today, 56 year old rob peter swales pleaded guilty to conspiring to facilitate travel of another with a view to exploitation. he is due to be jailed later this month. as for the victim who was forced to live like this, he is in supported accommodation outside cumbria, no longer a victim, but still recovering after being treated so cruelly for four decades. he will need care for the rest of his life. i m back at the top of the hour, but now on bbc news: the travel show. this week on the show: how to survive one of the planet s longest lockdowns. we decided to start looking at how we re going to survive, how we re going to keep our staff engaged, how we re going to create revenue. the island with pride of place in lgbt history. it was pretty young the first time i visited the sunken forest and i think pulling in on that ferry, and next to the american flag, was this big beautiful rainbow flag. and just what is it that makes paris feel so parisian?
as a queer person later in life towards the end of college. i sort of had to admit to myself that i was trans in some way. i identify now as trans feminine and non binary. my pronouns are they/them. so at kind of a young age, i found myself inspired just walking through this community. i did not really know why i was so jazzed up. i knew about the lgbt history. before homosexuality was decriminalised, living an openly gay life was difficult in some states. isolated towns like cherry grove became safe havens for america s marginalised lgbt communities. i was pretty young the first time i visited the sunken forest. i was a volunteer, i was maybe 13, 1a at the time. and i think pulling in on that ferry, i saw these two flags, one was an american and next to the american flag was this big, beautiful rainbow flag, and i think it was the first
i grew up in mastic beach, which is sort of a lower income community on the south shore of long island. fortunately, mastic beach also happens to be one of the only places that you can walk onto fire island. it was a space i returned to every single summer. it s shifting landscape as a barrier island. every single day i come out here, it s a little bit different and i think that s all really inspiring because sometimes, we think of nature as this immutable, sort of unchangeable thing, but nature is really dynamic. i sort of came to my identity as a queer person later in life towards the end of college. i sort of had to admit to myself that i was trans in some way. i identify now as trans feminine and non binary. my pronouns are they/them. so at kind of a young age, ifound myself inspired just walking through this community. i did not really know why i was so jazzed up. i knew about the lgbt history.
the end of college. i had to admit to myself that i was transit in some way, i as transcendent and non primary and my pronouns are they/them. a kind of a young age i found myself inspired walking through this community. i did not know why i was jazzed up, i knew about the lgbt history. up, i knew about the lgbt histo . ., up, i knew about the lgbt histo ., ., . , history. before homosexuality was decriminalised, history. before homosexuality was decriminalised, living i history. before homosexuality was decriminalised, living in l was decriminalised, living in openly gay life was difficult in some states. isolated towns like cherry grove became safe havens for america s marginalised lgbt immunities. t marginalised lgbt immunities. i was pretty young the first time i visited the sunken forest, i was a volunteer of 13 or 14 at the time and i think pulling in on the ferry, saw these two flags, one was the american and next to it was this big beautiful rainbow flag. and i think i
every single day i come out here, it s a little bit different and i think that s all really inspiring because sometimes, we think of nature as this immutable, sort of unchangeable thing, but nature is really dynamic. i sort of came to my identity as a queer person later in life towards the end of college. i sort of had to admit to myself that i was trans in some way. i identify now as trans feminine and non binary. my pronouns are they/them. so at kind of a young age, i found myself inspired just walking through this community. i did not really know why i was so jazzed up. i knew about the lgbt history. before homosexuality was decriminalised, living an openly gay life was difficult in some states. isolated towns like cherry grove became safe havens for america s marginalised lgbt communities. i was pretty young the first time i visited the sunken forest. i was a volunteer. i was maybe 13, 11; at the time. and i think pulling in on that ferry, i saw these two flags. one was an americ