[Lnc-business] URGENT - Request for ExCom meeting to add LP's voice opposing FOSTA (HR 1865) and SESTA (S. 1693)

Whitney Bilyeu whitney.bilyeu at lp.org
Mon Feb 26 21:48:59 EST 2018


I agree.

Whitney Bilyeu

On Mon, Feb 26, 2018 at 6:40 PM, Starchild <starchild at lp.org> wrote:

>
>         I'm requesting that the LNC Executive Committee hold a special
> meeting ASAP for the purpose of voting to add the Libertarian Party as a
> signatory to the following attached letter in opposition to two bad pieces
> of legislation currently in Congress which would further criminalize
> consensual prostitution, and related online speech including sharing harm
> reduction and safety tips for sex workers, in the name of fighting sex
> trafficking (which they would do nothing to stop).
>
>         This harmful legislation was just brought to my attention. The
> House bill, the "Allow States and Victims to Fight Online Sex Trafficking
> Act" or FOSTA, may be voted on in the House as soon as TOMORROW (Tuesday,
> February 27), which makes this a time–sensitive matter that lacks the time
> for a vote of the full LNC.
>
>         I've reviewed the letter and did not notice anything substantive
> in it that is objectionable from a libertarian perspective, but I encourage
> others to review it as well. Due to our screwed-up email list, I have
> copied the text of the letter below as well as attaching it as a PDF file.
> Also attached is a graphic detailing some of the provisions of these two
> bills (which may not come through).
>
>         The libertarian-oriented Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) also
> has a page devoted to stopping FOSTA for its Internet censorship provisions
>https://www.congress.gov/bill/115th-congress/senate-bill/1693 . Another
> website with additional information detailing what's bad about both bills
> is https://medium.com/@EngineOrg/myth-vs-fact-what-you-need-to-
> know-about-sesta-fosta-850e74f3b8c4 .
>
>         The actual text of the bills can be read at
> https://www.congress.gov/bill/115th-congress/house-bill/1865 (FOSTA) and
> https://www.congress.gov/bill/115th-congress/senate-bill/1693 (SESTA).
>
> Love & Liberty,
>
>                                      ((( starchild )))
> At-Large Representative, Libertarian National Committee
>                           RealReform at earthlink.net
>                                    (415) 625-FREE
>                                      @StarchildSF
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> TEXT OF LETTER FOR LP TO SIGN ONTO:
>
>
> February 25, 2018
>
> As organizations which support the rights, health and wellbeing of
> individuals who trade sex, the undersigned are firmly against the passage
> of “Stop Enabling Sex Trafficking Act” SESTA (S. 1693) and “Fight Online
> Sex Trafficking Act” FOSTA (H.1865). This legislation will cause harm
> without improving anti-trafficking efforts. Passage of this legislation
> will put the most vulnerable in our communities at higher risk of violence
> and victimization. We reject legislation that threaten the lives and safety
> of individuals trading sex - people who are disproportionately LGBTQ,
> immigrant, and people of color trying to survive. This legislation will
> target peers and communities who use the internet for harm reduction and
> anti-violence work, and isolate people who trade sex, increasing
> vulnerability to violence and victimization.
>
> Meaningful anti-trafficking work should not make those in the sex trade
> more susceptible to violence and exploitation. After the closure of RedBook
> or Rentboy.com, sex workers became even more vulnerable and economically
> precarious. Both FOSTA and SESTA promote the closing of those websites and
> chill the possibility for organizations to create internet-based platforms
> which service providers and communities use to distribute and access harm
> reduction and safety information and techniques.
>
> Under the current language in the Communications and Decency Act,
> prosecutors have every tool required to go after third parties, including
> websites, who have engaged in trafficking in persons. The proposed changes
> made by SESTA open this to a wider civil liability without clear guidelines
> for how to obey the law. These costly lawsuits could easily imperil any
> website which caters to, or even acknowledges, people who trade sex. This
> including websites which:
>
> - Host ads, enabling safer conditions and screening for violence
> - Host harm reduction information and mechanisms, including safety and
> health tips for workers
> - Create community for people who trade sex to share information
>
> We anticipate that this will have a chilling effect on websites and
> organizations providing valuable safety information, community and peer
> support. Denying these resources exacerbate the risk of violence and
> victimization of sex workers, including those experiencing exploitation.
>
> Websites which hold that information are also vital resources for
> trafficking investigations. Pushing the sex trade further underground means
> that it will be harder to identify potential victims, find an electronic
> trail for which to build cases, and resurrect information to access
> post-conviction relief. SESTA disincentivizes websites from holding or
> creating a digital footprint, destroying these valuable tools for law
> enforcement and service providers.
>
> Further, shutting down websites that sex workers use to screen clients
> more safely through ads does not deter people from trading sex. To the
> contrary, this only drives sex workers to find clients through street-based
> work where they face higher rates of violence, HIV, Hep C and STI
> transmission, and exploitation. And those with fewer options will
> inevitably be the most impacted. The impact of this legislation is that
> trafficking victims will see more trauma and violence and have fewer
> opportunities for identification by law enforcement.
>
> The House-backed bill, FOSTA, takes this one step further and criminalizes
> anyone using those platforms - including sex workers and trafficking
> victims - and expands this to prostitution, as opposed to the narrower
> crime of sex trafficking. By expanding the Mann Act, which criminalizes the
> transportation of a person across state lines for the purpose of
> prostitution, to encompass all of the internet means that all harm
> reduction tools, which almost always involve connecting to peers and
> community for safety and information, makes people criminally liable for up
> to ten years in prison. Under FOSTA, sharing information about violence,
> victimizers, HIV/STI transmission when engaged in sex work would put a
> person at risk for criminal prosecution. We have already seen these
> activities criminalized to the detriment of those trading sex, and very
> often criminalizing trafficking victims themselves. Improving
> anti-trafficking efforts does not mean expanding the umbrella to crimes
> which require no force, fraud or coercion, and this expansion undermines
> the original intent of the law.
>
> Currently, there are no standards for what is expected of internet-based
> platforms when trafficking in the sex trade is suspected. This legislation
> does not get us closer to that goal, and instead makes it harder for
> trafficking investigators, prosecutors or service providers to connect with
> potential victims and sex workers better able to protect themselves from
> exploitation. Meaningful legislation would empower stakeholders - sex
> workers, internet platforms, law enforcement, the legal community and
> service providers - to come together and build those expectations in a way
> which mitigates harm.
>
> As organizations which believe in supporting the safety and lives of those
> engaged in the sex trade, we condemn these efforts and encourage Congress
> to focus their efforts on harm reduction. These moves criminalize the
> survival of our communities, especially those with compounding
> marginalizations which make resources even more difficult to obtain.
>
> Sincerely,
>
-------------- next part --------------
   I agree.
   Whitney Bilyeu

   On Mon, Feb 26, 2018 at 6:40 PM, Starchild <[1]starchild at lp.org> wrote:

             I'm requesting that the LNC Executive Committee hold a
     special meeting ASAP for the purpose of voting to add the
     Libertarian Party as a signatory to the following attached letter in
     opposition to two bad pieces of legislation currently in Congress
     which would further criminalize consensual prostitution, and related
     online speech including sharing harm reduction and safety tips for
     sex workers, in the name of fighting sex trafficking (which they
     would do nothing to stop).
             This harmful legislation was just brought to my attention.
     The House bill, the "Allow States and Victims to Fight Online Sex
     Trafficking Act" or FOSTA, may be voted on in the House as soon as
     TOMORROW (Tuesday, February 27), which makes this a time–sensitive
     matter that lacks the time for a vote of the full LNC.
             I've reviewed the letter and did not notice anything
     substantive in it that is objectionable from a libertarian
     perspective, but I encourage others to review it as well. Due to our
     screwed-up email list, I have copied the text of the letter below as
     well as attaching it as a PDF file. Also attached is a graphic
     detailing some of the provisions of these two bills (which may not
     come through).
             The libertarian-oriented Electronic Frontier Foundation
     (EFF) also has a page devoted to stopping FOSTA for its Internet
     censorship provisions – [2]https://www.congress.gov/bill/
     115th-congress/senate-bill/1693 . Another website with additional
     information detailing what's bad about both bills is
     [3]https://medium.com/@EngineOrg/myth-vs-fact-what-you-need-to-
     know-about-sesta-fosta-850e74f3b8c4 .
             The actual text of the bills can be read at
     [4]https://www.congress.gov/bill/115th-congress/house-bill/1865
     (FOSTA) and [5]https://www.congress.gov/bill/
     115th-congress/senate-bill/1693 (SESTA).
     Love & Liberty,
                                          ((( starchild )))
     At-Large Representative, Libertarian National Committee
                               [6]RealReform at earthlink.net
                                        (415) 625-FREE
                                          @StarchildSF
     TEXT OF LETTER FOR LP TO SIGN ONTO:
     February 25, 2018
     As organizations which support the rights, health and wellbeing of
     individuals who trade sex, the undersigned are firmly against the
     passage of “Stop Enabling Sex Trafficking Act” SESTA (S. 1693) and
     “Fight Online Sex Trafficking Act” FOSTA (H.1865). This legislation
     will cause harm without improving anti-trafficking efforts. Passage
     of this legislation will put the most vulnerable in our communities
     at higher risk of violence and victimization. We reject legislation
     that threaten the lives and safety of individuals trading sex -
     people who are disproportionately LGBTQ, immigrant, and people of
     color trying to survive. This legislation will target peers and
     communities who use the internet for harm reduction and
     anti-violence work, and isolate people who trade sex, increasing
     vulnerability to violence and victimization.
     Meaningful anti-trafficking work should not make those in the sex
     trade more susceptible to violence and exploitation. After the
     closure of RedBook or Rentboy.com, sex workers became even more
     vulnerable and economically precarious. Both FOSTA and SESTA promote
     the closing of those websites and chill the possibility for
     organizations to create internet-based platforms which service
     providers and communities use to distribute and access harm
     reduction and safety information and techniques.
     Under the current language in the Communications and Decency Act,
     prosecutors have every tool required to go after third parties,
     including websites, who have engaged in trafficking in persons. The
     proposed changes made by SESTA open this to a wider civil liability
     without clear guidelines for how to obey the law. These costly
     lawsuits could easily imperil any website which caters to, or even
     acknowledges, people who trade sex. This including websites which:
     - Host ads, enabling safer conditions and screening for violence
     - Host harm reduction information and mechanisms, including safety
     and health tips for workers
     - Create community for people who trade sex to share information
     We anticipate that this will have a chilling effect on websites and
     organizations providing valuable safety information, community and
     peer support. Denying these resources exacerbate the risk of
     violence and victimization of sex workers, including those
     experiencing exploitation.
     Websites which hold that information are also vital resources for
     trafficking investigations. Pushing the sex trade further
     underground means that it will be harder to identify potential
     victims, find an electronic trail for which to build cases, and
     resurrect information to access post-conviction relief. SESTA
     disincentivizes websites from holding or creating a digital
     footprint, destroying these valuable tools for law enforcement and
     service providers.
     Further, shutting down websites that sex workers use to screen
     clients more safely through ads does not deter people from trading
     sex. To the contrary, this only drives sex workers to find clients
     through street-based work where they face higher rates of violence,
     HIV, Hep C and STI transmission, and exploitation. And those with
     fewer options will inevitably be the most impacted. The impact of
     this legislation is that trafficking victims will see more trauma
     and violence and have fewer opportunities for identification by law
     enforcement.
     The House-backed bill, FOSTA, takes this one step further and
     criminalizes anyone using those platforms - including sex workers
     and trafficking victims - and expands this to prostitution, as
     opposed to the narrower crime of sex trafficking. By expanding the
     Mann Act, which criminalizes the transportation of a person across
     state lines for the purpose of prostitution, to encompass all of the
     internet means that all harm reduction tools, which almost always
     involve connecting to peers and community for safety and
     information, makes people criminally liable for up to ten years in
     prison. Under FOSTA, sharing information about violence,
     victimizers, HIV/STI transmission when engaged in sex work would put
     a person at risk for criminal prosecution. We have already seen
     these activities criminalized to the detriment of those trading sex,
     and very often criminalizing trafficking victims themselves.
     Improving anti-trafficking efforts does not mean expanding the
     umbrella to crimes which require no force, fraud or coercion, and
     this expansion undermines the original intent of the law.
     Currently, there are no standards for what is expected of
     internet-based platforms when trafficking in the sex trade is
     suspected. This legislation does not get us closer to that goal, and
     instead makes it harder for trafficking investigators, prosecutors
     or service providers to connect with potential victims and sex
     workers better able to protect themselves from exploitation.
     Meaningful legislation would empower stakeholders - sex workers,
     internet platforms, law enforcement, the legal community and service
     providers - to come together and build those expectations in a way
     which mitigates harm.
     As organizations which believe in supporting the safety and lives of
     those engaged in the sex trade, we condemn these efforts and
     encourage Congress to focus their efforts on harm reduction. These
     moves criminalize the survival of our communities, especially those
     with compounding marginalizations which make resources even more
     difficult to obtain.
     Sincerely,

References

   1. mailto:starchild at lp.org
   2. https://www.congress.gov/bill/115th-congress/senate-bill/1693
   3. https://medium.com/@EngineOrg/myth-vs-fact-what-you-need-to-know-about-sesta-fosta-850e74f3b8c4
   4. https://www.congress.gov/bill/115th-congress/house-bill/1865
   5. https://www.congress.gov/bill/115th-congress/senate-bill/1693
   6. mailto:RealReform at earthlink.net


More information about the Lnc-business mailing list