking exposes the harsh reality that trafficking in human beings is a lucrative and ruthlessly exploitative enterprise. Reporter Meredith May describes in haunting detail the story of You Mi, a Korean college girl whose attempts to settle her credit card debt land her in the middle of a sex slavery ring in San Francisco’s Tenderloin district. May’s reporting shines the harsh light of truth on the reprehensible sex trade and the morally outrageous behavior of the pimps, johns and criminal networks that are getting rich by exploiting girls like You Mi.”

Read More About Meredith


Interview: Sunday March 4, 2007 11:00 am

Our goal: To document human trafficking in San Francisco and document our findings. 

 

1. We understand that you got the idea for this article from the large federal bust of massage parlors in Los Angeles, What was the first step you took in initiating your investigation in San Francisco?

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OBSERVANT

Cecily, our wonderful reasearcher noticed this:

This spa has changed its name twice in the span of two weeks.  Fishy, fishy, fishy.

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On different pages…

As many of you know, the ERASMUS students have made groups on the social network facebook for the NOT FOR SALE CAMPAIGN.  The following comments were made on my facebook “wall” the other day shortly after I invited a friend from high school to join.  This morning… that Mike Paz (Erasmus Student) has responded…  WHAT DO YOU THINK?

Friend From High School: 

“omg stop inviting me to that group

first
those people are thousands of miles away and their sphere of existence is totally independent of mine, yours, or any other young American “activist” whose only actual perception of slavery is as an extremely negative, unrealistic construct that’s been imprinted on us by elementary school teachers and popular culture

my point is that they really don’t matter to you. you don’t care. you want to care. stop thinking about it for like a week and look back and think of what awesome productive things you could’ve been doing instead of feeling guilty and futile about a situation you have nothing to do with

second
the type of slavery that that group claims to be against is totally different from the type of slavery that this country used two hundred years ago. slavery in many areas of the world continues to play integral, traditional roles like paying off debt (labor is used since there’s scarce reliable capital or goods)… it’s temporary, humanistic, and natural. these international liberal shithead groups know that you hear the world slavery and your mind (and wallet) explodes with how you’ve been taught to respond throughout your childhood Read the rest of this entry »

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Women’s Rights Forum

Next week at the University of San Francisco there will be a women’s rights Forum discussing the following issues:

Monday March 5, 6-8pm (Maraschi Room):
“women’s livelihood post 9/11″

Tuesday March 6, 6-8pm (Maraschi Room):
 ”The Church, the Body, and the State: Negotiating Reproductive and Sexual Rights in Latin America”

Wednesday March 7, 6-8pm (Maraschi Room):
“Daughters of Darfur”

Thursday March 8, 1:30-4:15 (Lone Mountain 365):
“International Women’s Day! Art and Activism”

Erasmus students will be there tabling.  80% of human trafficking victims are women; this even won’t only be highly useful but also very enlightening.  If you have questions please contact Margot (margot@notforsalecampaign.org).

Thanks!

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World Cup and Slavery?

Last year during the 2006 world cup games there were large influxes of Asian women who were brought to Germany for sexual purposes.  As a country who receives approximately 200,000 human trafficking victims a year, the attention was quickly brought to the United States as well as Germany. 

Secretary of State Condoleeza Rice addressed this issue with great eloquence, however, I cannot help but feel that our government will not take bigger strides to stop this issue.  She says that the government is well aware of the issue and there has been progress regarding human trafficking.  What type of progress?  She does not mention this.  She only mentions that $400 million dollars has been spent on trying to prevent this issue.  I am not being pessimistic, rather, I simply want to hear about the results.  The more government officials talk about how much money is being spent on an issue, the less serious people take it.  It suddenly becomes a story of resources.  “So much money has been put into this issue…”  This could be true or not true, but even if there has been 3 gazillion trillion dollars put into the project and used inefficiently and ineffectively, is there a point???  Additionally, it starts seeming like a hopeless problem… and it is NOT. 

The government and business are key factors to the end of modern slavery; let’s urge them to step up to the plate.

-Mai

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Free to Play Campaign

Alexis from the USF women’s soccer team has challenged herself as an athlete for the Not For Sale Campaign movement as a part of the FREE TO PLAY CAMPAIGN.

Check it out!

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01.25.07 – Notes From Class

Brainstorm for Trafficking Movement

January 25, 2007

Goal: Document slavery in SF and document how you document

Create a blog with one czar

Individual group members post and give their updates regularly; czar tracks, edits, and posts group updates; czar in charge of blog PR, etc

Possible czars: Mai, Margot Read the rest of this entry »

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Ready, get set, GO!

The University of San Francisco’s Erasmus Class of 2006-2007 is very excited to have been granted the great privilege of joining the Not For Sale Campaign to fight the injustices of modern day slavery.

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