Showing posts with label Prostitution. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Prostitution. Show all posts

Saturday, 8 June 2013

Are you supporting slavery with your iphone and other tech equipment?




Dear Networkers,

Right now, while you’re reading this  on your phone or computer, 
you may have a product of slavery in your hand.

The reality is that almost every electronic device we use in our everyday lives 
could include conflict minerals mined by slaves in the Congo.


This week, we brought together some of the world’s leading experts to discuss slavery in electronics - and right now, you can download the free podcast of that discussion to learn a few simple steps you can take to prevent slavery from entering your pocket.


Many of the world’s major electronics companies fuel the demand for conflict minerals. While companies like Intel, HP, Apple and Microsoft are taking concrete steps to end the demand for slave-mined minerals in the Congo, there is one company that has not – Nintendo.

As Sasha Lezhnev of the Enough Project explains in the podcast, "There are many things that consumers can do to influence these companies, and whether these companies move the needle on this issue is really up to us."
That’s why we need your help to put pressure on Nintendo to ‘level up’.

The greater the pressure from consumers, the more likely we are to make a real difference. So once you’ve taken action, please forward this message to a friend and ask them to join us in calling on Nintendo to take concrete steps to ensure slavery is not in their products.

Yours in solidarity,
Amy, Kate, Debra, Mich, Jess, Nick and the Walk Free team

Walk Free is a movement of people everywhere, 
fighting to end one of the world's greatest evils: Modern slavery. 

Further reading:


Saturday, 7 July 2012

Will abolition of Amsterdam's famed red light district destroy human trafficking, drug sales, & illegal money laundering?


Video News provided by IBTimes TV. Visit IBTimes.co.uk for Latest News, and Business News

Holland wants to close down its red light district.  Not only is the district famous for prostitution and girls in windows, it is also a convenient place for your drug of choice and taking your money to the laundromat.

But what happens next, I ask?  Decentralisation of the red light economy? A move to the outer suburbs? I know the Dutch are pretty clever but can they stamp out prostitution, drugs, and money laundering with a stroke of the public policy pen?

My view is to deal with the demand end - but for millennia male dominance in decision-making and wealth has prevented that and it is difficult - if not impossisble - to establish bulwarks against a p*n*s-driven economy.  

Human trafficking is a globalised trade of significant proportions as is drug and currency trafficking - and law enforcement agencies don't seem to have made all that much of a dint in any of the degradation which these trades represent.
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