Kristof is the sort of acute observer who, upon witnessing plantation slavery, decides that farming must be abolished. – Jacob Sullum
Amnesty At Last
The biggest story of the year so far is that Amnesty International has at long last come out in support of absolute decriminalization of sex work, as sex workers ourselves have wanted for decades. Amnesty has a tremendous amount of clout; this will strongly affect small countries, and even in big countries like the US some politicians may now begin to doubt the wisdom of backing laws that allow the cops to persecute adults for consensual sex. It will also undermine the prohibitionists’ arguments; they can no longer pretend that their views are common-sense and mainstream. To me the most important lines in the document are these:
…the need for states to not only review and repeal laws that make sex workers vulnerable to human rights violations, but also refrain from enacting such laws…the harm reduction principle…Recognizing and respecting the agency of sex workers to articulate their own experiences and define the most appropriate solutions to ensure their own welfare and safety…the evidence from Amnesty International’s and external research on the lived experiences of sex workers, and on the human rights impact of various criminal law and regulatory approaches to sex work…
Super-ally Elizabeth N Brown again:
A four-part series from Capital News Service (CNS) looks at human trafficking in Maryland…[and] contends that “Maryland has some of the lightest penalties in the nation for human trafficking of adults”…yet a bill to enhance criminal penalties…recently failed to pass…it was a rare moment of legislative sanity on this issue…advocates for the increased penalties claim that sex trafficking of adults is a mere misdemeanor in Maryland…[but they] aren’t really talking about human trafficking. They’re talking about prostitution. Which they want felony punishments for…”misdemeanor human trafficking” is punishable by up to 10 years in prison and a fine of up to $5,000. And what does this category entail?…driving a sex worker to a job…letting a sex worker work from your…building…taking money from a sex worker for any reason…
A man in Orlando is suing a local dominatrix, accusing her of taking more than $500,000 and his house…Judith Gumbrecht…[offers]…“financial slavery”…[and] former client Alex Abrams…[alleges] Gumbrecht took more than $500,000 after he added her name to his financial accounts, and took ownership of his 1,450-square-foot townhome…the lawsuit accuses Gumbrecht of exploitation of an elderly person, theft, and unjust enrichment…Abrams’ attorney, Brian Mark, claims Abrams suffers from clinical depression, dementia and Alzheimer’s disease, and said this affected his decision when adding Gumbrecht to his bank accounts and signing a deed…to transfer his home to her. Abrams met Gumbrecht after he divorced his wife of 32 years about four years ago…“She went with him to the doctor when he was diagnosed. She was fully aware,” [said] Mark…”When you’re in that professional relationship with them, you cannot exploit them”…
If Gumbrecht really did know that Abrams was demented, it was both unethical and unwise for her to take this kind of advantage. However, I must point out that A) if she had married him this deal would be a great deal harder to break; and B) it’s amazing how often a submissive’s supposed mental incapacity is used as the excuse for a legal attack on a dominant. Also, was Abrams suddenly & miraculously cured of his Alzheimer’s, so that his actions now are assumed to be lucid, while his previous actions are not?
Real Men Support Sex Worker Rights (#4)
I really, really love it when Jacob Sullum tears into Nick Kristof:
…Kristof says some…teenagers are exploited by pimps who take out…ads…on Backpage.com…He mentions two examples…[but] wisely does not include the source who claimed to have been advertised on Backpage before it existed…Kristof…is condemning Backpage because some of its customers are criminals. Would he apply similar logic to the carmakers that produce getaway vehicles, the sporting goods stores that sell baseball bats occasionally used in vicious beatings, and the cellphone companies that help terrorists communicate with each other? Probably not…it’s clear (as usual) that Kristof’s concern is not underage prostitution or coerced prostitution but prostitution in general…by [his] reasoning, alcohol should be prohibited because of the parallel underground market serving minors, all sexually explicit material should be banned because some of it involves children, and housework for pay should be forbidden because rich Saudis have been known to beat domestic workers and hold them against their will…
An 87-year-old man is fighting allegations he was soliciting a prostitute when he approached an undercover officer during a police sting [in Grand Rapids Michigan]…police and prosecutors say this is likely the oldest person ever charged with this crime. Howard Arthur Klein…claimed he thought the woman he spoke to was someone he knew from church. Nevertheless, Klein faces a maximum of 93 days in…jail if convicted…[though he] has no previous criminal record…he has pleaded not guilty…
Lone man on a crusade manages to censor adult content on the internet by circumventing a court order. Sound familiar?
…[An] Indian lawyer’s formal request for a nationwide ban on access to 857 specific pornographic websites was rejected by the country’s Supreme Court but appears to have been enacted by the administration of Prime Minister Narendra Modi…Kamlesh Vaswani, a lawyer who failed to persuade the Supreme Court to block online pornography, gave thanks…to [the] Prime Minister…for [ignoring]…the Supreme Court…Vaswani [said]…“pornography…is worse than Hitler, worse than AIDS, cancer or any other epidemic…It is more catastrophic than nuclear holocaust, and it must be stopped”…
…Researchers agree that labor trafficking is the leading form of human trafficking, but sex trafficking is the focus of more federal prosecutions…In 2012, the Department of Justice successfully prosecuted 138 traffickers, with 76 percent of the cases predominantly sex trafficking and 24 percent predominantly labor trafficking…
Now useful idiots don’t even need to dial a phone to snitch!
Anyone with a smartphone can do their part in the fight against human trafficking thanks to…The GPS-based app…called Redlight Traffic. It’s a free download designed to help police [persecute sex workers]…Greater Seattle is [pretended] to be one of the worst areas in America when it comes to human trafficking. Police [fantasize] hundreds of children are worked every day in King County…Amin and Jessica Haq…say…their app…has helped rescue 25 children from sex traffickers…
Proof of that last statement? Oh wait, there is none, because you’re lying.
Ah, so “flat rate” isn’t actually flat rate; no wonder the girls like it!
In [Germany]…”flat-rate”…brothels…are a familiar sight, there are at least six in Berlin alone…On an average day, six or seven girls will be working, with the numbers rising to nine or ten at weekends. Some of them may have sex up to 20 times per shift…The women are able to refuse a customer if he is particularly unpleasant or aggressive but it’s rare. Once in the bedroom, “extras” are negotiated by the women, who keep 100% of any further money that changes hands. Not much is off limits, with the exception of unprotected sex…the flat-rate model works from a financial perspective because men over-estimate how many times they can have sex…From the women’s perspective, he says the guaranteed daily pay is the main lure. Of the entrance fee, 49 euros goes to the club and 50 euros to the women…
Imagine the NOW going to bat for sex workers like this:
The National Network of Sex Workers (NNSW) and women’s rights organisations in India have expressed outrage over…Swati Maliwal calling sex work…akin to “rape” and calling for its “eradication”. “We call on her to immediately withdraw her statement and tender an unconditional apology to the all women in sex work,”…[said] Meena Saraswathi Seshu…At a national consultation on Human Trafficking…Maliwal equated prostitution with rape and said, “It is a ‘blot’ on society which needs to be eradicated with [more violence from] the state”…
Charnesia Corley was…detained by [Houston] police for allegedly running a stop sign…the deputy…asked her to step out of the vehicle after “smelling what he believed to be marijuana.” However, during a search of Corley’s vehicle, without her consent, no illegal plants were found…a…female deputy…then stripped [Corley] down in public and forcefully penetrated [her]…“I bend over and she proceeds to try to force her hand inside of me. I tell her, ‘Ma’am, No. You cannot do this’,” Corley explained. Corley maintains that at no time did she ever consent to be raped by deputies…
“Politicians lie” = “the sky is blue”.
Warner ten Kate, the public prosecutor [for] human trafficking in Holland…claimed there was…research that showed that 70% of the prostitutes were forced in Holland…during [a radio] interview…Kate was specifically asked about the 70% and…claimed [it came] from…research done by…Erasmus University…[but the] University never did any such research…the Sneep case [cited by Kate] also doesn’t say 70% is forced, but claims it’s 50 to 85%…Warner [says he wants]…to “stop talking about numbers”…[but] this whole debate started because he…and the police keep mentioning numbers which are pure bullshit…
A group of 20 academics in the fields of law, medicine, anthropology, sociology and other fields, some of whose names have appeared on this blog before, wrote a letter to Amnesty International in support of decriminalization:
AI’s general policy is to be wary of criminal law regulating gender and sexuality…We focus on two specific issues: 1) why existing credible research supports the rejection of the so-called Nordic model…and 2) why rigorous studies on the relationship between human trafficking and the sex sector supports total decriminalization. In particular we note empirically and analytically sound research that debunks the Nordic model and refutes claims that legalization or decriminalization of sex work will “increase” the risk of trafficking into the sex sector…
And in The Nation, Melissa Gira Grants writes:
Using the criminal law to control sex work means police are pitted against sex workers, and sex workers can pay the price with their lives…as has also been documented by Amnesty—and others, like Human Rights Watch, UNAIDS, and the World Health Organization, all of whom support the decriminalization of sex work, a stance also backed by recent research in the medical journal The Lancet. Sex workers’ own rights groups, such as the 237 organizations in 71 countries under the Global Network of Sex Work Projects, report the same from their own experience: Criminal laws only add to the challenges…that many sex workers already face…Amnesty’s sex work proposal has drawn the ire of campaigners who support the [Swedish model]…precisely because it illustrates how these laws, marketed as compassionate towards sex workers, have exposed them to danger. They argue for more criminalization at a time when on most other issues, the public is turning away from using the police and prisons as a solution…
I think it’s very interesting how the letter to Amnesty International from CATW, the anti-trafficking organization, signed on to by Meryl Streep, Lena Dunham, et al, protesting its proposed policy to call for full decriminalization appears to have been a catalyst for a widespread call in support of AI’s position. I follow the issue closely and I comment on stories where I can and try to utilize my photo essay on sex workers in the Dominican Republic as a tool to break down stereotypes about sex workers. I posted comments and links to the numerous articles that cropped up, both anti-AI and then increasingly pro-AI articles. It was quite a heartening backlash to the letter.
I then posted my photo essay on Medium.com, framing it in a more personal story, as Medium stories tend to be, while calling attention to the upcoming Amnesty International vote. It got picked up by BoingBoing and went viral (or at least ran a midgrade fever).
https://medium.com/vantage/diary-of-a-sex-tourist-2d73817d23df
A wider audience became engaged with the issue because of that letter. I think we should thank Meryl, Lena, et al for their help.
I agree; I think it backfired on them big time.
Indeed. They look pretty stupid and clueless now.
Nice article. Thanks for sharing.
Amnesty at Last:
As long as there’s payoff money to be made, I suspect sex trafficking in the US will never be made legal. Same with drugs. To much illicit money changing hands for the police to ignore certain things, and hammer away at the drugs/sex workers at the street level. No, I don’t have any evidence…just a feeling.
trafficking should not and will not be legalized. It is recognized as a crime. Decriminalization should only be applied to consensual adult sex work. You are making the mistake the prohibitionist want everybody to make by conflating trafficking with sex work
Numbers Puzzle:
This reminds me of a documentary on the History Channel I saw that focused on Hawaii during WW2. The sailors would line up around the block to get 3 minutes with a woman in a brothel. 3 minutes with a sailor, 1 minutes to wipe herself and change rooms, 3 minutes with the next sailor, etc. 3 minutes doesn’t sound like much time to me, but then I’ve never been to sea for months at a time crowed in to the berthing spaces of a naval ship. Believe me, during that era there was no such thing as alone time at sea to, uh, relieve one’s self.
Many of the woman got rich and the madams made a fortune. One of them became a huge real estate owner after the war.
Re Gumbrecht & Adams: Financial domination is one of those fetishes I’ve never really understood. Yes, it is great from the point of view of the Domme but for the sub it’s a bloody awful deal. Be quicker to put your cash in a pile and set light to it all, frankly.
Re Redlight Traffic: Oh, I don’t know, I think it has possibilities for some malicious fun… Plenty of enjoyment is possible even if you just confine yourself to police and politicians. 🙂
Re findom: I don’t exactly get it either, but it’s one of those fetishes where no one’s getting hurt and it’s generally not exciting enough for prohibitionists to pay attention to, because they can’t even try to wail that the dommes are being exploited or pressured into sex, because one of the particulars about it seems to be (as you noted) that the subs don’t get anything except maybe stories about what the money’s spent on. The subs seem to enjoy it, though, so there’s that.
Checklist: What cracks me up every time is how truly stupid these liars are. The number 25 is a dead giveaway, as it is something that has pretty small probability of coming up, but at the same time is a number that is pretty “regular”, as a quarter of 100. If the claim were 17 or 29 or something, it would at least not be that obvious.
Amnesty At Last:
The thing that sticks out is that AI has actually talked to those affected and made a serious effort to understand what is actually going on. As a result, they have come up with a rational and ethical stance on the issue. There is a lot of egg on the face of the prohibitionists now.
I already donated to them to show support.
Yup. I feel like this is a pretty big moment in the decriminalization movement. A major organization that actually took a serious, neutral look at what was going on, not just reacting to politics.
I’ve been a dues-paying member of Amnesty International for some years now, and I couldn’t be more proud to be a member than right now.
Re: Gumbrecht & Adams – I suspect that if the claims of dementia hold up in court (which it may well do, if only because I have a hard time imagining a lawyer being daft enough to make a claim like that if it didn’t have legs – but then I didn’t think anyone would be daft enough to pull off what Prenda did, so what do I know, exactly?) then it’s going to come out that Adams isn’t pressing the suit himself, it’s someone who holds his legal guardianship who’s doing it. My bet would be on his kids, if he has any, or anyone else who’d assume that money and house would’ve been coming to them when Daddy Dearest passed, and got a rude surprise when they found out about his findom arrangement.