Certainly. It's a position I took when I talked to the committee in 2014. I said that we need to not conflate, using the word conflate to understand...there may be connections, there may be pathways, between sex work and human trafficking, but you can't just assume that if someone is autonomously working in the sex industry, they have been trafficked there. There are different truths for different people with the lived experience, so I am not going to try to assume that anyone who has had one experience begets another. There is that difference.
The big thing, too, to keep in mind is that it's very common for people to look into those stereotypes that I was talking about in my introduction and make assumptions. This is the stigma that is attached to sex workers. They are seen in society as either being less than or not worthy victims, because they've engaged in something that we might think is morally wrong. However, when we look at that stigma, we extend the stigma of sex work to something like human trafficking, which we see in society as the worst thing, to take one human being and do that to another. It's important to understand the definitions.