Faith prefers the absurd to the plausible. – Mason Cooley
…four girls engaged in prostitution were arrested by more than 10 police officers…in…Bangkok…after reports were received of underage females engaged in prostitution…the four girls told police they were all high school students…[who] had been convinced or advised by friends to become prostitutes, because they did not have enough money to go out at night…The police will conduct a thorough investigation to track down the real providers behind the illegal prostitution operation.
Though the girls revealed their exact motivation and the exact way they got the idea, the cops refuse to believe them; there MUST be some “real provider” who forced them into whoring, because “innocent children” couldn’t possibly come up with the idea on their own. It’s a textbook example of Maier’s Law: the facts do not conform to the theory, and must therefore be discarded. It’s exactly the same in Dallas, Texas, though US reporters are far more credulous:
…In a city known as a national hotbed for prostitution, a special Dallas police unit is trying new approaches to identify and save underage girls being lured into the street life. Officers have adopted what they call a “victim-centered approach,” making a list of every known juvenile prostitute and probing their pasts and ways to keep them out of trouble. And they’re making a new push to use the Web — where for years traffickers have had almost free rein — to find girls and help them before it’s too late. “We can make survivors out of victims,” said Lt. Fred Diorio, the head of the department’s Crimes Against Children unit. “That’s what we’re trying to do. That’s the goal.” It’s a difficult one to achieve. While Dallas’ effort has won acclaim for devoting extra resources to combat juvenile prostitution, officials and experts say web trafficking makes it harder to identify the girls and weed out the pimps. The girls are also sometimes reluctant to help prosecute their pimps and get them behind bars…
That first sentence is about the only accurate and truthful statement in the whole story; Dallas has so many whores it’s a buyer’s market with depressed prices. I don’t think I have to point out the myths and fallacies in the rest (from “the scary internet is full of sex traffickers” to “all prostitutes have pimps”), but the pompous megalomania inherent in the cops’ claims to magic mind-control powers is worth noting. And it doesn’t let up:
In June, the police staged a sting they called “Operation Brick and Mortar” — a reference to how the physical building where prostitutes and pimps once congregated
had largely migrated to an online setting…
What in Aphrodite’s name is any of that supposed to mean? Do the cops believe that there used to be a big “pimp and ho” brothel and social club somewhere that was digitized like something in Tron?
…Catherine De La Paz, a veteran detective, was in charge of picking out ads she thought might offer juvenile prostitutes. Police dialed numbers and contacted each of the 99 ads she picked…they eventually…detained 23 people for prostitution. Just two were under 18 years old…
If the real purpose of this scheme was “rescuing” coerced underage prostitutes, I think even a cop would have to admit it was ineffective. But since the real reason is persecuting hookers no matter what the age, it’s all good. The rest of the story talks about a new gingerbread house under construction in Dallas and theoretical software to magically detect juveniles via stolen pictures on the internet, but it’s conveniently “years away” so there’s plenty of time for them to think up another politically correct excuse to justify whore-hunting by then.
But Texas cops are amateurs at writing lurid “white slavery” porn compared to those in Florida:
Fifteen-year-old C.G. was hanging out with friends in Tampa…when she met a man…who offered her a ride home…but…[took her to] Orlando…[and] force[d] her to become a prostitute. Authorities say that…teenage girls across the country are forced into the sex industry. Sometimes, they end up in Central Florida because of the area’s conventions and special events, which make it a lucrative region…The FBI estimates 293,000 children are at risk of becoming victims of sexual exploitation in America…While the national average age of a child involved in prostitution is 12 to 13, in Florida it is 10 to 11 years old…The youngest victim local DCF officials could recall: an 8-year-old from Central Florida…
