We have to remember that—I said this in 2014—choice is such a complicated topic. People make different choices every single day for many reasons, and the contexts in which those choices are made vary. Today, we have laws that.... I don't think they help make the prosecution of human trafficking easier, and I don't think they help sex workers, because they capture some of their activities.
One example would be living and working in the same space. If somebody were driving their friend, that would also potentially capture.... Is that human trafficking, or not? We get into this debate about which laws apply and which don't. It makes the job hard for the prosecutors. We have to remember that those roles are very important, too.
In terms of human trafficking, as my co-panellist Ms. Smiley was saying, we need to support the issues before they get there. This law is, as Ms. Davis was saying, a reactive law. It's not a proactive law.