Real Men Don't Buy Girls' Campaign Ashton Kutcher and Demi Moore Launch

Advertisements

Real Men Don't Buy Girls' Campaign Ashton Kutcher and Demi Moore Launch. The Demi and Ashton Foundation (DNA), founded by Demi Moore and Ashton Kutcher, launches its "Real Men Don't Buy Girls" interactive video campaign this week, aiming to educate the public about child sex slavery in the United States.

Kutcher became interested in the issue after stumbling across a "Dateline" feature on sex trafficking in Cambodia. He was astounded by what he saw.

"I was watching six and seven-year-old girls being raped for profit," Kutcher says. "I said to myself: I don't want to live in a world where these things are happening and I'm not doing anything about them."

Moore and Kutcher began researching the issue further, and discovered that, in the United States alone, between 100,000 and 300,000 girls are enslaved and sold for sex, while upwards of a million girls are prostituted worldwide. The entire industry generates $39 billion annually.

"The average age of a girl involved in the sex trade is 13," Kutcher says. "And the average man who buys a girl is 30-years-old, has no prior criminal record, and has a well-paying job."

Kutcher explains that the "Real Men Don't Buy Girls Campaign" contains a message he hopes people are willing to pass around; one that specifically addresses the male psyche, while also being entertaining and informative.

"Once someone goes on record saying they are or aren't going to do something, they tend to be a bit more accountable," says Kutcher. "We wanted to make something akin to a pledge: 'real men don't buy girls, and I am a real man.'"