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Exodus Cry
Exodus Cry
from Wikipedia

Exodus Cry is an American Christian non-profit advocacy organization seeking the abolition of the legal commercial sex industry, including pornography, strip clubs, and sex work, as well as illegal sex trafficking.[2] It has been described by the New York Daily News,[3] TheWrap,[4] and others as anti-LGBT, with ties to the anti-abortion movement.[5]

Key Information

History

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The organization originally developed out of a weekly prayer group founded in 2007 by Benjamin Nolot, a filmmaker and member of the Charismatic Christian International House of Prayer. Nolot is currently the CEO of the organization. Exodus Cry says it is no longer directly affiliated with the church, but that it is faith-based and does offer prayer instruction on its website.[6][7] As of 2018, Exodus Cry was listed as a "related tax-exempt organization" on tax filings submitted by the International House of Prayer and has partnered with the church for campaigns since then.[6]

Traffickinghub campaign

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The campaign states: "We're calling for Pornhub to be shut down and its executives held accountable for these crimes." Writing for Vice, Samantha Cole says that there are similarities between Exodus Cry campaign's messaging and that of some far-right (neo-Nazis and white supremacists) and extremist Christian groups; however, Cole writes that they have "never explicitly called for violence against Pornhub, and both groups clearly condemned these posts and others that call for violence while invoking their names after Motherboard reached out for comment."[7]

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In December 2020, Pornhub's parent company MindGeek was sued in California on allegations of hosting non-consensual videos produced by GirlsDoPorn, which allegedly coerced women into appearing in their videos under false pretenses. In January 2021, a class action lawsuit making similar allegations was launched in Montreal, seeking $600 million in damages for anyone whose intimate photos and videos had been shared on MindGeek's sites without their consent.[8] In June 2021, another class-action lawsuit by 34 additional women was filed against Mindgeek in federal court, alleging that the company had exploited them and hosted and promoted videos that depicted rape, revenge porn, and child sexual abuse.[9]

Ban of sexually explicit content on OnlyFans

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Pressure from the group, alongside purported MasterCard policy changes, was alleged to be behind the initial decision of OnlyFans to ban sexually explicit content in late 2021[10][11] (although this decision was subsequently reversed after a major backlash).[12]

Criticism

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In 2017, Exodus Cry released Liberated: The New Sexual Revolution, a documentary filmed during Spring Break condemning hook-up culture and casual sex. The film was shown on Netflix and at various college campuses. The film and the organization were criticized by people for failing to disclose the group's religious background, as well as for director Nolot's historic opposition to abortion and gay rights.[13][14]

In November 2020, actress Melissa McCarthy and HBO pulled their planned charitable support of the organization, after learning that founder and CEO Nolot had once compared abortion to the Holocaust, and had also condemned gay marriage.[15] The next month, the International Slavery Museum cancelled a planned collaboration with the organization because of Nolot's views on gay marriage.[16] In both cases, Exodus Cry denied accusations of homophobia, and stated that Nolot's personal views were not relevant to the overall mission of the organization.[17]

References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Exodus Cry is an American Christian founded in 2008 by Benjamin Nolot and headquartered in , dedicated to abolishing and commercial sexual exploitation through advocacy, awareness campaigns, documentary filmmaking, and survivor support services. The group's mission emphasizes disrupting the demand side of exploitation by promoting the "Equality Model" of legislation, which criminalizes the purchase of sex and pimping while decriminalizing sellers, a policy it has advocated for in multiple jurisdictions to address root causes of . Its documentaries, including Nefarious: Merchant of Souls (2011), expose the mechanics of and have reportedly inspired individual commitments to anti-trafficking efforts and influenced legislative discussions on exploitation. Exodus Cry's approach integrates a faith-based perspective with empirical focus on victim testimonies and industry data, arguing that and legalized fuel trafficking demand, though this stance has sparked debates with pro-sex work advocates who contend it conflates consensual adult activities with . The organization maintains a strong financial transparency rating and operates internationally to empower survivors via aftercare and prevention programs.

Overview

Founding and Leadership

Exodus Cry was founded in by Benjamin Nolot as a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization headquartered in . Nolot, a filmmaker and advocate, was inspired by the 19th-century abolitionist and initiated the organization following a centered on combating through combined spiritual and practical efforts. Nolot serves as the CEO and continues to direct the group's strategy, emphasizing awareness campaigns, survivor support, and policy advocacy against and commercial sexual exploitation. He has produced documentaries such as Nefarious: Merchant of Souls to highlight the issue and has spoken at international forums, including the . The leadership team includes Helen Taylor as of Impact, who joined in 2013 and manages , outreach programs, and survivor care initiatives, having trained over 3,000 individuals across 20 . Christina Rangel, Director of , brings over 13 years of experience in anti-trafficking work in nine , focusing on victim resources and family support, particularly in . The organization operates as faith-based but maintains no direct affiliation with specific religious institutions.

Mission and Core Principles

Exodus Cry's mission is to abolish sex trafficking and all forms of commercial sexual exploitation by exposing the underlying injustices, mobilizing public action, and supporting victims toward freedom and restoration. The organization emphasizes breaking the cycle of exploitation through a multifaceted approach that addresses cultural normalization, direct intervention, and legal reforms, with the vision that "every person should be free." This commitment extends to empowering survivors by providing resources for healing and reintegration while challenging the demand-driven aspects of the . At its core, Exodus Cry operates on abolitionist principles, viewing commercial sexual activity as inherently coercive and rooted in violence, inequality, and rather than consensual exchange. The organization prioritizes an "end-demand" strategy, advocating for models like the Equality Model, which criminalizes sex buyers, pimps, and brothel owners while decriminalizing and supporting victims. This approach draws from evidence that decriminalizing sellers reduces trafficking risks without increasing demand, as seen in implementations like Sweden's 1999 law, which has correlated with lower rates and victim identification. Core values include cultural transformation via media exposure—such as documentaries reaching millions—to shift societal attitudes toward exploitation, alongside direct outreach in high-risk venues like brothels and online platforms. Founded by Benjamin Nolot, whose work is inspired by historical Christian abolitionists like , Exodus Cry integrates a for universal human into its framework, mobilizing communities while maintaining a broad appeal focused on empirical outcomes over ideological purity. Principles emphasize verifiable impact, such as training abolitionists for street-level interventions and pushing policies like age verification for to curb underage access and exploitation, rejecting narratives that frame adult industry participation as empowering. This stance prioritizes causal links between demand for paid sex and trafficking incidence, supported by survivor testimonies and data on victim demographics, over industry claims of autonomy.

Organizational Scope and Funding

Exodus Cry operates as a faith-based 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization headquartered in San Clemente, California, with activities spanning domestic and international efforts to abolish sex trafficking and commercial sexual exploitation. Its scope encompasses awareness-raising through documentary films and social media campaigns, policy advocacy for legislative reforms such as the Equality Model, direct intervention via outreach teams, and survivor support referrals to partner organizations rather than in-house aftercare programs. Intervention teams, comprising staff and volunteers totaling over 20 individuals, conduct undercover operations targeting streets, strip clubs, massage parlors, online platforms, and jails, frequently coordinating with law enforcement for rescues and arrests. The organization provides training resources, including an outreach manual, and engages in global advocacy, such as presentations at United Nations events. Despite a relatively small operational footprint, Exodus Cry achieves broad reach by mobilizing millions of supporters through media production— including three feature films and seven animated videos that have garnered over 25 awards—and high-impact campaigns. As of fiscal year 2023, it employed 23 individuals, reflecting a lean structure focused on scalable strategies like content dissemination and partnerships rather than large-scale direct service provision. Funding for Exodus Cry is predominantly sourced from private contributions, which accounted for the entirety of its $6,415,176 in revenue for 2023, with total expenses matching this amount to support , media, and operational activities. No government grants were reported in that year, though prior filings indicate occasional receipt of such , such as $124,021 in 2023 per secondary analyses of tax documents. Key personnel compensation included $175,614 for the president and CEO, with board members receiving no . As a donor-supported entity, it accepts contributions via individual gifts, donor-advised funds, and foundations like the , aligning with its faith-based origins and evangelical mobilization efforts.

Historical Development

Inception and Early Advocacy (2008–2012)

Exodus Cry was established in 2008 as a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization by filmmaker Benjamin Nolot, who drew inspiration from the abolitionist efforts of to combat . The group's inception followed a led by Nolot, centered on invoking against and commercial sexual exploitation. Operating from , Exodus Cry positioned itself as an abolitionist entity, emphasizing the rescue of victims and the disruption of trafficking networks through awareness and mobilization. Early advocacy efforts from 2008 to 2010 focused on building a network of intercessors and educators amid limited public knowledge of human trafficking's scale. Nolot's prior experiences, including visits to exploitation sites abroad, informed the organization's strategy of combining spiritual mobilization with factual exposure of trafficking's economic drivers, estimated at billions annually in sex-related profits. These years saw initial outreach through prayer initiatives and grassroots campaigns to highlight victim testimonies and the demand-side factors sustaining the industry. A pivotal development occurred in 2011 with the release of the documentary Nefarious: Merchant of Souls on August 11, directed by Nolot and produced under Exodus Cry's banner. The film documented global operations, featuring survivor accounts and data on enslavement trends, and was screened to advocate for stricter enforcement against exploiters. By 2012, as reflected in its , Exodus Cry had expanded operational infrastructure to support growing advocacy, including victim assistance protocols and community engagement, while maintaining a commitment to empirical evidence of exploitation's harms over ideological narratives.

Expansion Through Media and Awareness (2013–2019)

During this period, Exodus Cry leveraged its 2011 documentary Nefarious: Merchant of Souls for extensive awareness efforts, including screenings presented to the , the , and Canadian Members of Parliament, which contributed to shaping anti-trafficking legislation in . The film, viewed by millions worldwide and featured on CNN's Freedom Project, received 24 awards and was utilized to train law enforcement personnel on dynamics. In 2013, the organization expanded international outreach by conducting awareness events in twelve cities across , described by participants as eye-opening and life-changing, focusing on about commercial sexual exploitation. This built on Nefarious to foster grassroots abolitionist training and public engagement in regions with high trafficking vulnerability. By 2017, Exodus Cry released Liberated: The New Sexual Revolution, a examining during college , highlighting its links to normalization of sexual exploitation and featuring firsthand accounts from participants, victims, and experts. The film premiered in April 2017 and elicited responses from diverse audiences, including celebrities and professors, emphasizing themes of and cultural influences on young adults. In 2019, awareness initiatives included the "Strike Out Slavery" campaign, with interactive booths hosted at Major League Baseball games in New York City, Kansas City, and , accompanied by a led by founder Benjamin Nolot to educate attendees on demand-side drivers of trafficking. That year, an animated video titled "The Key to Ending " garnered hundreds of thousands of views on platforms, advocating for legislative reforms targeting sex buyers. These efforts amplified Exodus Cry's media presence, growing followings to over 68,000 on and achieving more than 500,000 video views.

Shift to High-Profile Campaigns (2020–Present)

In 2020, Exodus Cry, through its Director of Abolition Laila Mickelwait, initiated the #Traffickinghub campaign targeting for allegedly hosting and profiting from non-consensual content, material, and trafficking-related videos. The effort began with Mickelwait's February 2020 op-ed in the calling for 's shutdown, followed by a petition launched on February 12 that amassed 2.2 million signatures from 192 countries. A June 30 animated video produced by Exodus Cry, titled "Pornhub Exposed as #Traffickinghub," achieved over 34 million views, amplifying survivor testimonies and evidence of unverified uploads. The campaign's momentum culminated in December 2020 when a New York Times investigation by , building on #Traffickinghub advocacy, prompted to remove approximately 10 million unverified videos—representing 80% of its library—and implement stricter verification. Major payment processors Visa, , and Discover severed ties with on December 10, severely curtailing its revenue streams. These changes, which Exodus Cry attributed directly to sustained public pressure, also spurred legal actions, including lawsuits by 191 victims seeking $1 billion in damages and executive resignations at 's parent company in June 2022. Post-2020, Exodus Cry extended high-profile interventions to other platforms, contributing to Mastercard's October 2021 policies requiring banks to block payments for content involving trafficking, rape, or , framed as a response to #Traffickinghub precedents. Advocacy efforts influenced Roku's November 2021 decision to restrict streaming via new technology blocking unverified content. In August 2021, pressure from Exodus Cry and allied groups factored into ' short-lived announcement to prohibit sexually explicit content, though the platform reversed course days later amid financial backlash. Ongoing #Traffickinghub work has sustained scrutiny, leading to 's January 2024 rollout of age and verification for new uploads. These campaigns marked a strategic evolution toward decentralized, survivor-led global movements emphasizing platform accountability over traditional awareness efforts.

Key Campaigns and Strategies

Traffickinghub Movement

The Traffickinghub movement emerged in early 2020 as a global advocacy campaign aimed at exposing and dismantling 's role in facilitating the distribution of non-consensual sexual content, including materials involving , , and . Founded by Laila Mickelwait, then Director of Abolition at Exodus Cry, the initiative began with a launched on February 10, 2020, demanding the shutdown of the platform and criminal accountability for its executives at MindGeek ('s parent company). The campaign was sparked by Mickelwait's June 2020 op-ed "Time to Shut Pornhub Down," which detailed evidence of over 13 million videos on the site lacking age or consent verification, many linked to exploitation networks like , which faced lawsuits for trafficking women into pornography production. As a decentralized coalition, Traffickinghub united survivors, anti-trafficking organizations, child protection advocates, and individuals across political, faith, and ideological lines, garnering endorsements from over 75 groups worldwide, including the UK's National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children. Its core demands included immediate removal of unverified content, implementation of robust uploader verification, cessation of downloads to curb non-consensual sharing, and cooperation with law enforcement to prosecute traffickers profiting from the platform—assertions supported by documented cases where victims identified their abuse videos on Pornhub, leading to revictimization through perpetual online distribution. The movement's strategies encompassed viral social media mobilization under the #Traffickinghub hashtag, public protests at Pornhub headquarters, and pressure on financial institutions and advertisers to sever ties with MindGeek, resulting in Mastercard and Visa suspending payments on the site in December 2020. By mid-2021, Traffickinghub's efforts prompted Pornhub to delete over 80% of its video library—approximately 10 million files—while introducing manual review processes and ID verification for new uploads, concessions Mickelwait attributed directly to the campaign's public scrutiny. These reforms were corroborated by independent reports of reduced exploitative content, though critics from pro-sex work perspectives questioned their permanence; empirical data from survivor testimonies and lawsuits, such as the 2019 $13 million verdict against GirlsDoPorn affiliates whose videos proliferated on Pornhub, underscored the platform's prior facilitation of trafficking revenue streams estimated in the billions. The movement extended its influence to policy, inspiring U.S. congressional inquiries, Canadian investigations into MindGeek, and state-level legislation like New York's 2021 laws mandating age verification on porn sites, with Exodus Cry providing research and survivor input to substantiate trafficking-pornography linkages.

Platform-Specific Interventions

Exodus Cry has targeted online classified advertising platforms known to facilitate sex trafficking, notably advocating for the shutdown of .com, which was seized by U.S. federal authorities on , , following indictments for facilitating and . The organization's founder, Benjamin Nolot, described the action as having "broken the back of in America" by disrupting a primary venue for traffickers to advertise victims. This intervention aligned with broader support for the Allow States and Victims to Fight Online Sex Trafficking Act (), signed into law on April 11, , which amended of the to hold websites liable for promoting . In the wake of , Exodus Cry highlighted the closure of Craigslist's personals section on March 22, 2018, as a direct outcome that curtailed online facilitation of commercial sex, including trafficking. The platform had previously been criticized for enabling anonymous ads that traffickers exploited to sell victims, with reports indicating that such sites represented a significant portion of commercial sex schemes in trafficking cases. Exodus Cry's advocacy emphasized that these shutdowns reduced traffickers' ability to operate covertly online, though the organization noted ongoing challenges with emerging platforms. Beyond classifieds, Exodus Cry has pressured financial intermediaries to restrict payments to exploitative sites, including porn platforms hosting non-consensual content. In 2021, following campaigns highlighting verified cases of trafficking and abuse, implemented policies prohibiting processing for sites failing to remove , trafficking, and material, affecting multiple adult video platforms. Similar efforts contributed to ' temporary suspension of sexually explicit content on August 20, 2021, amid scrutiny over unverified uploads including and exploitation. These interventions focused on disrupting revenue streams, with Exodus Cry arguing that payment restrictions compel platforms to implement stricter verification and . The organization has also developed practical tools for direct intervention on digital venues, including strategies in its Intervention Manual for identifying and assisting victims advertised , such as through monitoring brothels, strip clubs, and listings. This approach combines advocacy with on-the-ground outreach, targeting platforms where exploitation occurs while pushing for systemic changes like mandatory age verification to prevent underage access and trafficking facilitation.

Legislative and Policy Advocacy

Exodus Cry has engaged in legislative advocacy primarily to reduce demand for commercial sex by criminalizing the purchase of sex acts while decriminalizing sellers, aligning with the "" or "Equality Model" of policy. This approach, which the organization promotes as effective in curbing based on empirical outcomes in adopting countries, involves direct of lawmakers in the United States and internationally to enact and enforce such measures. In the U.S., Exodus Cry has supported state-level bills targeting exploitation, including California's AB 379, passed on August 1, 2025, which elevates sex buying to a offense applicable to all minors, irrespective of the buyer's knowledge of age. The organization collaborated with survivors and anti-trafficking advocates to influence legislators, framing the law as a critical step in holding buyers accountable and disrupting sex trafficking networks. Additionally, Exodus Cry has advocated for federal policies to shield children from online , urging in June 2022 to mandate effective safeguards against exposure, citing the role of unregulated porn platforms in facilitating exploitation. A key focus has been age verification requirements for adult websites, with Exodus Cry contributing to campaigns that led to in nearly 40 states since 2021 aimed at preventing minors' access to pornographic content. This effort gained momentum following a June 30, 2025, U.S. ruling upholding such laws, which the organization hailed as a strengthening nationwide enforcement and countering industry challenges from platforms like Pornhub's parent company. Internationally, Exodus Cry backed France's 2016 law criminalizing sex buying as a form of and Israel's Prohibition of Consumption of Prostitution Services Act, enforced from July 10, 2020, which imposes fines on buyers to deter demand-driven trafficking. The organization's policy work emphasizes evidence from jurisdictions adopting demand-focused laws, arguing these reduce trafficking incidence more effectively than models, though it has faced opposition from lobbyists who challenge such measures in . Exodus Cry's annual reports document ongoing direct engagement with policymakers to mobilize support for these reforms, prioritizing abolition over partial regulations.

Impact and Achievements

Policy and Platform Reforms

The Traffickinghub campaign, initiated by Exodus Cry's Director of Abolition Laila Mickelwait in November 2019, catalyzed major platform reforms targeting exploitative content on sites like . In December 2020, responded to the campaign's —amassing over 2.2 million signatures—and a New York Times investigation by deleting approximately 10 million unverified videos, comprising 80% of its library, while restricting uploads to verified users only and removing the download button. By January 2024, implemented mandatory age and consent verification for all featured individuals as ongoing compliance measures. Pressure from the movement extended to payment processors, prompting policy overhauls to curb facilitation of illegal content. In December 2020, and Visa suspended payments to amid allegations of hosting non-consensual and underage material; later formalized requirements in October 2021 for adult platforms to verify performer age, obtain affirmative consent documentation, and expeditiously remove prohibited content like trafficking or videos. Visa imposed similar restrictions, and in August 2022, both processors halted services to MindGeek's ('s parent) advertising network, TrafficJunky, until enhanced safeguards were enacted. Discover and had previously severed ties in 2019 and 2020, respectively, contributing to reduced revenue streams for non-compliant operators. In legislative advocacy, Exodus Cry has influenced demand-focused anti-trafficking policies by advising legislators in 13 countries and achieving consultative status to promote laws penalizing sex buyers while providing victim support services. The organization supported France's 2016 adoption of the , which criminalizes purchases with fines up to €1,500 for first offenses and offers rehabilitation funding for exit programs, reducing without prosecuting sellers. In the U.S., Exodus Cry contributed to the introduction of the Sex Trafficking Demand Reduction Act and, after over two years of coalition efforts, helped secure passage of Assembly Bill 379 on August 1, 2025, elevating the purchase of a minor for sex from to status with enhanced penalties. The campaign also spurred a 2021 Canadian parliamentary investigation into MindGeek, yielding recommendations for stricter laws against online sexual exploitation.

Media Production and Public Awareness

Exodus Cry produces documentary films and miniseries aimed at exposing the realities of and commercial sexual exploitation, with a particular emphasis on the industry's role in perpetuating demand. Their inaugural production, Nefarious: Merchant of Souls (2011), features survivor testimonies, interviews with traffickers, and data on global trafficking networks to illustrate the scale and brutality of sex slavery. The film has been screened thousands of times in over 20 countries, directly reaching an estimated 1.5 million viewers through events including UN and U.S. Congress presentations, while accumulating over 50 million online views. Viewer impacts include personal commitments to anti-trafficking work, such as one individual pursuing a master's on trafficking patterns and another entering enforcement. Subsequent films build on this foundation to address cultural drivers of exploitation. Raised on Porn examines 's psychological and relational harms through survivor narratives and expert analysis, prompting reported behavioral changes among audiences, including adolescents discontinuing consumption. In 2022–2023, Exodus Cry released the three-part Beyond Fantasy, which investigates production practices in mainstream , highlighting ethical lapses, performer , and health crises like widespread sexually transmitted infections. The second episode, "Unsafe ," released on February 17, 2023, details STI outbreaks, including a incident that halted industry filming. More recently, Buying Her (launched July 30, 2025) focuses on buyer motivations and trafficking operations, positioning it as a tool for mobilizing public opposition to the trade. All productions are distributed freely online to audiences aged 18 and older, prioritizing accessibility to foster widespread education. These media efforts underpin Exodus Cry's public awareness strategies, which seek to alter societal tolerance for sexual commodification through viral campaigns and toolkits. The #ProtectChildrenNotPorn initiative, launched in 2021, leverages clips and data to demand mandatory government ID-based age verification on platforms, aiming to curb underage access affecting millions. Complementary efforts, such as story-sharing permissions for awareness drives and the #777 Campaign (raising funds across seven anti-trafficking groups), amplify survivor voices via and screenings to build grassroots pressure for cultural and legal shifts. By integrating from survivors and industry insiders, these productions and campaigns challenge demand-side narratives, contributing to policy discussions on exploitation without endorsing unsubstantiated claims of industry-wide consent.

Survivor Support and Empirical Outcomes

Exodus Cry conducts outreach to individuals exploited in street-level prostitution, strip clubs, massage parlors, and online platforms, distributing gift bags containing beauty products, resource information, and access to a trafficking hotline, while facilitating connections to partner service providers for exit support. The organization operates a weekly survivor-led support group focused on mentorship, tailored to women exiting commercial sexual exploitation, and provides on-site childcare to accommodate single mothers participating in the sessions. It has also launched mentorship initiatives equipping survivors with essential life skills and vocational training to foster independence post-exploitation. Although Exodus Cry does not maintain in-house aftercare facilities or safe houses, it refers survivors to vetted partner organizations for and collaborates with entities such as OUR Rescue and FreeAGirl USA to transition victims from trafficking into secure environments. Additionally, the group funds trauma-informed therapy through partnerships with specialized centers, covering costs for survivors of online sexual exploitation on platforms like , including those victimized as children via nonconsensual content distribution. These efforts are overseen by dedicated staff, such as Vice President of Impact Helen Taylor, emphasizing survivor care alongside broader abolitionist training that has prepared over 3,000 individuals across more than 20 countries to conduct similar outreach. In terms of reach, Exodus Cry reports having delivered exit resources—such as counseling referrals, emergency aid, and skill-building support—to over 5,000 exploited women and children in 12 countries since its . Empirical outcomes from supported interventions include documented improvements in survivor metrics; for instance, the organization's 2023 details a 51% transformation rate in key recovery indicators (e.g., reduced trauma symptoms) after six months of funded sessions, marking progress over prior years' results. Individual case studies highlight long-term successes, such as survivor Sophia, who transitioned from trafficking victim to a SWAT team member and aftercare contributor following receipt of supportive resources. Independent evaluations of Exodus Cry's survivor programs remain limited, with available data primarily derived from the organization's internal reporting and partner collaborations.

Criticisms and Counterarguments

Ideological Objections from Pro-Sex Work Advocates

Pro-sex work advocates, including sex worker rights organizations such as the Global Network of Sex Work Projects, contend that Exodus Cry's abolitionist ideology frames all commercial sexual activity—including consensual and —as intrinsically exploitative and equivalent to trafficking, thereby erasing the distinction between voluntary labor and coercion and denying workers' agency. This perspective, they argue, stems from the organization's Christian fundamentalist roots, which prioritize moral opposition to sexual commerce over evidence-based , reviving historical "moral panics" akin to early 20th-century campaigns rather than addressing verifiable trafficking dynamics. In critiques of specific initiatives like the Traffickinghub campaign launched in 2020, performers and advocates such as Gwen Adora and Maya Morena have asserted that demands to shutter platforms like exploit documented abuse cases to pursue broader industry elimination, potentially displacing thousands of voluntary workers without resolving underlying exploitation or providing economic alternatives. They further object to Exodus Cry's endorsement of end-demand policies, such as the , which criminalize buyers while decriminalizing sellers, claiming these measures drive transactions underground, erode , and heighten risks, as evidenced by reports from sex worker-led groups documenting increased stigma and isolation post-implementation in jurisdictions like and . Additional ideological grievances include allegations of unreliable data practices, such as Exodus Cry's 2012 claim of 300,000 U.S. children at risk of —which critics, including analyses, have debunked as inflated extrapolations from partial studies—and purported ties to broader , including past organizational queries on applicants' views of that suggest an anti-LGBTQ+ undercurrent influencing anti-sex work advocacy. These elements, pro-sex work voices maintain, prioritize ideological purity over pragmatic interventions like performer verification systems, which they propose as superior for curbing non-consensual content without dismantling the sector.

Allegations of Religious Extremism

Critics, particularly from pro-sex work advocacy groups and outlets aligned with interests, have accused of promoting religious extremism through its opposition to commercial sexual exploitation, including and . These allegations portray the organization's faith-based motivations—rooted in evangelical emphasizing biblical prohibitions on sexual immorality—as an attempt to impose fundamentalist moral codes on society, rather than addressing trafficking through . For instance, a 2021 by the pro-sex work organization Prostasia Foundation described Exodus Cry's campaigns as reinventing historical "white slavery moral panics" driven by evangelical ideology, claiming the group conflates consensual adult with trafficking to advance a puritanical agenda that endangers sex workers by stigmatizing their work. Such claims often highlight Exodus Cry's founding by Benjamin Nolot in 2007, under the auspices of the in Kansas City (IHOPKC), a charismatic evangelical network known for extended sessions and apocalyptic theology. Detractors argue this connection exemplifies , with a 2018 investigation labeling Exodus Cry as part of a "Christian fundamentalist" network seeking to limit expressions of sexuality that deviate from traditional norms, including through media productions like the 2018 Netflix film , which allegedly promotes abstinence-only views under the guise of anti-trafficking advocacy. Similarly, a 2020 report on a International Slavery Museum exhibition partnership noted backlash from sex worker rights groups, who called Exodus Cry "fundamentalist" for its "hyper-scandalised" depictions of that allegedly dehumanize workers by equating all commercial sex with exploitation, ignoring demands for . Further allegations tie Exodus Cry's activism to broader cultural warfare, with a 2021 VICE article framing its involvement in the Traffickinghub campaign against as part of an "anti-porn extremism" aligned with non-mainstream religious tactics to mainstream theocratic goals, potentially inciting against sex workers and platforms. Pro-sex work commentators, such as those in a 2021 Medium post, have explicitly termed Exodus Cry "religious extremists" for pressuring financial institutions to defund adult sites, arguing this disrupts livelihoods under the pretext of while advancing a "not religious but religious" agenda that prioritizes moral purity over . These criticisms frequently emanate from sources advocating full of sex work, such as the Adult Industry Laborers and Artists Association, which in submissions to Canadian parliamentary committees have grouped Exodus Cry with "extremist rhetoric" from anti-porn religious entities like the (NCOSE). In response to high-profile incidents, such as actress Melissa McCarthy's 2020 withdrawal of support amid online backlash, Exodus Cry has been tagged as a "religious " outfit alongside claims of anti-LGBTQ and racism, though the organization counters that its work models ' compassion without dogmatic imposition. Academic and media critiques, including a Canadian Journal of Communication study, extend this to assert that Exodus Cry's "abolitionist" stance reflects a fundamentalist drive to suppress gender and sexual expressions violating evangelical norms, potentially conflating voluntary sex work with trafficking to justify sweeping prohibitions. These allegations persist despite Exodus Cry's emphasis on empirical data from survivor testimonies and reports, with opponents viewing its Christian framing as inherently biased toward ideological ends over nuanced policy.

Defenses and Evidence-Based Rebuttals

Exodus Cry maintains that criticisms from pro-sex work advocates, which often portray commercial sex as inherently consensual and separate from exploitation, overlook empirical evidence of widespread within the industry. Data from the U.S. National Hotline indicate that in 2020, was documented as a form of exploitation in numerous trafficking cases, with traffickers using to coerce victims into ongoing and generate revenue. Similarly, research highlights intersections between pornography production and , including post-abuse tactics like distributing non-consensual videos to maintain control over victims. These findings align with the Protocol's framework, which recognizes pornography-based exploitation as a vector for trafficking when involving force, fraud, or , countering claims that enhances safety by demonstrating how models can normalize demand-driven . The organization's advocacy for the abolitionist model—criminalizing sex buying while decriminalizing sellers—draws on outcomes from implementations like Sweden's 1999 law, which reduced by 50% and visible trafficking without increasing violence against sellers, as evaluated by government reports. Pro-sex work arguments favoring full decriminalization, such as those in post-2003, have faced scrutiny for failing to eliminate underground ; a 2018 peer-reviewed analysis found persistent barriers to exiting, with many participants reporting unmet health and safety promises. Exodus Cry emphasizes survivor testimonies and data over ideological assertions, noting that terms like "sex work" can obscure non-consensual realities, as articulated by survivors who reject voluntary framing. Allegations labeling Exodus Cry as religiously extremist are rebutted by the group itself, which describes its faith-based approach as rooted in compassionate action modeled on ' character rather than dogmatic imposition, focusing on victim rescue and policy reform informed by . Critics' portrayals ignore the organization's collaborations with secular entities and reliance on verifiable , such as undercover investigations and hotline statistics, which underpin campaigns like those exposing non-consensual content on platforms. This evidence-driven methodology has yielded policy shifts, including enhanced age verification laws, demonstrating practical impact beyond religious rhetoric. Systemic biases in media coverage, which often amplify pro-decriminalization voices from advocacy groups while downplaying trafficking , further contextualize such labels as selective rather than substantive.

Recent Developments

Ongoing Litigation and Wins (2023–2025)

In 2023, federal courts dismissed challenges to age verification laws in Utah and Louisiana, preserving requirements for commercial websites distributing material harmful to minors to verify users' ages before granting access. On August 2, 2023, a U.S. District Court in Utah dismissed a lawsuit by the Free Speech Coalition against the state's 2016 law (amended in 2023), ruling the plaintiffs lacked standing due to the law's private right of action structure. Similarly, on October 5, 2023, a U.S. District Court in Louisiana dismissed a Free Speech Coalition challenge to the state's Effective State Age Verification Enforcement Act of 2022, citing insufficient evidence of irreparable harm and procedural deficiencies under the law's bounty provisions. These rulings advanced Exodus Cry's advocacy for such measures under its Protect Children Not Porn campaign, which links unrestricted online pornography access to increased risks of sexual exploitation and trafficking. The most significant development involved Texas's H.B. 1181, enacted in 2023, which mandates age verification for websites where one-third or more of content is deemed obscene to minors. The challenged the law, leading to a Fifth Circuit affirmance of a district court in 2024, prompting a U.S. petition granted on April 16, 2024. Exodus Cry filed a 36-page amicus brief on November 22, 2024, citing of pornography's role in grooming and trafficking victims, including data from survivor testimonies and industry analyses. Oral arguments occurred on January 15, 2025, focusing on First Amendment scrutiny levels for content-based restrictions protecting minors. On June 27, 2025, the affirmed the law in a 6-3 decision authored by Justice , applying and rejecting for regulations burdening adult access to protect minors from obscene material. The majority emphasized the state's compelling interest in shielding children from harm, supported by legislative findings on pornography's psychological effects, while dissenters argued for stricter review due to privacy burdens on adults. Exodus Cry hailed the outcome as a "historic win" bolstering similar statutes in over a dozen states, potentially reducing minors' exposure to content facilitating trafficking demand. As of October 2025, ongoing appeals in states like persist, with Exodus Cry continuing amicus participation to defend verification mandates against industry claims of overbreadth.

New Media Releases and Global Expansion

In July 2025, Exodus Cry released the documentary Buying Her, the first film to examine the psychology and motivations of men who purchase sex, featuring interviews with convicted sex buyers and experts on demand reduction. The release coincided with the launch of the "End Demand" campaign, a global advocacy effort to criminalize sex buying as a felony in multiple jurisdictions, building on empirical evidence linking purchaser demand to trafficking perpetuation. This initiative extends prior U.S.-focused reforms by targeting international policy changes, with petitions and resources disseminated through Exodus Cry's platforms to mobilize supporters worldwide. Complementing this, Exodus Cry announced the January 2025 worldwide premiere of For the One. For the Millions., a highlighting survivor stories and abolitionist strategies, distributed via a newly launched online streaming platform to enhance global accessibility beyond traditional theatrical or broadcast limits. The platform aims to amplify reach to international audiences, supporting outreach in regions including , , , and , where prior interventions have addressed local exploitation hotspots. These releases represent an evolution in Exodus Cry's media strategy, shifting toward digital-first distribution to facilitate cross-border awareness and activism, with viewership metrics from earlier films like Nefarious: Merchant of Souls demonstrating potential for millions of global engagements. Ongoing podcast episodes and articles on the organization's site further this expansion, covering topics such as digital exploitation and policy updates, with content optimized for international relevance to sustain from the #Traffickinghub campaign's influence on global investigations into platforms like . By 2023, these efforts had inspired independent undercover probes abroad, underscoring a broadening impact without reliance on localized infrastructure.

References

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