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Prop K Helps Unite Prostitutes with other Wage Slaves

by Jonathan Shockley
By decriminalizing prostitution, we allow prostitutes to approach the same rights as other wage slaves--including the right to unionize and struggle toward a more decent future.
I am in favor of proposition K. At the same time I oppose prostitution. How can that be? Personally, I think sex and love, just like society, the workplace etc. should be free i.e. I prefer a society where people don't live under authoritarian rule or where their choices are limited to the ones pushed by people with power and privilege. In that sense, my argument goes beyond the arguments about the improvements seen in New Zealand or Amsterdam with the de-criminalization of prostitution, or the arguments of K-proponents about San Francisco's money savings and the the increased safety for sex workers, or the arguments about the reduction of sexually transmitted disease and coerced police sex with prostitutes, or the argument about how prop. K will result in more pimp, rather than prostitute arrests.

There are many studies showing how our perceptions of prostitution in the US are way off. For example, we never see them as women with a family to feed, and we incorrectly believe that a majority of them have pimps, are drug addicts, minors etc. I think these misperceptions are not an accident. Our competitive, hierarchical order erodes solidarity and we want to look down on prostitutes because of what prostitution reveals about ourselves. We don't want to admit how much we have in common with them, so we exaggerate the differences.

It's true that for the money, prostitutes rent their bodies and take this to an extreme by selling one of our most intimate acts. Nevertheless, wikipedia describes wage slavery as "a coerced set of choices...a condition under which a person must sell his or her labor power, submitting to the authority of an employer in order to prosper or merely to subsist." This, the article continues, implies among other things "the absence of unconditional access to non-exploitative property and a fair share of the basic necessities of life" and the absence of "non-hierarchical workers' control of the workplace and the economy as a whole."

In other words, in the absence of such conditions, many people will become "wage slaves" who have to rent themselves-- selling their smiles, time, bodies etc not only as blue collar workers, but also as

"professionals [who] are trusted to run organisations in the interests of their employers. The key word is ’trust’. Because employers cannot be on hand to manage every decision, professionals are trained to 'ensure that each and every detail of their work favours the right interests – or skewers the disfavoured ones' in the absence of overt control. [Thus] "[t]he resulting professional is an obedient thinker, an intellectual property whom employers can trust to experiment, theorize, innovate and create safely within the confines of an assigned ideology."

In fact, in some ways prostitutes degrade themselves less that other wage slaves who get married for money or reshape their whole personality, intellect or behavior as an act of subordination to external power. And in sharp contrast with the alarmist attention to the problems of prostitution, pimps and measure K, there is very little attention paid to the consequences of such (legally protected) hierarchy of wage slavery and boss-rule, which results in unspeakable destruction and suffering (in fact, most of the evil in the world). Given that this destruction and suffering, and the underlying causes of prostitution are so closely related, perhaps there are ways to strive toward a solution with an approach that unites all of us wage slaves.

By decriminalizing prostitution, we allow prostitutes to approach the same rights as other wage slaves--including the right to unionize and struggle toward a more decent future. In that more decent future, if it ever comes, I would love to write, as George Orwell did describing the anarchist-dominated streets of Barcelona, of how "in the streets were colored posters, appealing to prostitutes to stop being prostitutes."

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by Lauren
it is amazing how this topic brings out the breadth of our lack of education...sad, really. pimps should be in jail, men buying sex should pay a steep fine and attend meetings (hey we do it for running a stop sign here!) because not only does poverty control this business but the demand is what is equally uncontrollable...this sounds extreme to some but... this would greatly reduce human trafficking and S.F would not have a bunch of innocent women in dire situations they cannot get out of, which eradicates the idea of consensual sex in the first place...Sweden did this exact thing in 2000 and in the first year of these laws trafficking reduced by 55%...it is an unfriendly environment for a pimp. period. they leave and find a profitable place... decriminalizing would THEN work...putting prostitutes in jail is useless, meaningless, and a waste of money...DECRIMINALIZATION works but not without the other laws accompanying it...
by Karly (feminist.escort [at] gmail.com)
Thanks for commenting about this Jonathan. I think it's an important conversation to have in the context of labor. While I do think that Prop K will eliminate the many barriers that prevent sex workers (not just prostitutes, but also dancers and porn performers who often face similar discrimination) from organizing for better occupational health and safety conditions, I can say from experience that the actual work of doing sex for money, whether as a prostitute or as a performer, is not inherently damaging and degrading.
Sex is honest work that not all individuals are well-suited for. Bringing it out of the shadows and into a space where workers' voices are visible and employers are being held accountable for their businesses is the only way to improve the lives of all sex workers. The current system demonizes the patrons and the management and then punishes the "victim" by forcing her into shame-based programs that she has to pay the District Atty and the SFPD for the privilege of being forced into. Supporting Prop K does not mean that you support or encourage prostitution. Say "Yes" to Prop K because it's not fair to discriminate against and shame some workers because of their actual or perceived sexual behavior. Say "Yes" to Prop K because you want to see these resources used to identify and support any actual trafficked victims who are in need of help. And when we win, please support sex workers in labor organizing and recognize us as workers.
Thank you!
by Karly (feminist.escort [at] gmail.com)
"it is amazing how this topic brings out the breadth of our lack of education...sad, really. pimps should be in jail, men buying sex should pay a steep fine and attend meetings"

It's amazing- I couldn't agree with you more. People really should look a bit further into these issues before buying into the Swedish model. Especially if they intend to criticize others for being less informed. One good way to understand the Swedish model is to listen to the voices of the women who are actually working in the sex industry in Sweden. Here's a good place to start: http://www.sans.nu/sans_eng.htm

Violence against the poorest sex workers and most marginalized workers has increased in Sweden. Because legitimate clients fear arrest, they're less willing to provide information about themselves. Because workers need the money, they're forced to take the risk of seeing clients without screening, or limiting the amount of time that they spend chatting with someone in a public space before going into a private place with them. Workers' ability to be selective about their work has forced rates to go down and violence has gone up.

It's a nice fantasy that some feminists have- let's punish the men for being sexual! No women have sex for money by choice!- really, this is an uninformed position. This exchange is actually perfectly natural and the violence and drugs that are sometimes associated with sex work are more often because of the prohibition than because of the sex itself.

Thanks,
Karly
by Mariko Passion
This post touches on the principal that work in this world is usually not a choice. Everyone needs to bring in income is some way to survive. Sex workers though are not all wage earners, many of us are sole proprietors and independent contractors. In fact, even if sex workers ARE bonafide employees, they are falsely classified as independent contractors and NOT paid a minimum wage. Labor protections are an amazing thing that I wish more legal sex workers (brothel workers in Nevada, strippers, phone sex operators) who do have exploitive bosses would use.

I stripped in San Francisco for 3 years and used the Labor Commission to win back all of the stage fees that I was illegally charged and the minimum wage that I was not paid. Even though gross labor violations continue to exist in the stripclubs in the U.S and in SF there are precedents that have been set by the founding members of the Exotic Dancers Alliance and the Labor Commission is very familiar with siding these cases in the dancer/employee's favor. If PROP K passes, the same resource of labor protection would be in place. If relationship abuse (say from an abusive pimp that a worker lives with), extortion, child abuse, trafficking, sexual assault, battery would occur, those crimes would be charged and prosecuted like they are supposed to be for all citizens. If a massage parlor owner doesn't pay workers minimum wage and charges them a fee to work like the stripclubs do, then that worker is also now able to use the power of the Labor commission because now they are seen as employees not CRIMINALS.

I believe that if PROP K passes it will be better for strippers too because then we can start to actually separate venues for sex work based on giving workers the CHOICES that they have been NEEDING and WANTING forever. There would be places for workers who wanted to have sex and places for workers who only wanted to strip which is something that this industry really needs, instead of pretend that it doesn't sex doesn't go on in stripclubs and massage parlors. Defacto legalization of prostitution (like the kind that goes on stripclubs) is NOT the same as decriminalization and allows the workers 0 protection.

Don't buy into the pimp rhetoric that folks who don't even work in the industry try to sell because pimps are technically any people that profit or receive payment from the profits of prostitution. Stripclub owners, a boyfriend that a girl lives with, a driver that she pays for security services, a WEEKLY NEWSPAPER that she advertises in all fall under the legal definition of 'pimp.' It is just selectively enforced by authorities, and disproportionately enforced to men of color based on popular culture stereotypes of Superfly.

VOTE YES ON K SAN FRANCISCO!
by Stephen
As a university senior Biology student, I have the privilege of being enrolled in an evolution and a bioethics course at this time. Perhaps some biological insights may help voters make a prudent decision as they vote on the critical issue of Proposition K.

First, legalizing prostitution will increase the spread of STDs, including HIV. There is a direct correlation between the average number of partners a person has and the incidence of STDs in a community. If a market for prostitution exists (a basic premise behind Proposition K), there will be an intrinsic rise in the number of partners involved parties have, should this legislation pass. This rise in STD rates will affect both the prostitutes and their customers.

Second, legalizing prostitution will impede AIDS research. With higher HIV transmission rates, the virus has greater chances of mutating. HIV already has an extremely high mutation rate. Variant strands of HIV have been found in patients that were only exposed to the disease once (the virus mutated in the person after the initial infection, becoming, essentially, two species of the virus). The greater the genetic mutation in HIV, the more resistant the virus becomes to current drugs. HIV-AIDS research is fighting the clock against mutations. By allowing sex to be traded as a commodity, that clock will move faster.

Third, society pays for STDs. And not only in the billions of dollars spent on research, much of which comes from government grants and other tax-funded initiatives. Every sick day costs a business and our economy. Increased use of health care leads to increased health insurance premiums.

Fourth, there are many unethical consequences to legalizing prostitution. Women may unintentionally become pregnant and want to keep the baby while the man does not. Prostitution may ravage a woman’s reproductive tract, greatly hampering her chances of getting pregnant later in life if she so desires. Some prostitutes may become caught in a socioeconomic quandary, unable to escape what was believed to be a temporary job. Lastly, human trafficking, universally seen as unethical, would become increasingly more difficult to find and prevent.

To me, sheer common sense indicates that the benefits of legalizing prostitution (if there truly are any) are heavily outweighed by the detriments of such legislation. Even so, I hope these biological and bioethical insights help you make the prudent choice with Proposition K: a “No” vote.

Stephen, you have an interesting theory on biology, but too bad it is completely WRONG.

Decriminalization of prostitution would reduce STD's. It has been shown to do so over and over again. Here is some information about decriminalization in New South Wales Australia:

http://www.abc.net.au/worldtoday/content/2008/s2365943.htm

FYI, Jeffrey Klausner, head of the STD program at the department of public health has endorsed Prop K. The California STD controller's association has also endorsed prop K.

The Secretary General of the United Nations also recently said at a recent conference on HIV/AIDS that all nations should decriminalize prostitution as a way to reduce HIV/AIDS.
MARCH FOR A HAPPY ENDING!
END RACIAL PROFILING AND PATRIARCHAL, MORALISTIC TRAFFICKING HYSTERIA

!!URGENT CALL TO ACTION!!
PEOPLE OF ASIAN DESCENT and OF all ethnicities and nationalities!
Sex Workers and allies! Immigrant Rights activists! --Please vote YES ON PROPOSITION K!
WHEN: MONDAY, NOVEMBER 3rd 6pm,
WANTED: lion head masks, lion dancers!
Asian Drummers (taiko?), horns, kazoos and signs!
PLEASE CALL 1-877-776-2004 x5 for info or if you plan to show up!
BRING A RED UMBRELLA. IT IS GOING TO RAIN!
MEET UP POINT: O’Farrell and Polk streets
march through the Tenderloin, stop at Asianweek’s offices (who slated a No on K), and end at the park in Chinatown..

PROTEST RACIAL PROFILING OF ASIAN SEX WORK VENUES IN THE NAME OF “STOPPING TRAFFICKING.” PROTEST THE RACIST REPRESENTATIONS of the [anti-prostitution] Asian Sex Slave campaigns! There have been 0 convictions of human trafficking in San Francisco since 2006, but Gavin Newsom was present during the raids of 17 massage parlors where he rescued an allegedly underaged girl from forced prostitution.

STAND TOGETHER IN SOLIDARITY WITH VOLUNTARY ASIAN SEX WORKERS IN SAN FRANCISCO AND BEYOND WHO DEFEND THEIR RIGHT TO LIVELIHOOD. In Cambodia, in 2008 an anti-trafficking policy change resulted in overnight criminal status of sex workers and drug users to be imprisoned in detention camps, malnourished and abused by authorities until their families can afford bail. The prisoners are detained in the same detention camps used during the reign of Pol Pot. This is all in an effort to prove that they are cracking down on child trafficking. NO ONE SEEMS TO BE FINDING the REAL TRAFFICKING VICTIMS so they arrest and imprison voluntary sex workers.

Decriminalization makes it safer for everyone involved and helps to uncover underworld conditions that breed trafficking and exploitative prostitution. DO NOT BELIEVE when HARRIS & NEWSOM SAY they have any of our communities’ best interest in mind.

PROTEST the exploitation of the sad victimized Asian female victim. The Asian woman/girl that seeks rescue is the ultimate submissive stereotype. WE, ASIAN SEX WORKERS OPPOSE THE PRETTY WOMAN PATRIARCHAL RESCUE MISSION IDEOLOGY, KAMALA HARRIS! GIVE US RIGHTS NOT RESCUE!

Sex workers of Asian descent have been misrepresented by Western colonialism since the Gold Rush days of Chinese prostitutes in San Francisco. Criminalization of Sex Workers and their clients is NOT necessary to find TRUE trafficking victims. Criminalization of sex workers makes them MORE vulnerable to labor abuses, workplace violence and MORE vulnerable to making compromises in STD/violence prevention.

“My name is Mariko Passion. I am an artist, a woman of color and a community activist locally and globally. I live and do sex work in San Francisco, please vote YES on Proposition K!”

Pls read:
http://marikopassion.wordpress.com/the-continued-control-of-representations-and-policies-regarding-the-asian-female-sex-workers/
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