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Trump Just Signed Legislation That Could Be Deadly For Sex Workers Like Me

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Offline Lois

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I have friends that are sex workers by choice.  None of them were "sex-slaves" or sex-trafficked in any way.  Trump's actions will force these women to ply their trade on the streets where they will not be safe.  The following article is one woman's story.

For the record, I believe that prostitution should be legal and subject to regulations to ensure no exploitation is involved.  No pimps should be involved and 100% of a sex-workers earnings, after taxes, should belong to the sex worker.

Think about it.  Legal prostitution will cut into the profits of sex-traffickers, and make it less likely that girls will be forced into the industry.

Trump Just Signed Legislation That Could Be Deadly For Sex Workers Like Me
by Laura LeMoon

I am a homeless sex trafficking survivor and a sex worker. I’m a throwaway. Many people wonder how I could be both a survivor of sex trafficking and also presently a sex worker, but it’s easy. I’m not a victim, I’m a survivor.

Trump recently signed FOSTA/SESTA into law ― legislation aimed at preventing sex trafficking by holding websites accountable for third-party content. But this also makes it almost impossible for independent sex workers to continue working.

The panic surrounding FOSTA/SESTA has resulted in the complete seizure of Backpage, an online forum much like Craigslist, as well as the shutdown of The Erotic Review in the United States and the closing of the Craigslist casual encounters classifieds board, where many sex workers found clients. I and all my fellow survivor friends were already homeless or barely surviving before the passage of FOSTA/SESTA. Now, this legislation further limits our options for income and puts us on the fast track to even harsher marginalization.

If you want to help me as a trafficking survivor, then government-backed paternalism is not the way to go about it. The ramifications of these policies are quite serious. I’m already seeing an increase in street-based sex work because people have nowhere to go but to the streets to find clients.

I started in the sex industry by force, working for a boyfriend-turned pimp in upper Manhattan and the Bronx. I was locked in rooms and left to be gang raped on a regular basis. Street-based sex work is no joke. It can be extremely dangerous but also extremely necessary for many people’s survival.

I went on from forced prostitution to choosing to do sex work. That’s what people don’t understand: Choice is a trajectory. Choice is always constrained; it’s just a matter of how constrained. Doing sex work by ― and for myself ― was a righteous and liberating experience.

I advertised on Backpage, where I could screen clients over the phone or via email without ever having to be around them. I didn’t have to worry about getting beat up for turning down a date. Instead, I could say “NO” with confidence that I would not be hurt. You can’t tell me that isn’t empowerment. I got to do sex work on my own terms. I got to rewrite a very traumatic experience and turn it into a story where I am a strong, empowered person with full agency over my body.

I’ve heard one sex worker say that just in the short time Backpage has been closed, she got contacted by three of her former pimps with promises of lots of clients. Making people desperate facilitates trafficking. When you are desperate, you don’t have the luxury of screening a client. You need to take whatever comes your way. When you are desperate, you might not want to refuse if a client is willing to pay more for sex without a condom. Desperation equals a lack of choice and agency.

If trafficking itself is rooted in systemic oppression such as poverty, racial inequity and rape culture, then it is no wonder that the more the government limits our options, the more likely we are to be subject to individual instances of oppression, such as forced prostitution or forced labor. The more you expand options for people coming from a life of poverty and oppression, the less likely they are to continue to face micro and macro oppressions.

I am currently homeless, and I have been homeless several times before now. This legislation makes homeless sex workers more desperate and less able to protect themselves. It makes sex workers who have homes more likely to lose those homes due to a devastating loss of income.

Many people ask me what the answer to trafficking is if FOSTA/SESTA isn’t. The first thing members of the public need to do is stop thinking they know everything about trafficking just because they saw “Sex Slaves” on MSNBC or because they wrote a paper about it in college. You don’t know unless you’ve been there personally.

People who aren’t survivors and who may not know a survivor in their personal life are deciding what is best for us ― without us. But we are human beings. Deciding things for us and then deciding when you will and won’t share the mic with us is diminishing. Please be willing to listen and to have your preconceived notions about what it means to be a survivor challenged.

We are neither sad nor pathetic nor in desperate need of rescue. Actually, we are probably more adept at surviving than you are.

Moving toward decriminalization, which is the removal of penalties for prostitution, is another means by which trafficking could be effectively fought. This is because increasing the scope of legal sex work eliminates the need for pimps or other intermediaries by upping the choices folks have. One of the most harmful conceptions is that sex work and sex trafficking are the same thing, or that the sex industry is inherently violent and exploitative.

This contributes to lawmakers’ rapid expansion of the definition of trafficking to even include receiving money from a sex worker or living with a sex worker to be trafficking. This not only marginalizes us but also marginalizes the people who love us. Sex work comes from a place of empowered choice and is of the belief that work as an erotic service provider can, in fact, be empowering. Sex work is more than a phrase; it is a whole ideology and philosophy. This is obviously very different from trafficking.

Now, I guess if you believe that all sex industry work is inherently exploitative, then you would believe that it’s all trafficking. However, is that really your call to make about how someone else defines choice for themselves? I don’t think it is.

The closing of Backpage and other sites like it means death for sex workers and trafficking survivors. Like me, many people start out as trafficking survivors only to go on to autonomous sex work later in life. When you punish consensual adult sex work, you punish trafficking survivors. Make no mistake, Backpage has only been closed a short amount of time, but people are terrified and desperate and have no choice but to hit the streets.

If you care about trafficking survivors, you have to care about sex workers. I am both. And sex work has saved my life more than once. Please just give us a chance to survive. We’ll take care of the rest. 




Offline Lois

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Good article and worth the read IMO.

Jack Johnson Was Pardoned, But Taboo Sex Is Still Being Criminalized
A new law to fight sex trafficking targets some of the people it ostensibly aims to protect.
By Jenavieve Hatch

President Donald Trump posthumously pardoned Jack Johnson on Thursday, erasing the black boxer’s century-old conviction for violating the Mann Act — a 1910 law that prohibited transporting “any woman or girl” across state lines “for the purpose of prostitution or debauchery, or for any other immoral purpose” — by driving his white girlfriend from Pittsburgh to Chicago.

The timing of Trump’s decision was remarkable. Two months ago, Trump signed into law the bipartisan Allow States and Victims to Fight Online Sex Trafficking Act (FOSTA), which holds websites accountable for any sex-trafficking-related content posted by users. Its backers pitched it as a way to combat human trafficking. But like the Mann Act, FOSTA targets some of the people it ostensibly aims to protect: It has already shuttered many of the websites that voluntary sex workers — those who are not trafficked — used to screen clients and keep themselves safe.

Although drafted and signed more than a century apart, both laws are part of the United States’ long history of citing human trafficking as a pretext to crack down on consensual but taboo sex.

All this has happened before
The Mann Act, also known as the White-Slave Traffic Act, was enacted in response to public hysteria about sensational yet unconfirmed reports of white women being kidnapped and trafficked by foreign men.

“There’s a huge range of things that [the act] allowed the government to punish and control,” Alexandra Levy, a law professor at the University of Notre Dame, told HuffPost. “It gave tremendous leverage to punish interracial marriage, polygamy and promiscuity.”

Throughout the first half of the 20th century, thousands of people were prosecuted under the act. Johnson’s conviction in 1912 was a prime example of the broad power of a law pitched as a way to stop what was at the time called white slavery. His crime was, essentially, being black and driving across state lines with a white woman, even though she went voluntarily and was his girlfriend.

Seven years after the Mann Act passed, federal officials instituted the American Plan to protect U.S. servicemen from acquiring sexually transmitted diseases before they took off to fight in World War I. The initiative allowed for the detention of women suspected of having a venereal disease. It was celebrated across the political spectrum for keeping American troops safe and for “curing” thousands of women of sexually transmitted infections ― though those “cures” often meant arsenic- and mercury-based medicines and involuntary sterilization.

Just like the Mann Act, the plan took aim at some of the most vulnerable, like Nina McCall, a young poor white woman from Michigan who was arrested in 1918 under suspicion of being a prostitute. After her arrest, she was forcefully examined and medicated, then detained in a federal medical institution for three months. In Michigan alone, more than a thousand women were detained under the plan by 1918.

The Mann Act and the American Plan were swift responses to changes in American culture and the seemingly sudden rights and privileges granted women, said Scott W. Stern, who recently published a book about the McCall case.

“In the early and late 1910s, women were getting the vote in various states, women were beginning to get formally educated, women were joining political parties, and premarital sex was skyrocketing, as was divorce,” he said. “Both the Mann Act and the American Plan were really about controlling women, and especially working-class and nonwhite women at a time when women were becoming ‘uncontrollable.’”

“The Mann Act today is most famous because of the prosecutions of certain very prominent men, like Charlie Chaplin, Chuck Berry and Jack Johnson,” Stern continued. “Certainly those are notable cases, but what I think far too few people know is that the Mann Act was used to lock up huge amounts of women and police their lives.”

The first people arrested by officers of the Investigation Bureau — the Justice Department agency that would later become the FBI — for violating the Mann Act were a madam and five sex workers traveling together from Michigan to Chicago, Stern noted.

So while the Mann Act and the American Plan were ostensibly aimed at saving vulnerable women, in practice the initiatives allowed the Justice Department to control them, their sexuality, and the men they associated with ― many of whom were black or Chinese.

A Pattern Repeated, Again and Again
Measures like the Mann Act and the American Plan set the stage for legislation like FOSTA.

The law aimed to curb human trafficking by holding websites and social platforms accountable for hosting content related to the sex trade. But much like the Mann Act and the American Plan, it polices members of already marginalized communities.

The new regulations pushed sites like Craigslist and Backpage to scrub their platforms of not only sex-trafficking-related content but sex-related content in general. That meant that not just sex traffickers but also voluntary sex workers and people who engage in online sexual activities were forced further underground.

Melissa, a Phoenix-based escort, told HuffPost that FOSTA forced her back onto the streets. Lexi, a Florida-based escort, said she couldn’t screen her clients anymore without access to the sites.

Sex workers are often already members of marginalized communities, lacking easy access to banking and health care and safety from sexual or physical violence.

“It’s an important parallel,” Levy said.

The Mann Act and FOSTA used similar tactics to pass with overwhelming majorities. The Mann Act was passed unanimously, Stern said. The House and Senate versions of FOSTA passed almost unanimously.

The Mann Act was written in response to accounts of enslavement of white women. Similarly, FOSTA used hysterical anti-trafficking rhetoric — often provided by evangelical Christian organizations that oppose all sex work — to garner support from the public.

“The public is so easily manipulated when you say ‘trafficking,’” Levy said. “It’s a very emotionally provocative issue. You can sort of leverage that term.” In both cases, the public was galvanized by terrifying (and misleading) anecdotes of sex-trafficked children or white women, only for the legislation to be used against marginalized people after it was signed into law.

Trump’s decision to pardon Johnson shows progress. But Johnson’s story also offers an important lesson, Levy argued.

“It should call our attention to the fact that laws that purport to be anti-trafficking can mask very serious social agendas,” she said. “Hopefully we can learn from this.”

https://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/jack-johnson-taboo-sex-criminalized_us_5b08718be4b0802d69cb376a



psiberzerker

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The irony here is it's all misdirection.  You know of all people, Donald "What piss tape?" Trump has no problem, whatsoever with sex tourism.  He's a customer.  And he's always right.

This is another indirect retribution against Immigration.  They're using sex slaves as an emotional pleas to get support, but of course it's not about that.  He wouldn't have signed it, if he actually believed that it would have any impact at all on having whatever kinds of sex he wants, whenever he wants. 



Offline Lois

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I agree in part, but it also pandering to his evangelical and racist base, while the pardon was to prove he's not racist.

Meanwhile two of my sex-worker friends are totally freaked out now that they can't use Backpage anymore.  It is making it hard to pay the rent.

Another will be ok because she has always been good with cultivating "regulars".  She has not had to advertise for years.



psiberzerker

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Meanwhile two of my sex-worker friends are totally freaked out now that they can't use Backpage anymore.  It is making it hard to pay the rent.

Well, tell them for me that Backpage isn't safe.  I'm a niche prostitute, "Shemales," so I didn't have a choice.  I had to narrow my clientell to people I can trust, because I'm a target of hate crimes just for being transgender.

So are prostitutes, just for being "Whores."  I have no idea what causes the correlation between us and Nurses for sexually motivated murder, but it's there.  The more anonymous the meeting with johns, the easier it is to dial-a-hooker, rape, and kill us.  

Which isn't to say Trump is Right.  Just that it wasn't very safe to begin with.  A colleage of mine used to Craigslist before that was shut down, and she got knocked out with a tire-iron.  She was a marine, but if I hadn't been watching her back, he would have gotten her in the trunk before I stopped him.

The only way to protect us is to make it legal.  Donald "Job Creator" Trump could even get behind that, if he had any sympathy for his high class call-girls, but he's too mysogynistic, and racist for that.  This is a thinly veiled attack on women, and immigrants.

It enables the men who kill hookers because they can.
« Last Edit: May 26, 2018, 08:08:50 PM by psiberzerker »



psiberzerker

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I for one am glad that there's guys like Jed out there that see sex workers (In his case Strippers) as people, friends, and looks out for them.  Wish there were more guys out there like him.  Just reading his naming thread, i'm getting a little crush on him.



Offline Lois

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Yes Jed is cool, because he just sees people and not the other labels.



psiberzerker

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Yes Jed is cool, because he just sees people and not the other labels.

<3



Offline Jed_

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I for one am glad that there's guys like Jed out there that see sex workers (In his case Strippers) as people, friends, and looks out for them.  Wish there were more guys out there like him.  Just reading his naming thread, i'm getting a little crush on him.


LOL.  I have been told by friends I go after the girls that aren’t as it’s said ‘wrapped too tight.’  If it weren’t for that pesky Y chromosome, you might have a shot.

I’m currently you know where with my arm around a 19 year old blond girl.

Thanks for the kind words both of you.



psiberzerker

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If it weren’t for that pesky Y chromosome, you might have a shot.

It's purely a professional, fraternal, and platoinc love.  I can't offer you so much as a handjob in return, but if you want, I can show you my tits.

I'm not going to shave them though.  Not even for you.



Offline Lois

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That's good.  Shaving your titties off would hurt and would not be aesthetically pleasing.  ;D



psiberzerker

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That's good.  Shaving your titties off would hurt and would not be aesthetically pleasing.  ;D

It takes forever, too.



Offline Lois

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Hairy titties anyone?



Offline Jed_

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That's good.  Shaving your titties off would hurt and would not be aesthetically pleasing.  ;D

It takes forever, too.

Try a belt sander, that should be quick.



psiberzerker

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Try a belt sander, that should be quick.

I have sensitive nipples.



Offline Katiebee

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