Thank you so much.
Shrinking the market should be our priority. That will take out a substantial number of sex sellers, who are not there by any means of actual choice. Any policy that we implement is either going to expand the market or it is going to shrink the market. When we look at New Zealand, which we often do, to me that's comparing apples and oranges. New Zealand is an island in the Pacific of approximately five million people. Canada has a population approximately eight times that size, sharing nearly 9,000 kilometres of border with America.
The American population is over 330 million people, and their adult male population is more than double our entire population here in Canada, meaning that there are more than 100 million adult men in the United States. So when Cathy Peters said that we have the potential of becoming “America's brothel”, she was spot-on.
None of us has a crystal glass ball with which we can look into the future to see what will happen with any changes that we make, but we have to look at Canada as its own entity, as its own nation, and ask what risks we are willing to take to risk women's livelihoods and safety.
I also want to point to the effectiveness of Edmonton's sex trade offender program. We have a wonderful low 1% to 3% recidivism rate of re-arrests of men who come and attend the eight-hour program. It is a great program that I have been very fortunate speak at for the last nine years. I have seen tremendous growth in many of the men who come in.
I want to say that I believe, personally, that the industry in many facets is dually exploitative. Most men do not want to purchase sex. Most men are also victims of the culture that tells them that their masculinity requires them to be sexual consumers, requires them to consume women's bodies without any foregoing thought of who they are as an individual and anything along those lines.
I really think that when men are given the opportunity for education, when they are allowed alternative measures programs, many of them do turn the corner and they do not continue to exploit women. They have always said to me, “I had no idea. I really had no idea. I took it at face value. She told me she wanted to be there. I didn't see a pimp or anyone behind her and I thought that it was no harm, no foul.”
I think the problem is that people equate it to healthy natural sex, because that is the type of sex that most people fortunately have participated in. I think that whenever we look at transactional sex, it is not in alignment with what we know to be authentic sexual consent. One of the cornerstones to sexual consent is that it is freely given. The very essence of the fact that we are doing this huge amount of economic coercion in order to suck marginalized and vulnerable people into the industry speaks to what is needed for them to play along and smile, like I said, in the face of their abuse.
I really think that we need to have a strategy that creates an inter-ministerial body that works with Status of Women, with Public Safety, with WAGE and with Justice, because this is such a multi-faceted issue. It involves intimate partner violence, economic inequality, trafficking and all these problems, so this is a multi-decade strategy that we need to do and we need to stay the course.
Trisha Baptie said we need more time, and we do, but we also need more effort. We are not given effort and we can do better by Canadian women and girls. I think education is a cornerstone to it. The feds need to be giving the money to the provinces so that we can have some curriculum being put into all of our educational institutions, particularly starting in grade seven, because we are seeing these young men become exploiters.
Thank you.