The Honest Courtesan writes:
http://maggiemcneill.wordpress.com/
Just over a year ago (September 4th, 2010) Craigslist 
surrendered to political pressure  from busybody attorneys general out to make a name for themselves by  taking pot-shots at a straw man.  Founder Craig Newmark is a shy, timid  fellow who may have 
Asperger’s Syndrome and  was unable to cope with tyrannical demands and false accusations from  people who relish upsetting others.  So he simply shut down his “adult  services” section, thus granting the witch hunters their empty symbolic  victory and allowing the whores who advertise on Craigslist to return to  the personals and therapeutic services sections where they posted their  ads before  the government demanded the creation of an “adult services” section in  the first place.  Deafened by plaudits from trafficking fetishists, the  attorneys general were apparently unable to hear either the 
yawns with which the majority of Americans greeted their “victory” or the denunciations from civil libertarians and other rational folk, so now they’re at it again, 
issuing empty threats against Backpage:
Massachusetts Attorney General Martha Coakley joined with  44 attorneys general nationwide demanding Backpage.com crack down on  prostitution ads, saying the site is the new online mecca for the sex  trade.  “Children are being forced into prostitution in Massachusetts  and across the country, and those traffickers are being given a tool to  make this even easier,” Coakley said in a statement.  “We urge  Backpage.com to stop child-sex trafficking on the site by completely  removing all adult service advertisements.”  Backpage, owned by Village  Voice Media, charges a dollar for each ad.  While the site states it  does not tolerate ads promoting illegal services, the National  Association of Attorneys General, citing industry analysts, said the  company earns about $22.7 million in annual revenue from adult services  ad sales.  The prosecutors’ group claims the site does minimal vetting  of ads.  “The stated representations about the site are in direct  conflict with the reality of Backpage’s business model:  making money  from a service illegal in every state, but for a few counties in  Nevada,” the group said.  A Backpage spokesman could not be immediately  reached for comment.  The prosecutors’ association is the same group  that pressured Craigslist.org into abandoning its “adult” category in  2010.
As I was told by Pete Kotz 
back in January, Village Voice Media is 
not  run by gentle, socially-awkward souls who shrink from confrontation,  and its owners have no intention of running from this fight; some  commentators have observed that they actually seem to relish it, and why  shouldn’t they?  The attorneys general don’t have a legal leg to stand  on, and they know it; they’re just trying to blow down paper targets  with hot air.
 But there’s another aspect to the story which was called to my  attention by veteran activist Norma Jean Almodovar; in a comment on the 
Kansas iteration of the same news story she  pointed out that the politicians are making a big deal about imaginary  “children forced into prostitution” in order to call attention away from  their own disorderly house:
“More than 50 cases of trafficking or attempted  trafficking of minors on Backpage.com have been filed in 22 states in  the past three years, the letter says…”  And in 2011 alone, more than  100 cases of pedophile and child porn possessing police/district  attorneys/judges were brought to court…NONE of those cases involved  backpage.com or craigslist or any other classified website offering  adult ads – just a bunch of perverted cops, judges, FBI agents etc. who  had access to these young people because they are persons in authority  whom no one suspects of diddling their children.  These numbers do not  include the teachers, preachers, priests, boy scout leaders and other  persons who are trusted by the community and who do not find their  victims on backpage.com.  The US Government reports that 90% of the  cases of child sexual exploitation are at the hands of someone the child  knows, like the above cops, teachers, etc. and 68% of the cases of  child sexual abuse are at the hands of a family member.  Why don’t the  states attorneys general deal with those issues instead of conflating  all commercial sex with underage sex trafficking?
And in a comment on the Massachusetts story linked above, she went one better by actually publishing 
a list of 102 cops who have been accused of child molestation or possession of child porn THIS YEAR ALONE.
 It seems to me that Martha Coakley and her partners in crime need to heed the advice of scripture, specifically Matthew 7:5:  “
Thou  hypocrite, first cast out the beam out of thine own eye; and then shalt  thou see clearly to cast out the mote out of thy brother’s eye.”