Yes. I was just going to talk specifically about law enforcement and especially about anti-trafficking training programs that keep these conflation definitions going.
In Winnipeg we have the Joy Smith Foundation, which is well funded and educates our police on trafficking. That group also conflates sex work and trafficking. When police are themselves educated, they are educated to see sex workers as both trafficked and trafficker, so they are absolutely charged under these laws.
Another group, one that is not in my city, trains the RCMP as well as a bunch of Alberta police services. I did their training program for fun to see what they are saying. They say that studies show that human trafficking increases when the sex trade industry thrives. This means human trafficking and exploitation will continue as long as there is a demand for commercial sex work.
Their goal is to put an end to sex workers. I want to be clear about this: It's not just to end a commercial sex industry; it is talking about pushing workers underground, and the cost doesn't matter.
I'd just like to really outline that this is the training our law enforcement is receiving.