►
From YouTube: Columbus Connection ( Micah's Promise) 08 01 2019
Description
No description was provided for this meeting.
If this is YOUR meeting, an easy way to fix this is to add a description to your video, wherever mtngs.io found it (probably YouTube).
A
A
Welcome
to
Columbus
connections:
I
am
your
host
David
Britt,
and
we
have
a
serious
discussion
for
this
episode
and
that's
six
trafficking.
Now,
when
you
hear
this
often-
and
some
may
think
that
this
is
a
big-city
problem
or
not
one
of
our
problems-
well,
there's
definitely
a
problem
in
Columbus,
just
as
sexual
abuse
is
just
as
drug
abuse
is
just
as
economic
statuses
that
contribute
to
this.
In
all
of
these
come
together
and
all
of
these
make
this
huge
problem
of
a
sex
trafficking.
A
However,
Georgia
has
made
some
big
strides
in
fighting
this
and
we
have
some
people
who
are
on
the
front
line
in
fighting
sex
trafficking
right
here
in
our
studio.
So
we're
going
to
talk
about
we're
going
to
dig
deep
into
it
talk
about
some
things
you
may
be
familiar
with
in
some
things
you
may
not
be
so
we're
gonna
get
into
it.
How
are
you
doing
I'm.
A
No,
not
that
sex
trafficking
is
awesome,
but
it's
awesome
that
you're
here
to
be
with
us
before
you
before
we
started
rolling.
We
we
just
had
a
brief
discussion,
it's
obvious
your
passion
for
it
and
it's
a
great
thing
is
very
needed,
because
it
is
it's
so
big
and
it's
something
like
that.
We
said
that
people
don't
really
realize
that
how
big
it
is.
Yeah.
B
Thankfully,
the
Lord
made
me
very
stubborn,
so
I
learned
about
sex
trafficking
of
children
about
ten
years
ago
and
I
was
also
one
of
those
that
thought
it
was
an
international
problem,
then
that
it
didn't
touch
us
and
certainly
not,
that
it
was
our
own
children.
You
know
and
when
I
learned
about
it,
I
actually
learned
that
Georgia
was
at
that
time
was
in
the
top
15
and
well
now
we're
in
the
top
five.
You
know
Atlanta
is
in
the
top
five
of
cities
for
trafficking,
but
it's
not
Atlanta
children.
A
B
Is
so
exciting
to
me
to
see
these
changes
so
in
the
past
it
took
forever
to
recognize
that
these
children
were
actually
victims
of
a
crime.
They
were
always
treated
as
just
bad,
kids
or
Runaways,
and
unfortunately,
most
of
the
children
still
that
are
identified
as
sex
trafficking
victims.
Most
of
them
have
been
in
foster.
Care
have
been
some
of
our.
B
In
foster
care,
so
89
percent
is
it's
the
average
that
stays,
but
this
legislation
is
so
good
because
we
now
recognize
and
have
to
treat
children
and
it's
legally
defined
a
child
as
anybody
under
the
age
of
18.
So
sometimes
people
will
say
yeah,
but
the
age
of
consent
for
sex
in
Georgia
is
16
well,
legally,
children
cannot
consent
to
being
sexually
exploited
right.
A
B
Gain
right,
so
so
that's
the
number
one
big
thing:
we
cannot
arrest
children
any
longer
for
prostitution
and
solicitation,
and
that
makes
me
super
happy
because
that
that
the
fact
that
we've
been
doing
that
for
so
long
it
also
the
super
exciting
part
is
the
part.
The
people
that
drive
the
issue
of
trafficking
or
the
buyer
right.
B
On
the
wrist
bail
out
within
a
couple
of
hours
right
so
the
new
legislation-
and
this
is
even
just
for
general
prostitution-
so
any
person
soliciting
a
prostitute
now
they
have
to
they
have
to
spend
seventy
to
mandatory
hours
in
jail.
So
I've
done
the
math
and
I'm
not
really
great
at
math.
But
that's
like
three
days
right.
So
your
family's
gonna,
wonder
where
you
are
your
jobs,
gonna,
wonder
where
you
are
so
this
is
going
to
have
a
huge
impact,
because
if
you
can
put
the
pressure
where
it
should
be,
which.
B
A
B
A
B
Ways
I'd
like
to
talk
to
you
about
that,
and-
and
there
are
really
good
organizations
that
are
really
starting
to
collaborate
and
work
together
to
do
those
things
that
we
need
to
do,
because
when
we
consider
that
89%
of
trafficking
victims
were
first
in
foster
care
well
over.
Ninety
percent
of
trafficking
victims
were
first
sexually
abused,
so
somebody
in
their
early
childhood
that
they
should
have
been
able
to
trust
that
they
thought
was
going
to
love
them
abuse
them.
B
And
so
what
we
can
do
in
our
community
is
a
really
care
about
our
kids
in
foster
care.
They
didn't
choose
to
be
put
in
foster
care,
but
we
stigmatize
right
like
when
we
look
at
socio-economic
problems
and
things
like
that,
but
we
can
stick
mitai
x'
people
who
had
no
choice
for
what's
happening
to
them.
So
we,
you
know,
we
tell
people
all
the
time
or
organizations.
B
It's
been
that
way
for
there's
a
foster
care
crisis
across
the
u.s..
It's
not
just
you
know
Georgia
problem,
but
this
is
this
is
like
the
child.
Sexual
abuse
foster
care
to
domestic
minor
sex
trafficking
pipeline.
Basically,
so,
as
a
community,
we
have
to
help
our
kids.
We
have
to
help
our
youth.
We
have
to
treat
them
like,
like.
We
have
to
have
this
understanding
that
so
many
are
acting
out
in
school
or
or
acting
out
in
general,
because
they
have
untreated
trauma.
Yeah.
A
There's
a
reason
for
it.
I
heard
often
hear
of
you
know:
everybody
knows
a
victim
of
sexual
abuse,
but
nobody
knows
the
abuse.
Nobody
seems
to
know
anyone
who
has
done
it
right
and,
like
you
said
before
so
too
often
we
we
focused
the
blame
on
the
victim.
Instead
of
the
this
resources
to
help
support.
A
B
Or
trust
or
their
family
trust
or
is
a
family
member?
The
child
oftentimes
is
given
the
the
idea
to
keep
it
quiet.
Don't
don't
make
a
fuss,
don't
make
trouble
right,
so
we
really
recommend
recommend
stewards
of
children,
training,
and
that
was
the
other.
The
other
thing
I
spoke
to
council
about
was
that
we
currently
have
building
towards
wellness
coalition
is
one
of
our
partner
agencies
or
organizations
in
town
that
they
got.
A
B
Right,
it's
my
responsibility
as
an
adult
to
make
sure
that
I
set
up
safe,
safe
zones,
whether
it's
at
church,
just
simple
things
that
we
can
do
as
adults
or
call
out
adults.
If
we
see
them
doing
something
that
might
be
testing
a
child's
boundary.
But
the
child
doesn't
know
that
they
can
say
you
don't
quote
I,
don't
want
to
sit
on
your
lap,
yeah.
A
A
A
A
B
Know
and
that
we're
seeing
more
more
and
more
people
come
and
want
to
be
a
part
of
the
work
and
part
of
the
solution.
Just
with
that
simple
thought
that
my
god,
you
know
there
there's
so
many
people
that
have
come
through
this
and
become
stronger
because
somebody
helped
them,
but
if
they
can
survive
it,
we
should
be
able
to
fight
for
them.
Oh.
A
B
Well,
there's
several
ways
that,
even
just
as
the
community
so
stewards
our
children
as
the
the
number
one
thing
that
you
want
to
do
through
your
church
through
your
just,
even
just
as
family
members,
you
want
to
take
that
training
and
it's
free.
The
other
thing
is
our
school
systems.
So
one
of
the
things
exactly
in
our
schools,
they're
already
under
so
much
pressure
to
you,
know
they're
on
the
front
lines
for
everything,
but
the
more.
B
But
our
teachers
want
to
know
what
to
do
in
case
they
might
have
a
child,
that's
facing
abuse
or
or
at
the
worst
trafficking,
and
there
are
now
there's
a
free
webinar
that
we've
provided
to
the
school
system
that
they
created
at
the
state
task
force
too
specifically
for
teachers,
it's
a
one-hour,
free
webinar
that
they
can
take
to
learn.
What
are
the
signs
and
what?
How
do
they
respond
responsibly
right?
B
A
B
Well,
good
touch.
Bad
touch
for
the
longest
time
was
the
best
curriculum
for
like
little
kids
right
kindergarten.
First
grade,
we
talk
about
good
touch,
bad
touch.
This
is
this
makes
me
comfortable,
I'm,
not
comfortable
with
that.
So
basically
we're
teaching
children
again.
They
have
to
be
the
one
to
report.
It.
A
B
This
was
a
little
girl
sitting
in
front
of
him
and
it
just
changed
the
whole
way
he
looked
at
her
and
what
he
thought
of
her,
because
he'd
been
over
kids,
he
was
getting
cynical,
all
that
sort
of
stuff
man,
it's
just
a
bad
kids
right.
Well,
he
started
looking
into
what
in
the
world
is
going
on.
Why
am
I
arrest
in
twelve
year
olds,
and
so
he
starts
figuring
that
out,
so
there
were
people
all
across
the
u.s.
that
this
was
starting
to
occur
to
them.
A
B
B
A
B
A
Is
it's
it's
something
that
is
is
happening
so
it
doesn't
all
races
all
people
and
you
never
know
what
kind
of
some
I've
heard
people
say.
You
know
what
would
make
a
person
become
a
prostitute.
What
would
make
a
person
become?
You
don't
know
what
people
have
been
through
right
and
when
you've
gone
through,
that
you
know
unimaginable
trauma
right
and
when
it's
generational,
when
that's
all
you
know,
and
that's
you
see
to
the
point
where
you
think
this
is
the
right
thing
to
do
for
me
right.
B
And
you
mentioned
stripping,
so
you
know
any.
The
definition
of
trafficking
of
children
is
through
the
use
of
force,
fraud
or
coercion.
You
compel
well
trafficking.
In
general,
you
compel
a
human
to
either
do
a
labor
act
or
a
sex
act.
When
it
comes
to
kids,
we
don't
have
to
prove
force
fraud
or
coercion.
They
cannot
consent
to
engaging
in
stripping
or
any
adult
entertainment,
pornography
or
sex
for
sex
in
exchange
for
a
material
item.
B
So
if
somebody
is
partaking
in
that
or
even
somebody
think
of
boys
tend
to
be
sexually
exploited
due
to
their
homelessness.
So
if
somebody
exchanges
food
with
a
hungry,
homeless,
fifteen-year-old
boy,
you
have
now
commercially
sexually
exploited
that
child
and
can
be
charged
for
that.
So
we
need
to
understand
what
commercial
sexual
exploitation
is
or
domestic
minor
sex
trafficking,
engaging
a
child
in
any
of
those
forms
again.
Adult
entertainment
or
sex
for
trade
of
something
is
commercially
sexually
exploited.
A
child.
A
B
Thank
you.
So
we
have
a
website.
Mike
has
promised
WWE
Mica's
promise
org.
We
also
do
free
trainings
to
the
community
at
the
corporate
Center
bimonthly
and
as
well
as
we
I'm
a
travelling
Roadshow,
so
I
will
I
will
go
to
your
church
to
your
civic
organization,
to
your
school.
I
have
certifications
in
several
types
of
curriculums.
We
do
stewards
of
children
training
as
I
mentioned.
Not
a
number
curriculum
is
from
middle
to
high
school
students
to
help
them
understand.
B
You
know
really
get
a
grasp
on
what
the
issue
is
and
how
to
protect
themselves
and
others,
and
also
I,
just
recently
got
certified
in
a
training
for
hospitality,
industry
and
hotels.
So
we
triangle
that's
a
cool
one,
so
we
trained
the
front
desk
and
the
back
of
house
what
to
look
for
and
the
new
legislation
also
holds
bad
actor.
Hotels,
countable
so-
and
this
has
been
going
off
for
a
while.
So
in
some
of
these
hotels,
everybody's
getting
a
pay,
you
know
a
cut.
A
A
Will
talk
about
this?
This
is
such
a
great
thing,
but
if
you're
just
joining
us
we're
talking
about
sex
trafficking,
and
the
great
thing
is
that
Georgia
is
instilling
some
laws
that
are
really
going
after
and
fighting
the
issue
that
they're
targeting
their
users
they're
targeting
those
organizations,
the
hotels
and
those
businesses
and
things
that
are
helping
this
big
problem.
But
there
are
also
things
that
we
can
do
as
a
community
to
help
prevent
it
from
the
front
end
and
that's
helping
our
children
to
identify
when
something
is,
is
not
going
right.
B
Again,
making
sure
that
if
you're
an
adult
seek
out
getting
that
stewards
of
children
training
it's
free
in
our
community
right
now,
you
go
online
to
d2l
org
and
you
can
just
find
a
training
near
you
and
and
attend
a
training,
learn
how
to
keep
your
kids
safe.
Also,
online
safety
trafficking
is
across
across
all
borders
now,
because
all
children
have
access
to
the
Internet,
and
now
that
means
all
people
have
access
to
your
children.
Children
do
not
know
how
to
navigate
having.
A
Definitely
going
to
have
you
back
because
we
needed
this
information
definitely
again.
Sex
trafficking
is
a
big
problem
that
affects
our
community,
not
just
out
there.
It
affects
us,
but
it
is,
but
within
our
power
to
fight
it.
So,
let's
all
be
a
part
of
that
fight.
Thanks
for
watching
Columbus
connections,.