On 2/24/26 02:42, phoenix wrote:
Zorgan wrote:
Basically. You've got the throng of leftist feminists who "know in| DOJ Removed Record of Multiple FBI Interviews with Underage
| Trump Accuser, Epstein Data Shows
There was no underaged Trump accuser.
| How the Epstein Files
made Democrats look like a bunch of bumbling lying
tranny-smooching idiots.
their heart" pedophilia is wrong.
Think of what a good start it would be to put 50,000 of them in the
ocean and give their prune orifices a great saline bath and seawater
rinse?
I went to jail and the guys who would wank off and yell about
pedophilia struck me with only one truth:
-a-a "Dude, you're fucking arbitrary."
As to your "You've got the throng of leftist feminists who "know
in their heart" pedophilia is wrong."
This whole Epstein drama is so ridiculous and overblown.
So much outrage on one man and his long ago sins and crimes.
Yes, it was a crime he paid teenage girls to perform
sexual favors for him and people he wanted to influence.
But meanwhile, currently going on nightly, just 5 miles
from my house, over on Aurora Avenue North in Seattle,
are far grimier, meaner, sadistic, and evil pimps
abusing young teenage girls and putting them out on
the streets as cheap prostitutes.-a It is so profitable,
the evil pimps regularly get in running gun battles
with each other shooting up the neighborhood to protect
their business.
So, 5 years ago it got so bad Seattle actually elected
A REPUBLICAN City Attorney who did a number of things
to reduce this problem.
Can't have that!-a So, 3 months ago a progressive liberal
Erika Evans won big time, says actions against street
prostitution are "racist" and she will stop enforcement.
Even the liberal Seattle Times can not understand.
read it for yourself at https://www.seattletimes.com/opinion/editorials/new-seattle-city-attorney-must-offer-plan-to-combat-sex-trafficking/
New Seattle city attorney: WhererCOs the plan to fight sex trafficking?
Dec. 7, 2025 at 8:00 am Updated Dec. 7, 2025 at 8:00 am
Seattle City Attorney-elect Erika Evans (shown speaking during an
Election Day party) has called Stay Out of Area of Prostitution orders
part of rCLracist policies.rCY LetrCOs hope Evans reconsiders or presents an alternative plan for preventing human trafficking, writes the editorial board. (Ivy Ceballo / The Seattle Times)
By The Seattle Times editorial board
On a recent summer evening, an undercover Seattle police officer watched activities along Aurora Avenue North as three vehicles approached a
group of females standing on the sidewalk.
One of the cars, a Mercedes SUV driven by a 35-year-old man from
Phoenix, chased the women through traffic, making U-turns and crossing lanes. In a report, the officer wrote the incident was a rCLclear threat
to the safety of these women as well as the other motorists in the area.rCY
Because the defendant was a suspected pimp, the Seattle City AttorneyrCOs Office sought and obtained a Stay Out of Area of Prostitution order from
a municipal court judge.
The order stipulated that the man could not enter a swath of Aurora
Avenue North, subject to arrest and up to a year in jail and a fine.
Prostitution along the busy corridor is widespread, heartbreaking,
dangerous and exploitive.
Seattle City Attorney-elect Erika Evans recently reiterated to KUOW her campaign promise not to request any further SOAP orders or charge anyone with violating them. In a debate during her successful effort to unseat incumbent Ann Davison, Evans called SOAP part of rCLracist policies.rCY
LetrCOs hope Evans reconsiders or presents an alternative plan for preventing human trafficking.
SOAP may not be the perfect solution but ignoring the will of the
Seattle City Council and implicitly condoning the actions of those purchasing sex or controlling victims sends the worst possible signal.
As the Seattle Police Human Trafficking Unit put it: rCLSexual
exploitation is not a victimless crime. Women and girls (and sometimes
boys, men and transgender individuals) involved in the sex trade on
Aurora Avenue North are almost always the victims of criminal trafficking.rCY
HererCOs some legislative history.
Former City Councilmember Cathy Moore proposed commercial sexual exploitation legislation in the summer of 2024 after outcries from neighborhoods around Aurora Avenue North.
Combating prostitution is tough work for law enforcement. Police stings
are dangerous, resource intensive and costly. Female officers pose as
sex workers to engage with buyers, all under intense surveillance.
SOAP sought a different tactic by giving officers the ability to arrest people suspected of engaging in the sex trade if a judge orders them to
stay out of high-crime areas. The notion was to disrupt activities long enough for outreach workers and others to rescue those in need.
During deliberations, council members limited SOAP to buyers and
promoters, excluding sellers. On Sept. 17, 2024, it passed 8-1.
rCLAs a survivor myself, I find it incredibly powerful that the new loitering law and SOAP bill have shifted focus away from criminalizing
the exploited, and are now holding traffickers and buyers accountable,rCY said Sarah Ann Hamilton, survivor services manager at The More We Love,
an advocacy organization, in a council news release.
rCLThis change sends a clear message that the women and individuals we
serve truly matter, and that the community stands behind them in the
fight for justice,rCY wrote Hamilton.
What is the message being sent by City Attorney-elect Evans now?
There are 32 active SOAP orders and another 10 that have been issued but
not yet served on the defendant, according to the City AttorneyrCOs Office.
If EvansrCO deeds follow her words, these are all effectively moot.
In November, Evans won by 34 percentage points, a huge margin. ThatrCOs
what effectively painting your opponent as a Republican will do in
Seattle politics.
Evans appears quite certain about what she intends to dismantle come her inauguration in January. For the sake of the community and so many
victims of sex trafficking, she must provide an immediate proactive
agenda that shows she is serious about meeting the many challenges along Aurora Avenue North and elsewhere.
The Seattle Times editorial board: members are editorial page editor
Kate Riley, Ryan Blethen, Melissa Davis, Josh Farley, Alex Fryer,
Claudia Rowe, Carlton Winfrey, Frank A. Blethen (emeritus) and William
K. Blethen (emeritus).
Most Read Opinion Stories
Zorgan wrote:
Basically. You've got the throng of leftist feminists who "know in their heart" pedophilia is wrong.| DOJ Removed Record of Multiple FBI Interviews with Underage
| Trump Accuser, Epstein Data Shows
There was no underaged Trump accuser.
| How the Epstein Files
made Democrats look like a bunch of bumbling lying
tranny-smooching idiots.
Think of what a good start it would be to put 50,000 of them in the
ocean and give their prune orifices a great saline bath and seawater rinse?
I went to jail and the guys who would wank off and yell about pedophilia struck me with only one truth:
-a "Dude, you're fucking arbitrary."
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