Category Archives: BLOGGERY: articles of interest from elsewhere………

Dehumanising?

In Scotland, things could soon be changing. Of course, we don’t agree with trafficking, coercion or any other form of exploitative or consensually-dubious sex work, but to dismiss an entire industry with these labels and – even worse – to criminalise it all as a result of misinformation is counterproductive. Ethical sex, porn, titillation and kink is too often lumped in with crime and cruelty by lazy politicians and half-arsed journalism. Sex worker rights are important, and what Rhoda Grant MSP is proposing really doesn’t help.

Here’s a post by Laura Lee at Escort Scotland:

“Rhoda Grant MSP believes that ‘prostitution in Scotland is a form of sexual violence against women and sexual exploitation.’ She believes that ‘prostitution is inherently harmful and dehumanising’ and that ‘the majority of those who are involved in prostitution are unwilling participants.’ She is proposing to make it illegal to purchase sex in Scotland.

Now, I know, and you know, that her assertions are simply not true. I know from years of experience at various levels in the sex industry that in fact the vast majority of sex workers are working (quite contentedly) of their own volition and to support themselves and their families. Indeed, my colleagues and I have been visiting brothels so we know the truth, and we think it’s time that the truth is told.

The public consultation on Rhoda Grant’s proposals for a new law to criminalise the purchase of sex is open until 14th December. This is an open consultation – you do not have to be a resident of Scotland or the UK to respond.

All of us at SCOT-PEP have been campaigning to stop this law going through and we will continue to do so but we need YOU to use your voice too.

Are you a sex worker, a client or an individual interested in human rights and safety for sex workers? Politicians need to know the realities of sex work, so let’s tell them!

If you are a sex worker and enjoy your job, if you do not feel exploited or that it is dehumanising, harmful or degrading, SAY SO.

If you choose to work as a sex worker because it is the best available option for you, SAY SO.

If you see disabled clients who would otherwise never experience the joy of skin to skin contact, SAY SO.

If you feel that making it illegal for your clients to pay you is not going to tackle trafficking or ‘reduce demand’ but deprive you of a living, SAY SO.

If you are a client, who uses the services of sex workers and have yet to find a victim of coercion or trafficking, SAY SO.

If you work in health services and come into contact with sex workers who don’t fit *that* stereotype, SAY SO.

Here’s what you can do.

You can write to Rhoda Grant and tell her what you think of her proposals.

The consultation document asks specifically for answers to 8 questions – but you can also just write in with your opinion if you prefer. Your letter will be much more powerful if you can add your own views and experiences, although at Scot-PEP we have prepared some template letters here which you can use as a guideline for your own letter. In fact you can simply print the letters off and sign them.

You don’t need to use your real name, for example you can use your work name or an alias to send in your opinion. If you do use your own name you must ask for your response to be treated as anonymous if you do not wish your name to be published on Rhoda Grant’s website and by the Scottish Parliament. (Only names will be published – not contact addresses, telephone numbers, email addresses etc.)

You can email your letter to: Rhoda.Grant.msp@scottish.parliament.uk

or post it to:

Rhoda Grant MSP
Room M1.06
Scottish Parliament
Edinburgh
EH99 1SP

It has never been more important to stand up for your rights and to have your voice heard. Please don’t let this new proposal drive our already clandestine and stigmatised jobs further underground and please don’t allow politicians to tell you how you feel or how you ought to live your life. Enough is enough.”

For original post, click here.

Solanas

I was recently asked what I think of the work of Valerie Solanas. Well, it’s complicated, but I’d recommend a look at a recently-posted video at the Lenceria Femenina art blog where my 2007 self (armed) and her esteemed comrade (also armed) capture and educate a gentleman in a police cell.

From Lenceria Femenina:

“This video is part of my ongoing project The Department for the Ladies’ Well-Being, a fictional female supremacist dystopia. In this video, two officers of the Department violently indoctrinate a man into Valerie Solanas’ SCUM Manifesto at gunpoint.”

Click here for the video.

IC Dead People

At some point around the turn of the millennium, my first tentative tiptoes into the internet led me to a website called Informed Consent, recommended by a dungeon monitor I met at a club night. Through IC, directly and indirectly, I’ve met some of the most wonderful and important people in my life. There have been enlightening discussions, dramas, trolls and tribulations. Now, sadly, it’s nearly over. Today at 6:57pm, Admin posted this:

“IC was started during the Christmas holidays of 1997, and has gone through several stages of evolution over the years. From the start, it had a thread of activism, as reflected in the name which stresses the consensual and legitimate nature of what we do. Even publishing BDSM listings was part of that activism in those days, as it was created when publications like Time Out and the Guardian refused to take BDSM ads, and it was genuinely hard to find people, shops, and events. But now we’re in a world where daytime TV talks about “Fifty Shades of Grey”, and sites like Facebook, FetLife, Twitter, Pinterest, and WordPress make it easy for people to network and to talk about their BDSM ideas, or their business, or their event. So there are a lot of alternatives now, and we’ve taken the hard decision to close www.informedconsent.co.uk in February next year. There are several reasons for this, some of which we can’t talk about. We have looked at other options for the site to continue but none of them are both practical and consistent with our aims and values. Informed Consent as a project will continue as an activism site which will be developed using informedconsent.org.uk, and with the InformedConsent Twitter feed and Informed Consent activism and news group on FetLife. We’re also going to try to resinstate our Facebook page. The timetable is that www.informedconsent.co.uk will close at the end of Sunday 24th February 2013, with posts to the boards, groups, and blogs finishing at the end of Sunday 17th February 2013. The archive of posts made to the boards etc will be maintained as part of the informedconsent.org.uk site. If there’s anything you’d like to save from your profile, in particular pictures and blog posts, you will need to download them from IC before 24th February. We’d like to say a huge thank you to everyone who has made positive contributions to the site over the years, either by helping to maintain it, test it, donate to it, sponsor pages on it, or post on it.”

RIP IC.