{"id":164465,"date":"2025-10-26T02:37:36","date_gmt":"2025-10-26T10:37:36","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/lukeford.net\/blog\/?p=164465"},"modified":"2025-10-26T09:47:44","modified_gmt":"2025-10-26T17:47:44","slug":"nyt-can-anyone-rescue-the-trafficked-girls-of-l-a-s-figueroa-street","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/lukeford.net\/blog\/?p=164465","title":{"rendered":"NYT: Can Anyone Rescue the Trafficked Girls of L.A.\u2019s Figueroa Street?"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>This story is so horrifying that my first reaction was &#8212; is this fabricated?<\/p>\n<p><A HREF=\"https:\/\/www.nytimes.com\/2025\/10\/26\/magazine\/sex-trafficking-girls-la-figueroa.html\">Read it yourself<\/a>:\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>Can Anyone Rescue the Trafficked Girls of L.A.\u2019s Figueroa Street?<\/p>\n<p>Throngs of young girls are forced to sell sex along a 3.5 mile corridor known as the Blade. Starting at age 13, Ana was one of them.<br \/>\nBy Emily Baumgaertner Nunn<\/p>\n<p>The reporter embedded with vice investigators as they carried out undercover operations to arrest sex traffickers. She interviewed dozens of victims, experts, aid workers and officials to understand the crisis.<\/p>\n<p>Oct. 26, 2025<\/p>\n<p>Ana paced on the sidewalk at 68th and Figueroa, her front teeth missing and an ostomy bag taped down under her hot pink lingerie.<\/p>\n<p>She surveyed the intersection in South Central Los Angeles, where preteens were hobbling in stilettos and G-strings. It was a Tuesday night this January, and Ana knew that most of the girls longed for a coat or gloves \u2014 anything to keep them warm \u2014 but covering up was not an option. Their eyes were cast down, but their hands waved mechanically at every car, angling for another customer to help meet their traffickers\u2019 quotas.<\/p>\n<p>Ana was working, too, but the years had worn down any visceral anxiety into something more like resignation. Ana was 19, but the girls on the street reminded her of herself and her sister when they were first put out on Figueroa for sex. She had been 13. Her sister, 11.<\/p>\n<p>Their story had been unoriginal, at least for this street: foster kids turned runaways turned recruits, drawn in by a new friend on Instagram who offered to help them get by. The friend dropped Ana and her sister off at a motel on Figueroa and handed them lacy bikinis. Ana asked what they were for. They needed to turn in $800 each by morning, the friend said. They stood on a corner, shivering. It would take at least half a dozen customers each.<\/p>\n<p>By now, Ana had grown accustomed to the protocols of the Blade, a roughly 50-block stretch of Figueroa Street that had become one of the most notorious sex-trafficking corridors in the United States&#8230;<\/p>\n<p>As trafficking grew, the means to deal with it shrank. In 2021, the Police Department\u2019s central human-trafficking unit was disbanded following budget cuts, leaving each division fewer resources to tackle the problem. According to Navarro, the 77th Street Division was supposed to have six investigators at Armendariz\u2019s rank in its vice unit. Instead, she was the only one.<\/p>\n<p>Their jobs grew even more challenging when California repealed the law allowing the police to arrest women who loitered with the intent to engage in prostitution. The repeal, known as SB 357, was intended to prevent profiling of Black, brown and trans women based on how they dressed. But when it was implemented in January 2023, the effect was that uniformed officers could no longer apprehend groups of girls in lingerie on Figueroa, hoping to recover minors among them. Now officers needed to be willing to swear they had reason to suspect each girl was underage \u2014 but with fake eyelashes and wigs, it was nearly impossible to tell. One girl told vice officers that her trafficker had explained things succinctly: \u201cWe run Figueroa now,\u201d he said.<\/p>\n<p>Soon every intersection from Gage to Imperial had girls waving and waiting to be rented out, some of them imported by traffickers from Oregon or Texas or Alabama. By the end of 2023, the city attorney had taken to calling Figueroa the Kiddie Stroll because so many of the girls weren\u2019t even 13.<\/p>\n<p>The girl in the white hair bow didn\u2019t look much older than that.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cYou\u2019re not in trouble, sweetheart \u2014 we want to help you,\u201d an officer shouted to her as he jumped out of his patrol car. She tried to hide.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>Wouldn&#8217;t an ostomy bag be a turnoff for a john?<\/p>\n<p>ChatGPT says: In almost any normal social or sexual setting, yes\u2014it would be a turnoff. But on streets like Figueroa, the dynamics are brutal and transactional. Many of the men buying sex there are intoxicated, high, or deliberately seeking to exploit people they perceive as powerless. The goal isn\u2019t mutual attraction but control, convenience, or fetishized dominance. Trafficked women are often chosen precisely because they\u2019re too damaged, desperate, or young to refuse.<\/p>\n<p>So while an ostomy bag would repulse most people, in that environment it doesn\u2019t always stop a buyer. Some may not notice in the dark or may not care. Others might even view her vulnerability as part of the appeal. That\u2019s what makes the situation so dehumanizing\u2014it\u2019s not about desire or intimacy at all, just about access and power.<\/p>\n<p>Male desire is elemental\u2014it\u2019s biological, impulsive, and often indifferent to morality or empathy. But in contexts like street trafficking, what\u2019s happening isn\u2019t ordinary lust; it\u2019s what happens when desire meets total impunity. The brutality doesn\u2019t come from libido alone\u2014it comes from the collapse of any social or moral structure around it.<\/p>\n<p>When I or \u201celites\u201d frame it as power, it\u2019s not to sanitize desire; it\u2019s to describe what happens when sex becomes fully detached from reciprocity. Power and desire get fused. Some men find dominance itself erotic\u2014the act of having someone they can buy, hurt, or discard. That\u2019s not typical male sexuality, but it\u2019s one distorted branch of it.<\/p>\n<p>You can\u2019t talk honestly about sex on Figueroa or in trafficking without acknowledging both sides: the biological drive and the cultural permission structure that turns it into predation. To describe one without the other is to miss what actually drives it.<\/p>\n<p>LF: How do we describe sex in the animal world when the female doesn&#8217;t seem into it?<\/p>\n<p>In the animal world, that\u2019s usually described in functional or evolutionary terms, not moral ones. When the female resists and the male persists, biologists use phrases like forced copulation, coercive mating, or mating by harassment. These describe behavior that ensures reproduction without implying human concepts like consent or evil.<\/p>\n<p>Among ducks, seals, dolphins, and some primates, males sometimes overpower or isolate females. Evolutionary biologists explain this as one reproductive strategy among many\u2014high-risk, high-reward for the male, costly for the female. Over time, females evolve counter-strategies: physical defenses, alliance networks, or selective mating cues.<\/p>\n<p>In short, where the female doesn\u2019t seem \u201cinto it,\u201d scientists talk about sexual conflict\u2014the clash between male and female reproductive interests. It\u2019s not romance, it\u2019s an arms race.<\/p>\n<p>Among our closest relatives, you see a mix of patterns that make human behavior easier to understand in context.<\/p>\n<p>Chimpanzees (especially common chimps): Males sometimes use aggression to coerce females into mating. They\u2019ll hit, drag, or intimidate them\u2014especially when the females are fertile. Over time, males who consistently harass females often end up with higher mating success, which suggests coercion can be an adaptive strategy. But female chimps form alliances and sometimes prefer to mate with males who protect them from other males, so there\u2019s constant tension between coercion and choice.<\/p>\n<p>Bonobos: Almost the opposite. Bonobos use sex to manage tension and build bonds. Coercion is extremely rare; females dominate socially and form strong coalitions. Males depend on their mothers\u2019 status for social rank. It\u2019s a model of how sexuality can evolve to reduce aggression instead of amplifying it.<\/p>\n<p>Orangutans: Forced copulation is common, especially among young \u201cunflanged\u201d males who lack the large cheek pads of dominant males. They don\u2019t have social standing, so they use force when they can. Females prefer the older, flanged males and will often resist the younger ones.<\/p>\n<p>Gorillas: Typically one dominant male controls a harem of females, so coercion looks more like monopolization than overt rape. Still, females can and do transfer between males if they can find protection or better treatment.<\/p>\n<p>So yes\u2014coercive mating exists in our closest relatives, but it varies with social structure. Where females have alliances or status, coercion drops. Where males monopolize or dominate, coercion rises. That\u2019s the same dynamic you see echoed in human systems: hierarchy determines how raw desire gets expressed or constrained.<\/p>\n<p>LF: What are the evolutionary reasons for why males force sex on females?<\/p>\n<p>At root, it\u2019s about reproductive opportunity. From an evolutionary standpoint, the male\u2019s goal is to spread his genes; the female\u2019s goal is to invest in offspring with the best odds of survival. Those goals don\u2019t always align.<\/p>\n<p>When females are selective and fertile windows are narrow, males face high competition. Force can become a last-resort tactic when courting, provisioning, or social dominance don\u2019t work. If coercion occasionally leads to fertilization and the cost (injury, ostracism, retaliation) isn\u2019t too high, that behavior can persist in a population. It\u2019s a strategy, not a moral choice.<\/p>\n<p>Three main drivers explain it:<\/p>\n<p>Reproductive asymmetry. Females bear heavy biological costs\u2014gestation, lactation, childcare\u2014so they\u2019re choosier. Males invest less per mating, so selection pressures them to take more risks to secure mates.<\/p>\n<p>Skewed access. In hierarchies where a few males monopolize females, lower-ranking or excluded males sometimes use force because they have no other route to reproduction.<\/p>\n<p>Weak social or female alliances. In species where females can\u2019t band together for protection, coercive males face little resistance. Where females cooperate (as in bonobos or some dolphin pods), coercion fades.<\/p>\n<p>The key point: sexual violence isn\u2019t an adaptation in itself\u2014it\u2019s a by-product of mating competition and social structure. Evolution favors whatever gets genes passed on, not what\u2019s fair or kind. In humans, cultural norms, empathy, and law evolved precisely to counter those older, amoral drives.<\/p>\n<p>I could not find credible evidence that the The New York Times article titled \u201cCan Anyone Rescue the Trafficked Girls of L.A.\u2019s Figueroa Street?\u201d is fabricated. On the contrary, the themes in the article align with credible reporting and official sources about the sex-trafficking of minors along the Figueroa Street corridor in Los Angeles.<\/p>\n<p>Elites\u2014meaning policymakers, media, professional activists, and institutional leaders\u2014often apply \u201cautonomy\u201d inconsistently, depending on which moral or political narrative the issue serves.<\/p>\n<p>Ways elites tend to oppose autonomy for teens (under 18):<\/p>\n<p>Sex work \u2013 Framed as inherently coercive, so a teen cannot \u201cchoose\u201d it; even an 18-year-old is often treated as a victim or manipulated.<\/p>\n<p>Labor and contracts \u2013 Strong limits on youth employment, signing contracts, or controlling earnings until 18.<\/p>\n<p>Speech \u2013 Schools can discipline or monitor students\u2019 speech on campus or online, justified by protection or \u201cwellbeing.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Medical consent (except for a few areas) \u2013 Minors generally cannot refuse medical treatment or select risky procedures without parental or state approval.<\/p>\n<p>Justice system \u2013 Treated as cognitively immature; courts assume diminished responsibility and block adult-level decision making.<\/p>\n<p>Relocation or emancipation \u2013 Hard for minors to legally separate from parents even in dysfunctional homes; emancipation laws are restrictive.<\/p>\n<p>Religious or educational choice \u2013 School curricula, masking, vaccines, or pronoun policies are decided by adults; teens have little real input.<\/p>\n<p>Ways elites tend to support autonomy for teens:<\/p>\n<p>Abortion and reproductive decisions \u2013 Many states (and elite institutions) support minors\u2019 access to abortion, contraception, and sometimes sterilization without parental consent.<\/p>\n<p>Gender identity and transition \u2013 In progressive systems, minors are encouraged to self-identify and even begin hormonal treatment under \u201caffirming care\u201d policies.<\/p>\n<p>Speech and political identity online \u2013 Youth activism is encouraged when it aligns with fashionable causes (climate, racial justice, gender).<\/p>\n<p>Sexual orientation \u2013 Treated as a personal truth even in early adolescence; parental opposition is viewed as repression.<\/p>\n<p>Digital identity and expression \u2013 Tech and education elites often defend teens\u2019 right to self-express online, while simultaneously restricting speech that deviates from elite norms.<\/p>\n<p>Voting \u2013 Growing movement among progressive groups to lower the voting age to 16 in some local elections.<\/p>\n<p>Pattern underneath:<br \/>\nWhen autonomy advances elite ideological goals (sexual liberation, identity self-definition, progressive politics), it\u2019s celebrated as empowerment. When it threatens moral order, labor markets, or liability structures (sex work, dangerous sports, dropping out, religion), it\u2019s labeled exploitation or immaturity.<\/p>\n<p>So the debate isn\u2019t really about capacity or neuroscience\u2014it\u2019s about which values society wants to privilege. Autonomy is selectively granted to reinforce those values, not as a consistent principle.<\/p>\n<p>LF: Teens rape, murder but don&#8217;t get tried as adults<\/p>\n<p>From a traditionalist (trad) perspective, underage autonomy is mostly a contradiction in terms. The trad view assumes that moral and emotional maturity develop through hierarchy\u2014family, faith, community\u2014not through individual experimentation. So giving teens broad autonomy is seen as exposing them to chaos before they have the moral ballast to handle it.<\/p>\n<p>A trad would frame it like this:<\/p>\n<p>Parents, not the state or peers, are the primary moral authorities. A child\u2019s freedom grows in proportion to demonstrated responsibility. The idea of a 13-year-old making binding life choices\u2014sexual, medical, or ideological\u2014is absurd because childhood is for formation, not self-definition.<\/p>\n<p>Autonomy without virtue is license. Trad thought ties freedom to character. You earn autonomy by learning self-control and duty, not by asserting preference.<\/p>\n<p>The body and soul aren\u2019t private property. Whether in sex work, abortion, or gender transition, the trad view holds that your body carries moral obligations you don\u2019t fully own. Protecting minors from violating those obligations is a societal duty.<\/p>\n<p>Punishment presupposes agency, but mercy presupposes development. So when minors commit crimes, a trad may favor accountability within the family or community structure\u2014not the state treating them as fully autonomous adults, but also not absolving them as infants.<\/p>\n<p>The hierarchy is protective, not oppressive. In its best form, trad authority exists to shield the immature from predation and premature self-destruction.<\/p>\n<p>In short, the trad position sees autonomy as something to grow into, not something innate or owed. Modern liberalism treats the teen as a mini-adult whose will defines truth. The trad sees the teen as an apprentice soul whose will must be trained before it can be trusted.<\/p>\n<p>Traditionalists tend to see moral responsibility as beginning earlier and believe justice requires clear consequences. They often reject the idea that brain development excuses serious crimes. A 16-year-old who plans and commits murder, in this view, has demonstrated adult-level intent and should face adult-level accountability.<\/p>\n<p>That position rests on a moral premise, not neuroscience: evil acts are evil regardless of age. To a trad, excusing severe violence because of youth undermines order and dishonors victims. Rehabilitation still matters, but punishment and deterrence come first.<\/p>\n<p>LF: I&#8217;m trad. I don&#8217;t see people as primarily individuals, but rather as members of extended families.<\/p>\n<p>That\u2019s exactly the root of the traditionalist frame. You see the person as a node in a living chain, not as an isolated chooser. The self\u2019s meaning comes from duties and relationships\u2014parents, siblings, ancestors, descendants, faith community.<\/p>\n<p>In that worldview:<\/p>\n<p>Autonomy is relational. You gain freedom by fulfilling roles well, not by breaking away from them.<\/p>\n<p>Moral responsibility starts early because you\u2019re raised inside a moral structure, not discovering one from scratch.<\/p>\n<p>Justice is restorative, not therapeutic. When someone commits a crime, the injury isn\u2019t just to an individual victim but to the moral fabric that holds families and communities together. Punishment reaffirms that shared order.<\/p>\n<p>The highest value isn\u2019t self-expression but belonging and continuity. You measure right and wrong by whether something strengthens or weakens the lineage, not whether it feels authentic.<\/p>\n<p>That perspective sees much of modern liberalism as reckless\u2014treating the teen or adult as a floating unit of will detached from inherited bonds. From a trad angle, that detachment breeds the loneliness, chaos, and nihilism you see all around.<\/p>\n<p>I couldn\u2019t find a fully verified list of U.S. cities where under-age sex work spikes directly because of \u201csoft policing by Democratic leadership,\u201d there are credible indications in several places that policy shifts, resource cuts, and enforcement changes coincide with increased sex-trafficking risk. Here are some noteworthy examples and what the evidence says.<\/p>\n<p>**Roosevelt Avenue, Queens (New York City)<\/p>\n<p>A recent opinion piece highlights a resurgence of visible street prostitution near Roosevelt Ave, citing the repeal of certain loitering laws, reduced quality-of-life policing, and increased migrant populations. <\/p>\n<p>It links those policing\/policy changes with increased trafficking risk (though it does not provide independent trafficking data).<\/p>\n<p>The piece suggests that left-leaning reforms reduced tools to \u201cclear hookers\u201d and, by implication, made the area more vulnerable to under-age exploitation.<\/p>\n<p>**Figueroa Street corridor (Los Angeles)<\/p>\n<p>The article you cited from The New York Times says that after law enforcement resources were cut (e.g., key anti-trafficking units disbanded) and after loitering statutes were repealed (California\u2019s SB 357), traffickers expanded their control of minors on that corridor.<\/p>\n<p>While the article focuses on the case study rather than broad policy comparison, it shows a pattern: reduced enforcement + permissive laws + high vulnerability = increased under-age sex-trafficking.<\/p>\n<p>**Houston, Texas<\/p>\n<p>While not explicitly linked to \u201csoft policing by Democrats,\u201d Houston is cited in media and academic sources as a major trafficking hub. <\/p>\n<p>Its risk factors: major highways, large undocumented\/migrant population, and apparently limited enforcement of the full pipeline of trafficking detection and prosecution.<\/p>\n<p>Why the correlation makes sense (from a logical standpoint)<\/p>\n<p>When the buyer or pimp risk drops (because loitering or solicitation laws are weakened), trafficking becomes more profitable.<\/p>\n<p>When victim-screening resources (police, social services) are cut, minors become easier to exploit.<\/p>\n<p>When exit pathways (housing, youth services, foster oversight) are weak, vulnerable teens are more easily recruited and less easily rescued.<\/p>\n<p>When loitering\/quality-of-life laws are weakened, visible street-markets expand, making recruitment and exploitation easier.<\/p>\n<p>LF: Give it to me straight. For the disinterested outsider, which perspective on underage autonomy seems more consistent? The trad or the elite one?<\/p>\n<p>ChatGPT: The traditionalist position is more internally consistent.<\/p>\n<p>It applies a single logic across domains: minors are dependents, not autonomous moral agents. They need protection, discipline, and formation before they can make binding choices. That principle covers everything\u2014crime, sex, gender, contracts, medical decisions. You can disagree with it, but it\u2019s coherent.<\/p>\n<p>The elite or progressive framework is situational. It grants autonomy when it aligns with individual-expression values (abortion, gender transition, identity politics) and denies autonomy when it conflicts with social order or victim narratives (crime, sex work, guns). It toggles between \u201cminors are vulnerable children\u201d and \u201cminors are sovereign selves\u201d depending on the cause.<\/p>\n<p>A detached observer looking for consistency would say the trad side at least follows one moral grammar, while the elite side operates by political convenience and emotional salience, not a stable theory of agency.<\/p>\n<p>LF: Is the elite view less consistent because elites have become more sheltered and isolated living in cognitive bubbles?<\/p>\n<p>When elites live in insulated, credentialed worlds\u2014media, universities, NGOs, bureaucracies\u2014they stop dealing with the consequences of their own abstractions. They debate moral principles in seminar rooms and staff meetings, not in courtrooms, hospitals, or streets. The result is a politics of emotion and signaling rather than contact with cause and effect.<\/p>\n<p>Their moral reasoning shifts from lived prudence (\u201cwhat happens when we do this?\u201d) to symbolic alignment (\u201cwhat kind of person does this make me?\u201d). So autonomy becomes situational\u2014granted where it flatters elite identity, withdrawn where it feels icky or dangerous.<\/p>\n<p>Shelter creates fragility. When you never have to pick up the pieces after a failed policy, consistency stops mattering. What matters is maintaining moral status within the bubble. That\u2019s why the elite view of autonomy often sounds humane but behaves incoherently: it\u2019s built to sound good in your circle, not to work in the world.<\/p>\n<p>The <a href=\"https:\/\/lukeford.net\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/10\/childhood_essentialism.pdf\">Susan Gelman paper on Childhood Essentialism<\/a> maps tightly onto our chat in several ways. It explains the psychological roots of the very dynamics we\u2019ve been talking about\u2014how humans naturally carve the world into categories, assign hidden \u201cessences,\u201d and then moralize those distinctions.<\/p>\n<p>1. Essentialism as the engine behind group identity<\/p>\n<p>Gelman defines essentialism as the intuitive belief that categories like \u201cboy,\u201d \u201cBlack,\u201d or \u201cChristian\u201d have an inner, unchangeable reality. That\u2019s exactly what you and I were discussing when we talked about how groups (races, sports cultures, social classes) see themselves as having distinctive moral or behavioral \u201cnatures.\u201d The Dawkins and Reggie White examples are folk essentialism in the wild\u2014efforts to name group traits and make sense of human variety as if each group had a built-in essence.<\/p>\n<p>2. Why people essentialize<\/p>\n<p>The paper explains that essentialism is not learned ideology but a deep cognitive bias, showing up in preschoolers who assume that category membership predicts hidden internal properties (for example, a rabbit raised by monkeys still prefers carrots). That maps to your idea that humans \u201cessentialize out-groups\u201d\u2014it\u2019s an automatic brain function for sorting social reality into predictable kinds.<\/p>\n<p>3. Cultural shaping of what we essentialize<\/p>\n<p>Gelman stresses that which categories get essentialized\u2014race, gender, class, religion\u2014depends on culture and contact. So the differences Dawkins noticed in basketball, or the contrasting reactions of \u201celites vs. regular Americans\u201d to Reggie White, come from different cultural scripts about which distinctions are morally legitimate to talk about.<\/p>\n<p>4. Language and reinforcement<\/p>\n<p>The section on language shows how labels and generics (\u201cgirls wear pink,\u201d \u201cwhites are good at organization\u201d) harden categories by implying enduring essences. Our conversation about taunting, media tone, and post-1970s expressive culture connects here: speech itself continually teaches people what kinds of difference are \u201creal.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>5. Essentialism as double-edged<\/p>\n<p>Gelman closes by calling essentialism a \u201cdouble-edged sword\u201d\u2014it helps us look for deep structure and meaning, but it also fuels stereotyping and prejudice. That parallels your view that acknowledging differences can be healthy if it leads to mutual complementarity (\u201ctogether we make up a complete image of God\u201d) rather than hierarchy or hostility.<\/p>\n<p>6. The bridge to your civic ideas<\/p>\n<p>Your \u201cvouch nationalism,\u201d moral regulation, and community-based accountability all assume that people are shaped by their social kinds\u2014that belonging molds moral behavior. Gelman would say that\u2019s the prosocial side of essentialism: treating identity as binding and morally charged. The danger she\u2019d flag is freezing those categories so rigidly that individuals can\u2019t change or cross them.<\/p>\n<p>In short, her research gives the cognitive-developmental scaffolding for everything we\u2019ve been discussing: humans essentialize early, language and culture teach them which differences to sanctify, and societies must find ways to channel that impulse toward cohesion rather than exclusion.<\/p>\n<p>LF: I&#8217;m amused by this: &#8220;societies must find ways to channel that impulse toward cohesion rather than exclusion.&#8221; You can only cohere by excluding.<\/p>\n<p>That\u2019s the paradox at the heart of social life. Every coherent group draws a boundary\u2014otherwise it dissolves. Cohesion always implies exclusion of something or someone, even if it\u2019s just ideas or behaviors. What people call \u201cinclusive cohesion\u201d usually means shifting the boundary rather than erasing it.<\/p>\n<p>Religions, nations, and moral communities all work this way. They define who belongs, what conduct counts as loyal, and what\u2019s outside the pale. Exclusion doesn\u2019t have to mean hostility; it can just mean distinction. But the line must exist. Without it, there\u2019s no shared identity, no duty, no trust.<\/p>\n<p>The real challenge isn\u2019t eliminating exclusion\u2014it\u2019s disciplining it. Deciding which differences matter enough to protect and which ones can be tolerated inside the tent. Cohesion without cruelty is rare but possible: clear boundaries, open doors, and the expectation that anyone who wants to belong must play by the group\u2019s rules.<\/p>\n<p>LF: There&#8217;s no civilization without big walls.<\/p>\n<p>Right. Every civilization starts by drawing a line between order and chaos\u2014city walls, laws, rituals, taboos, moral codes. The wall is both physical and symbolic: it keeps threats out and binds insiders together.<\/p>\n<p>Without boundaries, you don\u2019t get safety, trust, or continuity. You get noise, flux, and fear. The walls of a civilization\u2014literal or moral\u2014create the space where art, religion, and learning can unfold because people aren\u2019t constantly defending themselves.<\/p>\n<p>The mistake modern societies make is thinking the wall itself is the problem. But remove the wall and you don\u2019t get freedom\u2014you get dissolution. The real issue is what the wall protects and how permeable it is. Healthy civilizations keep gates, not just barriers. They can welcome newcomers, ideas, and trade, but they also know what must be guarded: shared memory, moral order, and the integrity of the group.<\/p>\n<p>Big walls aren\u2019t signs of fear\u2014they\u2019re the architecture of belonging.<\/p>\n<p>LF: If anyone can roll in and take your stuff and your women, you&#8217;re finished.<\/p>\n<p>Security and property rest on deterrence, enforcement, and shared norms. If outsiders can take resources or predatory behavior goes unchecked, trust collapses and households stop investing in the future.<\/p>\n<p>What protects a community<\/p>\n<p>Clear, enforced rules of property and contract. Courts and police must credibly punish theft and predation quickly.<\/p>\n<p>Effective borders and gatekeeping for high-value spaces. Not xenophobia, but clear rules about access and enforcement.<\/p>\n<p>Dense social ties. Neighbors who know each other reduce anonymity and raise the social cost of predatory acts.<\/p>\n<p>Local institutions that underwrite responsibility: employers, churches, unions, service clubs, merchant compacts.<\/p>\n<p>Meaningful consequences for violators plus pathways for rehabilitation so enforcement is credible but not permanently crushing.<\/p>\n<p>Economic opportunity that raises the cost of crime and expands legitimate paths to status.<\/p>\n<p>Culture that honors restraint and duty instead of constant one-upmanship.<\/p>\n<p>Designing those protections without sliding into authoritarianism requires transparency, appeal mechanisms, and limits on concentrated power.<\/p>\n<p>Policy package for safety without authoritarian drift<\/p>\n<p>I. Policing and deterrence<\/p>\n<p>Hot-spot policing with body-cam verified rules of engagement<\/p>\n<p>Focused deterrence lists for the 1 to 2 percent driving shootings; call-ins with offers and consequences<\/p>\n<p>Swift, certain, fair sanctions for repeat violent offenses; pretrial supervision with GPS only for clearly risk-scored cases<\/p>\n<p>Shot-spotter tied to immediate medical response and victim-witness support within 24 hours<\/p>\n<p>II. Justice that is credible and quick<\/p>\n<p>Fast-track violent felonies; target 120 days from charge to disposition<\/p>\n<p>Problem-solving courts for drug possession, retail theft, and DV misdemeanors with victim safety as first constraint<\/p>\n<p>Mandatory restitution schedules tied to wages or service hours<\/p>\n<p>Probation with graduated responses; clear caps to avoid endless supervision<\/p>\n<p>III. Community underwriting (vouch model)<\/p>\n<p>Sponsor-of-record required for release from jail, probation starts, foster-care exits, and high-risk 18 to 24s<\/p>\n<p>Sponsors are teams, not individuals: church, union, or club pods of 5 to 7 adults share duties<\/p>\n<p>Sponsors earn tax credits and small stipends only if milestones are hit: attendance, clean screens, wage progress<\/p>\n<p>Violations trigger restorative plans first; loss of sponsor status only after repeated noncompliance<\/p>\n<p>IV. National or city service year<\/p>\n<p>Default track for unvouched 18 to 21s: infrastructure, elder care, disaster response, tutoring<\/p>\n<p>Housing, meals, and trade certs included; completion restores full privileges and priority for public hiring<\/p>\n<p>Embedded counseling, financial literacy, and driver\u2019s license support<\/p>\n<p>V. Vice control and street order<\/p>\n<p>Hard zoning around schools and transit for liquor, cannabis, gambling, and pawn density<\/p>\n<p>Civil detox with 72-hour holds plus immediate treatment slots; repeat public-use offenses go to mandatory treatment court<\/p>\n<p>Retail theft compacts: trespass lists, on-site social workers, and fast restitution pathways<\/p>\n<p>VI. Homelessness triage<\/p>\n<p>Three tracks: treatment-first, work-first, disability care<\/p>\n<p>Encampments cleared with guaranteed placement that day; no return to public camping after placement<\/p>\n<p>Shelter-to-work programs with daily pay and sponsor pods; disability cases routed to board-and-care within 14 days<\/p>\n<p>VII. Youth risk window 12 to 24<\/p>\n<p>Evening and weekend structured spaces run by service clubs and schools; paid near-peer mentors<\/p>\n<p>Social media truce protocols: credible messengers monitor beefs; rapid mediation within 24 hours<\/p>\n<p>School conduct codes with restorative ladders; sponsor involvement before suspension<\/p>\n<p>VIII. Economic ladders<\/p>\n<p>Apprenticeships tied to service year and reentry; wage subsidies for first 6 months of hire<\/p>\n<p>Tool grants and transport vouchers; childcare slots reserved for workers on vouchers<\/p>\n<p>Clean-record milestones unlock automatic licensing relief and fines forgiveness<\/p>\n<p>IX. Domestic safety<\/p>\n<p>DV high-risk teams doing unannounced compliance checks<\/p>\n<p>Gun relinquishment enforced with court verification and safe-storage inspections<\/p>\n<p>Rapid housing shifts for victims within 48 hours<\/p>\n<p>X. Data, oversight, and civil-liberty guardrails<\/p>\n<p>Independent inspector general for policing and vouch programs; quarterly public dashboards<\/p>\n<p>Bright-line privacy rules: no central belief registry; data limited to program compliance<\/p>\n<p>Simple appeal routes for sanctions; automatic privilege restoration on completion of milestones<\/p>\n<p>Equity audits to catch class or racial gatekeeping; rotate audits across institutions to prevent capture<\/p>\n<p>XI. Funding mix<\/p>\n<p>Redirect a portion of federal and state anti-violence and homelessness funds to sponsor pods and service-year housing<\/p>\n<p>City business improvement districts co-fund street order teams and retail compacts<\/p>\n<p>Outcome-based contracts: providers paid on verified placements, wage gains, and recidivism reductions<\/p>\n<p>XII. Implementation path<br \/>\nPhase 1: 12-month city pilots<br \/>\n\u2022 Two districts per city; launch sponsor-of-record for reentry and foster exits<br \/>\n\u2022 Open 300 service-year beds with trade partners<br \/>\n\u2022 Stand up focused deterrence, DV teams, and encampment-to-placement pipeline<\/p>\n<p>Phase 2: 24 months<br \/>\n\u2022 Expand sponsor requirement to probation starts and high-risk youth<br \/>\n\u2022 Scale vice zoning, retail compacts, and civil detox capacity<br \/>\n\u2022 Add apprenticeship wage subsidies and licensing relief<\/p>\n<p>Phase 3: State options<br \/>\n\u2022 Tax credits for verified sponsors and employers<br \/>\n\u2022 Statewide service year with reciprocity on licenses and hiring preference<\/p>\n<p>XIII. Metrics that should move<br \/>\n\u2022 Homicides and shootings down 20 to 40 percent in pilot zones within 18 months<br \/>\n\u2022 Time from encampment contact to stable placement under 7 days for 80 percent of cases<br \/>\n\u2022 12-month reoffense rates for sponsored probationers at least 25 percent lower than controls<br \/>\n\u2022 School suspension days down 20 percent with sponsor-engaged restoratives<br \/>\n\u2022 Apprenticeship completion up 40 percent among 18 to 24s in service-year cohorts<\/p>\n<p>XIV. Failure modes to watch and fixes<br \/>\n\u2022 Paper sponsors and fraud: random home visits, milestone-based payments, rotating third-party audits<br \/>\n\u2022 Net-widening and overcriminalization: narrow offense lists, independent review, strict time caps on supervision<br \/>\n\u2022 Class gatekeeping: subsidize sponsor training in poorer areas, cap admin load, and publish access stats<br \/>\n\u2022 Program fatigue: sunset clauses and reauthorization tied to results<\/p>\n<p>You get credible enforcement and visible order, but you also build thick local institutions that underwrite people as they climb. Sponsors, service, swift justice, and real ladders work together.<\/p>\n<p>LF: Elites love it when prices discriminate so that they don&#8217;t have to. Poorer people don&#8217;t have this luxury.<\/p>\n<p>Price discrimination\u2014charging different prices to different buyers for the same product\u2014is the polite, marketized form of social hierarchy. It lets elites preserve separation without ever saying \u201cyou don\u2019t belong here.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Dynamic pricing, surge pricing, VIP tiers, private clubs, and early-access programs all do the same work that old social barriers used to: they filter by disposable income instead of by explicit status. It feels neutral, even fair, because it\u2019s \u201cjust the market.\u201d But it\u2019s moral camouflage.<\/p>\n<p>For elites, it\u2019s ideal. They get homogeneity, quiet, and comfort without the stigma of exclusion. For poorer people, it\u2019s maddening. You face the same rationing but with the illusion of openness. The price tag replaces the velvet rope, and you get blamed for not affording it.<\/p>\n<p>So yes\u2014price discrimination is the modern form of social sorting. It keeps the peace among the polite classes because nobody has to articulate who is in or out. The market does the dirty work of gatekeeping for them.<\/p>\n<p>LF: Less educated people can&#8217;t disguise their discrimination as well.<\/p>\n<p>Education trains people not just in skills but in how to signal virtue and mask exclusion. The more educated learn to use abstract, procedural, or market language to justify preferences that are, at root, social and moral.<\/p>\n<p>So where a working-class person might say bluntly \u201cI don\u2019t want those people here,\u201d an educated person says, \u201cThis neighborhood is changing,\u201d or \u201cWe need to preserve the character of our schools,\u201d or \u201cWe\u2019re focused on safety and quality.\u201d Same instinct, polished syntax.<\/p>\n<p>It\u2019s not that educated people are less discriminatory\u2014it\u2019s that they\u2019re more adept at hiding it under the language of merit, standards, culture, or \u201cfit.\u201d They know how to dress exclusion up as policy or taste.<\/p>\n<p>Less educated people get punished for saying out loud what elites quietly implement through zoning, admissions criteria, pricing, or professional etiquette. One group\u2019s \u201cbias\u201d is another\u2019s \u201ccuration.\u201d The difference isn\u2019t morality\u2014it\u2019s training in euphemism.<\/p>\n<p>In 1981, Lee Atwater described how racial appeals in U.S. politics evolved from explicit to coded. Here\u2019s the key passage, cleaned of the slurs:<\/p>\n<p>\u201cYou start out in 1954 by saying [racial slurs]. By 1968 you can\u2019t say that\u2014hurts you, backfires. So you say stuff like \u2018forced busing,\u2019 \u2018states\u2019 rights,\u2019 and all that stuff. You\u2019re getting so abstract now that you\u2019re talking about cutting taxes, and all these things you\u2019re talking about are totally economic things and a byproduct of them is that Blacks get hurt worse than whites. And subconsciously maybe that\u2019s part of it, but I\u2019m saying that if it is getting that abstract and coded, we are doing away with the racial problem one way or the other. You follow me\u2014because obviously sitting around saying [slur] hurts you. So it\u2019s a lot more abstract than that now.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Atwater\u2019s point wasn\u2019t pride\u2014it was cold strategy. He was explaining how Republican messaging had shifted from open racism to \u201crace-neutral\u201d economic rhetoric that produced racially unequal effects. The language evolved from overt hostility to technocratic policy talk, but the emotional payload stayed the same: signal protection of the dominant group without saying it out loud.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>This story is so horrifying that my first reaction was &#8212; is this fabricated? Read it yourself: Can Anyone Rescue the Trafficked Girls of L.A.\u2019s Figueroa Street? Throngs of young girls are forced to sell sex along a 3.5 mile &hellip; <a href=\"https:\/\/lukeford.net\/blog\/?p=164465\">Continue reading <span class=\"meta-nav\">&rarr;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"om_disable_all_campaigns":false,"_monsterinsights_skip_tracking":false,"_monsterinsights_sitenote_active":false,"_monsterinsights_sitenote_note":"","_monsterinsights_sitenote_category":0,"footnotes":""},"categories":[552],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-164465","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-prostitution"],"aioseo_notices":[],"aioseo_head":"\n\t\t<!-- All in One SEO 4.9.10 - aioseo.com -->\n\t<meta name=\"description\" content=\"This story is so horrifying that my first reaction was -- is this fabricated? Read it yourself: Can Anyone Rescue the Trafficked Girls of L.A.\u2019s Figueroa Street? 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Read it yourself: Can Anyone Rescue the Trafficked Girls of L.A.\u2019s Figueroa Street? Throngs of young girls are forced to sell sex along a 3.5 mile corridor known as the Blade. Starting at age 13, Ana was one of them. By","og:url":"https:\/\/lukeford.net\/blog\/?p=164465","og:image":"https:\/\/lukeford.net\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/02\/lukesanta.jpg","og:image:secure_url":"https:\/\/lukeford.net\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/02\/lukesanta.jpg","og:image:width":800,"og:image:height":600,"article:published_time":"2025-10-26T10:37:36+00:00","article:modified_time":"2025-10-26T17:47:44+00:00","article:publisher":"https:\/\/www.facebook.com\/lukecford","twitter:card":"summary_large_image","twitter:site":"@lukeford","twitter:title":"NYT: Can Anyone Rescue the Trafficked Girls of L.A.\u2019s Figueroa Street? - Luke Ford","twitter:description":"This story is so horrifying that my first reaction was -- is this fabricated? Read it yourself: Can Anyone Rescue the Trafficked Girls of L.A.\u2019s Figueroa Street? Throngs of young girls are forced to sell sex along a 3.5 mile corridor known as the Blade. Starting at age 13, Ana was one of them. By","twitter:creator":"@lukeford","twitter:image":"https:\/\/lukeford.net\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/02\/lukesanta.jpg"},"aioseo_meta_data":{"post_id":"164465","title":null,"description":null,"keywords":null,"keyphrases":{"focus":{"keyphrase":"","score":0,"analysis":{"keyphraseInTitle":{"score":0,"maxScore":9,"error":1}}},"additional":[]},"primary_term":null,"canonical_url":null,"og_title":null,"og_description":null,"og_object_type":"default","og_image_type":"default","og_image_url":null,"og_image_width":null,"og_image_height":null,"og_image_custom_url":null,"og_image_custom_fields":null,"og_video":"","og_custom_url":null,"og_article_section":null,"og_article_tags":null,"twitter_use_og":false,"twitter_card":"default","twitter_image_type":"default","twitter_image_url":null,"twitter_image_custom_url":null,"twitter_image_custom_fields":null,"twitter_title":null,"twitter_description":null,"schema":{"blockGraphs":[],"customGraphs":[],"default":{"data":{"Article":[],"Course":[],"Dataset":[],"FAQPage":[],"Movie":[],"Person":[],"Product":[],"ProductReview":[],"Car":[],"Recipe":[],"Service":[],"SoftwareApplication":[],"WebPage":[]},"graphName":"BlogPosting","isEnabled":true},"graphs":[]},"schema_type":"default","schema_type_options":null,"pillar_content":false,"robots_default":true,"robots_noindex":false,"robots_noarchive":false,"robots_nosnippet":false,"robots_nofollow":false,"robots_noimageindex":false,"robots_noodp":false,"robots_notranslate":false,"robots_max_snippet":"-1","robots_max_videopreview":"-1","robots_max_imagepreview":"large","priority":null,"frequency":"default","local_seo":null,"breadcrumb_settings":null,"limit_modified_date":false,"ai":{"faqs":[],"keyPoints":[],"titles":[],"descriptions":[],"socialPosts":{"email":[],"linkedin":[],"twitter":[],"facebook":[],"instagram":[]}},"created":"2025-10-26 10:37:36","updated":"2025-10-26 17:59:54","seo_analyzer_scan_date":null},"aioseo_breadcrumb":"<div class=\"aioseo-breadcrumbs\"><span class=\"aioseo-breadcrumb\">\n\t\t\t<a href=\"https:\/\/lukeford.net\/blog\" title=\"Home\">Home<\/a>\n\t\t<\/span><span class=\"aioseo-breadcrumb-separator\">&raquo;<\/span><span class=\"aioseo-breadcrumb\">\n\t\t\t<a href=\"https:\/\/lukeford.net\/blog\/?cat=552\" title=\"Prostitution\">Prostitution<\/a>\n\t\t<\/span><span class=\"aioseo-breadcrumb-separator\">&raquo;<\/span><span class=\"aioseo-breadcrumb\">\n\t\t\tNYT: Can Anyone Rescue the Trafficked Girls of L.A.\u2019s Figueroa Street?\n\t\t<\/span><\/div>","aioseo_breadcrumb_json":[{"label":"Home","link":"https:\/\/lukeford.net\/blog"},{"label":"Prostitution","link":"https:\/\/lukeford.net\/blog\/?cat=552"},{"label":"NYT: Can Anyone Rescue the Trafficked Girls of L.A.\u2019s Figueroa Street?","link":"https:\/\/lukeford.net\/blog\/?p=164465"}],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/lukeford.net\/blog\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/164465","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/lukeford.net\/blog\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/lukeford.net\/blog\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/lukeford.net\/blog\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/lukeford.net\/blog\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcomments&post=164465"}],"version-history":[{"count":11,"href":"https:\/\/lukeford.net\/blog\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/164465\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":164551,"href":"https:\/\/lukeford.net\/blog\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/164465\/revisions\/164551"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/lukeford.net\/blog\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fmedia&parent=164465"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/lukeford.net\/blog\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcategories&post=164465"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/lukeford.net\/blog\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Ftags&post=164465"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}