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America isn’t alone in its moral panic over sex trafficking, as an Argentinian case against a self-help center called the Buenos Aires Yoga School (BAYS) suggests. Prosecutors are trying the school’s 85-year-old founder, Juan Percowicz, and a number of its members, alleging that the school was really a cult engaged in brainwashing and sex trafficking.

Authorities raided the group’s headquarters and the houses of 50 members two summers ago, accusing the group of being a front for an international sex slavery ring. Seventeen people, including Percowicz, were arrested and jailed on suspicion of human trafficking for sexual exploitation and money laundering.

It wasn’t the first time the Buenos Aires Yoga School faced criminal allegations; a similar case was brought in the 1990s. But after an intense investigation that involved raids and wiretapswhich human rights groups said were civil liberties violations and some chalked up to anti-Semitismthat earlier case was closed with nary a conviction.

And it’s looking like the newer case may face a similar fate. Last week, the Argentinian Court of Cassationthe country’s highest criminal courtupheld a lower court’s ruling from last December that the case would not be elevated to a trial.

I don’t pretend to have some special insight into what’s going on with BAYS. But in light of a recent New York Times article leaning heavily into prosecutors’ arguments, I think it’s worth bringing up some of the evidence that challenges the official narrative here and highlighting how the case mirrors many of the “sex trafficking busts” we’ve seen in the U.S.

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Δ ‘Human Trafficking Without Victims of Trafficking’

“Cults exist here, but we’ve never seen one that operated at this level,” Ricardo Juri, the investigator who oversaw the 2022 raids, told the Times.

“Prosecutors say the organization exploited and drugged some of its female members, forcing them to sell their bodies and generating hundreds of thousands of dollars monthly from clients in Argentina and the United States,” the newspaper reports.

Times writer Ana Lankes suggests the trouble with the earlier case was that “Argentina did not yet have laws on human trafficking or money laundering” and that “the country’s justice system was still being overhauled after the end of the military dictatorship”or at least that’s what the prosecutors today argue. According to authorities, this is a case of bad guys who got away before but are now finally being brought to justice.

The government says at least seven women were forced into prostitution by BAYS. “But the women in the case have denied ever having sex in exchange for money, or being victims of any crime,” Lankes points out.

“This is a case of human trafficking without victims of trafficking,” Percowicz’s lawyer, Jorge Daniel Pirozzo, told the Times. Red Walls = Brothel?

A paper published last year in The Journal of CESNUR (the Center for Studies on New Religions) casts doubt on the government’s narrative about BAYS and details questionable tactics used in investigations of it. The paper”The Great Cult Scare in Argentina and the Buenos Aires Yoga School” by Italian sociologist Massimo Introvignelooks at both the 2022 raids and the earlier case against BAYS.

As part of the 2022 raids, “a man was badly beaten by the police for no reason (it came out later they had mistaken him for somebody else),” and doors were busted in despite residents offering to open them, writes Introvigne. “All in all, twenty persons were arrested and warrants for arrest were issued against another eight.”

But police found scant evidence of the alleged international prostitution ring they were seeking or of an alleged sex museum linked to the group.

At the apartment of “a well-known female musician,” where they were told this “museum of sex” existed, “all they found was a small painting depicting three naked persons united in an embrace,” notes Introvigne. “They noted an abundance of the color red in the decoration of the apartment, and put in their notes it was reminiscent of a brothel.”

As in so many American “sex trafficking” busts, this was all turned into a big show for the media:

The painting was duly put on display for the media, together with some old and ruined commercial pornographic VHS videos found elsewhere in the building. The inhabitants claimed they were part of the inventory of a nearby shop that had been flooded with water. They had purchased the whole inventory to help the owner, who was their friend, and had forgotten the videos, most of them not pornographic, stored somewhere in the buildingand who would watch in 2022 pornographic VHS of the 1980s anyway.

By March 2023, “all those detained had also been liberated by a Court of Appeal after almost three months spent in jail, in conditions they described as horrible,” according to the CESNUR paper. An All-Too-Familiar Tale

Was BAYS a cult? Some former members or family of members report strange antics, including extreme reverence of the group’s leader, members partaking in orgies, and forcing new members to do housework for established members. But even if such statements are true (and I have no idea), it doesn’t necessarily mean anything illegal or exploitative was going on. One person’s “cult” can be another’s spiritual salvation, life coaching service, or kink activity.

The BAYS situation reminds me somewhat of the U.S. case against members of the self-help group NXIVM, a prosecution that included charges against actress Allison Mack. Prosecutors broke the case in a big, sensationalist manner, calling NXIVM a sex cult guilty of human trafficking. But the reality of the case was much more nuanced (and interesting) and nothing like the narrative that initially made headlines. There was certainly evidence that NXIVM’s leader may have been cruel, manipulative, and an egomaniac, and there were indications that he started a relationship with someone when she was under 18. And there were women upset with how the group’s secretive side-group DOS operatedas well as a number of women who still defend it to this day. But whatever was going on, it was not the simplistic black-and-white narrative that prosecutors portrayed, and it clearly involved authorities trying to slot a range of behaviorsome potentially illegal, some merely unsavory, and some that simply read as odd to many peopleinto a trendy criminal category. A surefire way to get attention to a case these days is to label it sex trafficking or human trafficking.

The BAYS situation also recalls oh-so-many lower profile U.S. “sex trafficking stings” conducted at massage parlors or during boondoggles like “Operation Cross Country” and their ilk. As part of these stings, adult sex workers are often described to and in the media as “victims,” even if none of them actually say they are being victimized.

In the BAYS raids, none of the female “victims” said they were being trafficked, and none said they sold sex for money (which is broadly legal in Argentina). But under Argentina’s anti-trafficking law, “if a trafficked prostitute denies that she is a prostitute…this is further evidence she is trafficked and somebody is abusing her vulnerability,” according to the CESNUR article.

“There is an express mention of the lack of legal relevance of the consent of the [alleged victim],” Argentinian lawyer Marisa Tarantino told the group Human Rights Without Frontiers. “If in a particular case the prosecution agencies detect an activity that they classify as a form of ‘prostitution’, even if it is exercised by adult and autonomous persons, these will be objectively considered victims and those who make the activity possible or benefit from it in any way, even if it is occasional,will be liable to prosecution.” Coming Up in the Yoga School Case

The case against Percowicz and the other remaining defendants “is currently working its way through the courts. No trial date has been set yet,” the Times reports.

And no trial may happen. The Times piece was published right around the same time that Argentina’s highest criminal court upheld a lower court ruling rejecting the government’s request that the case go to trial.

“This is not the end of the case, since it returns to the judge of first instance, but is clearly a setback for the prosecutors,” write Introvigne (author of the CESNUR article) and Maria Varde in the religious liberty and human rights magazine Bitter Winter.

Introvigne and Varde also call the Times piece “a sensationalist attack” that parrots prosecutors’ arguments.

They note that “the main reason the elevation to trial has been annulled is that it ignored the opinion by independent experts, including those of the Forensic Medical Corps of the Supreme Court, who examined the [women prosecutors say are victims] and concluded that they are psychologically normal and believable.” The court did not find persuasive the prosecutors’ claim that the women were brainwashed into denying their victimhooda bit of rhetoric that U.S. authorities also conveniently deploy to wave away sex workers or others whom they’ve deemed victims denying that they’re actually being trafficked.

Introvigne notes that brainwashing theories of this sort have generally been debunked, but “there is an international lobby of so-called anti-human trafficking agencies, not less powerful in the United States than in Argentina,” which wants to bring them back into vogue. More Sex & Tech News

Elon Musk has dismissed his lawsuit against OpenAI.

Four more states have joined the Department of Justice’s antitrust suit against Apple. (More about the case here.)

Apple’s Siri is getting an AI makeover.

New York is the latest state to pass a bill demanding age verification for social media. New York just passed the "Stop Addictive Feeds Exploitation (SAFE) for Kids act" that will require social media companies to use commercially reasonable methods to determine user age" https://t.co/QjFGUdbTRP pic.twitter.com/4qTzUlrshJ

— Sharon Polsky MAPP (@PolskySays) June 10, 2024

The tech industry group NetChoice is suing over Mississippi’s age verification law.

An interesting argument against the idea that technology should liberate us from routine housework and day-to-day chores. Today’s Image Phoenix | 2018 (ENB/Reason)

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Bob Geldof accuses Israeli authorities of ‘lying’ about starvation in Gaza

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Bob Geldof accuses Israeli authorities of 'lying' about starvation in Gaza

Bob Geldof has accused the Israeli authorities of “lying” about starvation in Gaza – after Israel’s government spokesperson claimed there was “no famine caused by Israel”.

Earlier this week, David Mencer claimed that Hamas “starves its own people” while on The News Hour with Mark Austin, denying that Israel was responsible for mass hunger in Gaza.

Appearing on Sunday Morning with Trevor Phillips, Geldof said the claims are false.

Follow latest: Gaza aid airdrops a ‘smokescreen’ and ‘distraction’, says UN agency chief

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Israel challenged on starvation in Gaza

Mr Phillips asked the Live Aid organiser: “The Israeli view is that there is no famine caused by Israel, there’s a manmade shortage, but it’s been engineered by Hamas.

“I guess the Israelis would say we don’t see much criticism from your side of Hamas.”

In response, Geldof said “that’s a false equivalence” and “the Israeli authorities are lying”.

The singer then added: “They’re lying. [Benjamin] Netanyahu lies, is a liar. The IDF are lying. They’re dangling food in front of starving, panicked, exhausted mothers.

“And while they arrive to accept the tiny amount of food that this sort of set up pantomime outfit, the Gaza Humanitarian Front, I would call it, as they dangle it, then they’re shot wantonly.

“This month, up to now, a thousand children or a thousand people have died of starvation. I’m really not interested in what either of these sides are saying.”

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Gaza: ‘This is man-made starvation’

In the interview with Mark Austin on 23 July, Mr Mencer added: “This suffering exists because Hamas made it so. Here are the facts. Aid is flowing, through the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation. Millions of meals are being delivered directly to civilians.” He also claimed that since May more than 4,400 aid trucks had entered Gaza carrying supplies.

It comes after MSF, also known as Doctors Without Borders, warned 25% of young children and pregnant women in Gaza are now malnourished.

The charity said Israel’s “deliberate use of starvation as a weapon” has reached unprecedented levels, and said that at one of its clinics in Gaza City, rates of severe malnutrition in children under five have trebled over the past two weeks.

MSF then called the lack of food and water on the ground as “unconscionable”.

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Aid waiting to be distributed in Gaza

In a statement to Sky News, an Israeli security official said that “despite the false claims that are being spread, the State of Israel does not limit the number of humanitarian aid trucks entering the Gaza Strip”.

Read more:
What does recognising a Palestinian state mean?
Surgeon claims IDF ‘deliberately’ shooting boys at Gaza aid points
Security shot at Palestinians at Gaza aid centre – ex-guard

It then blamed other groups for issues delivering aid. They said: “Over the past month, we have witnessed a significant decline in the collection of aid from the crossings into the Gaza Strip by international aid organisations.

“The delays in collection by the UN and international organisations harm the situation and the food security of Gaza’s residents.”

The IDF also told Sky News: “The IDF allows the American civilian organisation (GHF) to distribute aid to Gaza residents independently, and operates in proximity to the new distribution zones to enable the distribution alongside the continuation of IDF operational activities in the Gaza Strip.

“Following incidents in which harm to civilians who arrived at distribution facilities was reported, thorough examinations were conducted in the Southern Command and instructions were issued to forces in the field following lessons learned.

“The aforementioned incidents are under review by the competent authorities in the IDF.”

You can watch the full interview on Sunday Morning with Trevor Phillips at 8.30am tomorrow.

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Honda takes a page from Tesla playbook, launches new insurance business

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Honda takes a page from Tesla playbook, launches new insurance business

Say what you will about Elon Musk, but Tesla has changed the way that millions of people buy cars and, by extension, car insurance. Now, Honda is taking a page from Tesla’s successful playbook and launching its own in-house insurance business. Enter: Honda Insurance Solutions.

Honda Insurance Solutions is being launched as a fully licensed insurance agency serving the insurance needs of Acura and Honda customers, but it’s not stopping at competitive pricing and coverage options for Honda cars and motorcycles. Honda Insurance Solutions promises to go several steps beyond Tesla’s offering with coverage for trailers, RVs, homes, and even pets.

“Honda Insurance Solutions offers customers access to coverage through a brand they know and trust,” says Petar Vucurevic, President, American Honda Insurance Solutions, LLC and Senior Vice President, American Honda Finance Corporation. “Insurance is a key touchpoint in the vehicle ownership journey, and we aim to deliver a superior experience tailored to the unique needs of each customer, while promoting safer driving and increased peace of mind on the road.”

The company says the launch of its new insurance business is just part of Honda’s broader digital vehicle sales platform strategy, with future plans to integrate insurance offerings into new products.

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Electrek’s Take


Electric CUVE scooter; via Honda.

It’s important to note some of the key differences between Honda’s insurance offering and Tesla’s. Honda isn’t offering discounts, they’re not bundling insurance premiums into the vehicle financing, and they’re not building their insurance offerings into their dealerships’ checkout/F&I offices. Not yet, anyway.

What Honda is doing right now is deepening relationships with its existing customers and finding ways to make money on products it hasn’t sold them – whether that’s the Harley parked in the garage next to their Prologue or the garage itself.

It’s a smart play. And, once Honda figures out a way to cut franchise dealers out entirely and go to a direct sales model, it’ll look even smarter.

SOURCE | IMAGES: Honda.


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Demographics will ‘leapfrog’ Bitcoin adoption in Pakistan — Bilal Bin Saqib

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<div>Demographics will 'leapfrog' Bitcoin adoption in Pakistan — Bilal Bin Saqib</div>

<div>Demographics will 'leapfrog' Bitcoin adoption in Pakistan — Bilal Bin Saqib</div>

A young and tech-savvy population, combating inflationary pressures, is driving Bitcoin adoption and a new financial system in Pakistan.

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