Making Laws Count - with Jaco Booyens
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概要
Human trafficking doesn’t lose because we lack talking points. It wins when cases never get prosecuted as trafficking, when judges don’t know what to do with the complexity, and when our systems quietly allow predators to slip through. That’s why this conversation turns the spotlight away from national theater and toward the unglamorous place where outcomes are decided: state policy, local law enforcement capacity, family court, and courtroom follow-through.
We share practical ways to get equipped locally through Patriot Academy, the Patriot Institute, and Constitution Coach training, because culture change and policy change require trained citizens and leaders. Then Yaako Bullions joins us from the Pro Family Legislators Conference with a direct briefing on what’s coming, including the heightened risk around the 2026 World Cup and why destabilizing the family reliably leads to child exploitation and trafficking. If you care about victim protection, anti-trafficking legislation, and real prevention, you can’t ignore how family court gaps and judicial inexperience create openings for abuse.
We also dig into the prosecution crisis: “best laws on the books” can still produce weak results when trafficking gets pled down to lesser charges. Yaako makes the case for a specialized, constitutional human trafficking court approach to build expertise, speed timelines, and make convictions match the law. Finally, we confront the digital shift, including AI-driven coercion and the disturbing reality that many cases no longer fit the old hierarchy model, leaving communities unprepared for self-exploitation dynamics and online grooming.
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