No, not necessarily, especially not across the border. In Canada, for example, most cases involve domestic trafficking, meaning it occurs between cities in the same country. Right now, particularly because of the recent case before the Ontario Court of Appeal and the lobby that is trying to completely decriminalize prostitution, the danger is that people are talking as though there is some healthy type of prostitution that can please women and make them rich, happy people. In reality, that is not true. I have seen thousands of these women. We talk to many women from around the world.
There is an idea going around that there could be a well-regulated, properly governed industry that would benefit women, where all of the women would be treated properly. In every county where prostitution exists and, of course, in every country that legalized, regulated or even completely decriminalized it, such as New Zealand, the everyday reality is that there are more indigenous women in the sex trade and more children who are being brought into it. It is the sex trade that—