Would a survivor be comfortable in your church?
Over the 11+ years REST has been walking alongside victims and survivors of sex trafficking and the sex trade, we’ve heard countless stories and reasons why survivors don’t feel welcome in churches—even when they are devout Christians.
The Marriage of Racism and Misogyny in the Sex Trade
That decision came over 300 years after interracial marriage was made illegal through colonial antimiscegenation laws. These laws vastly expanded a racist system of sexual exploitation—and we still see their impact in the sex trade today.
Racism and Pornography
While pornography is a sexually exploitative industry that objectifies, commodifies, and degrades individuals from every walk of life, it is often uniquely degrading and reliant on centuries-old racist stereotypes for people of color.
There is no such thing as fair trade pornography.
The thing is, there is no “fair trade” stamp for pornographic content—pornography consumers have no way of knowing if sexual acts they are viewing are consensual. There is no enforceable measure for “ethical production”. Even if it’s something that looks consensual or caring, there’s no guarantee that force, fraud, or coercion wasn’t involved.
Systemic Oppression, Inequity, and Sex Trafficking
Today, more than 200 years after Harriet Jacobs was born, we still see the impact of the slave trade and a social system that allows for the devaluation and oppression of marginalized individuals, in the sex trade. And we see it here in King County, Washington.