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      [Verb]  | "traffic" 


      1: to carry on traffic

      2: to concentrate one's effort or interest; broadly : engage, deal

      3: to travel over


      Origin: 1537 ;

      [Noun]  | "trafficker" 


      1: a buyer and seller of goods for profit;


        * e.g., " ... a trafficker who sold pirated videos from the back of his car "



      •  Antonyms : 

      • (N/A)





      [Verb]  | "traffic" 


      1: to carry on the business of buying and selling goods or other property;


        * e.g., " ... arrested him for trafficking in drugs "



      •  Antonyms : 

      • (N/A)





       [ "trafficking" ]

      1: Selling something illegal.

        * e.g.,  ... I heard he got the book for trafficking in drugs and diamonds. 

       [ "Traffickity" ]

      1: Used to describe times when there is an excessive amount of traffic

        * e.g.,  ... I'm not going anywhere right now. It's too traffickity 

       [ "Trafficked" ]

      1: Adv. To be dragged about town, resulting in prolonged hours waiting in traffic.

        * e.g.,  ... Me: “How was your night?” 

       [ "Human trafficking" ]

      1: Trading a humans life for profit.

        * e.g.,  ... Identity theft is human trafficking 

       [ "human trafficking" ]

      1: Per the Protocol to Prevent, Suppress and Punish Trafficking in Persons, especially Women and Children, supplementing the Convention against Transnational Organised Crime of 2000(“The Palermo Protocol”):

        * e.g.,  ... A young woman in the Ukraine is offered a job to work as a nanny in the UK. She arrives in the UK and her passport and travel documents are taken from her, she is made to stay inside the house all day, she cleans the house, cooks all the meals and cares for the children everyday with no rest days, the employer beats her and never pays her the salary he promised. Her employer tells her that the police will deport her if she tries to escape. She is a victim of human trafficking.  


       [ "human trafficking" ]

      2: ‘Trafficking in persons’ shall mean the recruitment, transportation, transfer, harbouring or receipt of persons, by means of the threat or use of force or other forms of coercion, of abduction, of fraud, of deception, of the abuse of power or of a position of vulnerability or of the giving or receiving of payments or benefits to achieve the consent of a person having control over another person, for the purpose of exploitation. Exploitation shall include, at a minimum, the exploitation of the prostitution of others or other forms of sexual exploitation, forced labour or services, slavery or practices similar to slavery, servitude or the removal of organs;


       [ "human trafficking" ]

      3: (b) The consent of a victim of trafficking in persons to the intended exploitation set forth in subparagraph (a) of this article shall be irrelevant where any of the means set forth in subparagraph (a) have been used;


       [ "human trafficking" ]

      4: (c) The recruitment, transportation, transfer, harbouring or receipt of a child for the purpose of exploitation shall be considered ‘trafficking in persons’ even if this does not involve any of the means set forth in subparagraph (a) of this article;


       [ "human trafficking" ]

      5: This is the most recent definition of human trafficking in a long line of international conventions that have attempted to suppress and prevent trafficking of women and children for commercial sexual exploitation since the "International Agreement For The Suppression Of The 'White Slave Traffic'" of 190


       [ "human trafficking" ]

      6: Human trafficking is distinguishable from human smuggling in several ways:


       [ "human trafficking" ]

      7:  The Purpose of the Movement


       [ "human trafficking" ]

      8: Trafficking: Exploitation of the individual’s sexuality/labor for profit.


       [ "human trafficking" ]

      9: Smuggling: Movement for profit


       [ "human trafficking" ]

      10:  The Nature and Quality of Consent


       [ "human trafficking" ]

      11: Trafficking: Consent for movement may be present, but is nullified by force, coercion, deception, abuse of power or of another’s vulnerability, etc. Consent to move or recruit individual is predicated on a false idea or misconception, or is coerced by threats and manipulation


       [ "human trafficking" ]

      12: Smuggling: Consent for movement clearly present. The individual agrees to the movement or transportation


       [ "human trafficking" ]

      13:  Nature of the Relationship Between the Individual and the Facilitator/Agent


       [ "human trafficking" ]

      14: Trafficking: Victim-Exploiter. A long-term relationship extending beyond the movement phase (although initial facilitator may be a link in the chain, there is continuity in the individual’s relationship with the trafficker/s).


       [ "human trafficking" ]

      15: Smuggling: Buyer/Supplier. Short-term relationship. Terminates upon completion of movement.


       [ "human trafficking" ]

      16:  The Profit Element


       [ "human trafficking" ]

      17: Trafficking: Major profit source is the exploitation.


       [ "human trafficking" ]

      18: Smuggling: Sole profit source is the movement.


       [ "human trafficking" ]

      19:  Violence and Intimidation


       [ "human trafficking" ]

      20: Trafficking: Characteristic of trafficking and generally necessary to maintain victim in exploitative situation.


       [ "human trafficking" ]

      21: Smuggling: Incidental to movement.


       [ "human trafficking" ]

      22:  Autonomy and Freedom


       [ "human trafficking" ]

      23: Trafficking: Severely compromised – either cannot leave – kept under watch, guarded or locked in places or threatened to not leave (various methods can apply here – beatings, verbal threats)


       [ "human trafficking" ]

      24: Smuggling: Generally not severely compromised except to extent require for successful movement. After movement is completed, the individual regains freedom.


       [ "human trafficking" ]

      25: To be trafficked a person does not necessarily have to move across international borders - more governments and NGOs/IGOs have agreed that trafficking can occur within domestic borders.


       [ "human trafficking" ]

      26: A person can actually have been smuggled into a country and upon arrival be forced into an exploitative labor situation making them trafficked. The consent to the movement is irrelevant in regards to the exploitation that follows after a person arrives.


       [ "human trafficking" ]

      27: Debt Bondage, peonage, indentured servitude are all common forms of trafficking.

       [ "CHILD TRAFFICKING" ]

      1: Trafficking of children is a form of human trafficking and is defined by the United Nations as the "recruitment, transportation, transfer, harboring, and/or receipt" kidnapping of a child for the purpose of slavery, forced labor and exploitation.1:Article 3(c) This definition is substantially wider than the same document's definition of "trafficking in persons".1:Article 3(a) Children may also be trafficked for the purpose of adoption.

        * e.g.,  ... ALEX: hEY BRO DID YOU SEE THE NEW EPISODE OF SAILOR MOON? 

       [ "drug trafficker" ]

      1: a person who deals in drug trafficking, trafficks narcotics or any other types of drugs like marijuana or cocaine threw a border into another counrty

        * e.g.,  ... El Americano is a song about a drug trafficker 

       [ "Vet-Trafficking" ]

      1: A practice utilized by dubious organizations to raise massive amounts of money. Generally, they will use veterans, many times wounded combat veterans, to help raise funds for veteran-focused initiatives that have high social value. Unfortunately it seems, a larger portion of the funding will go to pay organizational salaries, marketing, and other expenses not directly benefiting anyone but the organizers and their business associates. This practice makes it more more difficult to raise funds for the organizations that spend a higher percentage of their monies on actual programs and services that directly benefit veterans in need.

        * e.g.,  ... I talked to Sergeant Henderson and he said the organization he had been helping was a front for a vet-trafficking operation. On several weekend fundraising events, he witnessed drunken partying every night and money being spent on expensive hotel rooms and rental vehicles. He said he even overheard one of the inebriated organizational managers bragging about his 6-digit salary. 

       [ "Data Trafficking" ]

      1: A new term to define gossiping, used by superiors in the professional world to provide a sense of engaging in criminal activity.

        * e.g.,  ... Data trafficking in the workplace will not be tolerated, and will result in instant termination. 

       [ "people traffickers" ]

      1: Undercover travel agents working in the shadow economy, offering transport to people who wish or need to travel internationally, including refugees fleeing persecution; and/or people from whatever background who help migrants to evade racist restrictions on freedom of movement between countries, including those who help refugees escape from persecution.

        * e.g.,  ... New laws against people trafficking increase penalties for concealing migrants inside one's vehicle. 


       [ "people traffickers" ]

      2: This is a recently INVENTED word which has appeared in the mass media, perhaps from the Millbank spin machine, in an attempt to justify attacks on the right of refugees to flee oppression, torture and death. It did not exist until about a year ago. It is used as an excuse for persecuting refugees and those who transport them, by likening the latter to drug and arms "traffickers" (although genealogically, to "traffick" simply means to move something from one place to another - in which case all commercial pilots, bus and train drivers and people who take passengers in their cars are strictly speaking "people traffickers" - it is linked to the word "traffic", used to refer to lots of cars etc. in one place; this use, however, is archaic, and to traffick now means to smuggle illegal goods).


       [ "people traffickers" ]

      3: It basically means that the people who use the word think that people - especially black people - are THINGS which can be OWNED and therefore TRAFFICKED like drugs and arms; worse still, that people are ILLEGAL goods to be trafficked and owned. Its use is evidence of the barely concealed racism of the government and the corporate media as well as all the sheep who buy into the filth they spout.


       [ "people traffickers" ]

      4: It has become popular partly because of a lot of publicity surrounding sections of migrancy which are run by organised criminals and involve the establishment of sex slavery and forced labour. However, the laws brought in against "people traffickers" are typically aimed at ANYONE who transports migrants, including refugees, and so could even apply to heroic people such as human rights activists who help people flee oppression.

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