Wednesday, October 29, 2025

California State Senator Scott Wiener Is Obsessed With Reducing or Eliminating Penalties for Having Sex With Children. Even the New York Times Magazine Now Notices That Police Can't Act Against the Child Traffickers Weiner Worked So Hard to Immunize.

California State Senator Scott Wiener Is Obsessed With Reducing or Eliminating Penalties for Having Sex With Children. Even the New York Times Magazine Now Notices That Police Can't Act Against the Child Traffickers Weiner Worked So Hard to Immunize


John Sexton has great background for Wiener's constant advocacy for reduced penalties for sex crimes, including statutory rape of a minor and sex trafficking.

Although Weiner is always the one writing, proposing, and fighting for these laws, the diseased groomer California legislature voted to make them law.

And Gavin Newsom signed them into law.

Wiener claims he's doing this, you see, just to protect the all-precious trans community. He claims that trans people are arrested on the street not for prostitution, but just for looking a certain kind of way.       

Why would anyone propose such a law? Why would the California State Legislature pass it? I asked the bill's author, San Francisco--based state senator Scott Wiener. 
The answer he gave is the one that he supplies for so many of the bills he authors: it was necessary to advance the rights of LGBTQ people. 
"If you are standing on the sidewalk with high heels, and you wear your hair a certain way, and you wear tight clothing, an officer can say, 'I think you're loitering with the intent to commit prostitution' and arrest you," Wiener said. 
"That is not how we should be doing things in the United States of America--arresting people for how they look," he continued. "And when you do that, not surprisingly, it's only certain kinds of people who actually get arrested: it's trans women. It's black women. . . . It's an inherently profiling law," he said. "Randomly arresting a bunch of black trans women for how they look is not protecting potential victims of human trafficking."

But were the police indeed "randomly arresting a bunch of black trans women"? The anti-trafficking advocates I spoke with dispute this. For starters, Wilson, Powell, and Russell (all of whom are African-American) say that biological women and girls--not transgender individuals--constitute the vast majority of those trafficked. Nearly every report on human trafficking by global human rights organizations confirms this observation.

GO READ THE WHOLE THING

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