The White Cat by Gennady Spirin

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The White Cat by Gennady Spirin
long term goal: 108 years old, isolated from society, referred to by the children of nearby village folk only as âthe crone,â holding a sword at all times
me: âi think ill play an evil character in fallout this time!â
me:
IâM SEEING FLORENCE IN OCTOBER :â))))))Â
Heâs getting used to having his picture taken
Korak - The Black Norwegian Elkhound | Tanja Renate Aakerøy
Iâm not going to quote anything, because every single line is great, just click on the link and read it.
âI wish to take seriously the claim that selling sex is âwork like any other kind of workâ and examine what taking this claim on its face as true would entail in the United States. In my view, there are serious problems with the regulatory approach that aims to treat women selling sex (âsex workâ in their lingo) as simply a form of work like any other. To take the claim that âsex workâ should be treated/regulated like any other form of work seriously, the following, at minimum, would have to be addressed:
Worker Safety
Sexual harassment
Civil rights
In what follows, I draw on the laws of the United States regarding workers safety, sexual harassment, and civil rights to show that the claim that selling sex is work just like any other form of work is indefensible. Itâs indefensible because if we apply the regulations currently applied to other forms of work to the selling and buying of sex, the acts intrinsic to the âjobâ canât be permitted; they are simply inconsistent with regulations governing worker safety, sexual harassment laws, and civil rights.
OSHA (Occupational Safety and Health Administration) is responsible for overseeing worker safety and health in the U.S. They specify the standards for worker safety regarding in employment contexts that include exposure to blood borne pathogens and other potentially infectious materials (of which sperm counts)[19], as they are concerned with the potential transmission of HIV or Hepatitis, or other infectious diseases. The sexual acts that form the necessary working conditions for (persons) women selling sex means that routine âOccupational Exposureâ is intrinsic to the âjobâ. Occupational exposure âmeans reasonably anticipated skin, eye, mucous membrane, or parenteral contact with blood or other potentially infectious materials that may result from the performance of an employeeâs duties.â[20] Employers must âlist ⌠all tasks and procedures or groups of closely related task and procedures in which occupational exposure occursâŚâ and [t]his exposure determination shall be made without regard to the use of personal protective equipment.â[21] So, presumably, every potential sex act would need to be on the list, as âtasksâ, in which occupational exposure occurs, and the list needs to be made without reference to condom use because the list is required list exposure threat without reference to personal protective equipment.
Condom use certainly would be a minimum requirement for compliance with OSHA standards. However, condom use will not be sufficient to meet OSHA regulations, for: âAll procedures involving blood or other potentially infectious materials shall be performed in such a manner as to minimize splashing, spraying, spattering, and generation of droplets of these substances.â[22] Condoms break, they are not foolproof. Moreover, condoms break more frequently in anal sex. The CDC states that receptive anal sex with an HIV positive person, even with a condom, represents a 100X greater risk for contracting HIV than oral sex with a condom.[23] Anal sex, with an HIV positive partner, without a condom puts the ârecipientâ at a 2000X greater risk for contracting HIV than oral sex with a condom.[24] Condoms, while reducing risk, does not eliminate it, nor arguably does it âminimize riskâ per the OSHA standard; Condoms also donât protect against all sexually transmitted infections (STIs). The CDC makes clear that, though condoms can reduce some STIs, they are not effective for all STIs, HPV and genital ulcers occur in places that condoms donât cover, and hence condom use is not necessarily an effective prophylactic in all cases.[25] Moreover, we know that even where condoms are required by law, âclientsâ often prefer not to use them.[26] We also know that the most vulnerable among persons selling sex are the least likely to use condoms (to have the power to require purchasers of sex to use them), for example, transgendered persons and âmigrant sex-workers.â[27]
Other relevant OSHA regulations that clearly would govern worker safety in a âsex workâ environment:
1. âMouth pipetting/suctioning of blood or other potentially infectious materials is prohibited.â Note this doesnât say is permitted with protective gear. It says prohibited. So, oral sex seems to be inconsistent with OSHA worker safety standards as applied to every other form of work.[28] Will âsex work regulationsâ allow an exception? And if so, what could possibly be the rationale? Will we say that worker safety is less of a concern in this industry?
2. âGloves. Gloves shall be worn when it can be reasonably anticipated that the employee may have hand contact with blood, other potentially infectious materials, mucous membranes, and non-intact skinâŚâ This regulation seems to entail that âsex workersâ must wear latex gloves while performing any âwork taskâ in which their hands may come in contact with potentially infectious materials (i.e., sperm). Should this sound ridiculous to some readers, consider that the St. James Infirmary Occupational Safety & Health Handbook makes a very similar recommendation, but only for some activities. The Handbook suggests: âuse latex gloves (ideally, elbow length) and lots of lube for fisting.â[29] But, this is not the only âtaskâ in which exposure is possible or even likely. Moreover, in other fields in which exposure is possible or likely, notably medical fields, glove wearing is mandatory. Small cuts or abrasions to the skin are potential transmission sites and âminimizing risksâ surely seems to demand gloves be worn at all times for all âtasksâ in which exposure is possible. Hence, St. Jamesâs Handbook goes further and states: âBecause body fluids such as blood, vomit, urine, feces, saliva and semen many contain infectious organisms, protective gloves must always be worn when dealing with body fluids.â[30]
3. âMasks, Eye Protection, and Face Shields. Masks in combination with eye protection devices, such as goggles or glasses with solid side shields, or chin-length face shields, shall be worn whenever splashes, spray, spatter, or droplets of blood or other potentially infectious materials may be generated and eye, nose, or mouth contamination can be reasonably anticipated.â[31] Ejaculation on the face of women in pornography is routine. Data for how wide spread this practice is among men who buy sex is unknown. However, we can safely assume itâs not zero. However, this practice would either be prohibited (under the OSHA minimize risk standard) or if permitted worker protection demands masks, eye protection, and face shields. If this sounds absurd, consider that among porn performers gonorrhea and Chlamydia is frequent, including such infections in the eyes.[32]
4. âGowns, Aprons, and Other Protective Body Clothing. Appropriate protective clothing such as, but not limited to, gowns, aprons, lab coats, clinic jackets, or similar outer garments shall be worn in occupational exposure situations. The type and characteristics will depend upon the task and degree of exposure anticipated.â Â While this may indeed sound absurd in the context of âsex workâ, it goes to the point that the kinds of worker protections deemed necessary in every other work context, in which exposure to infection materials is possible or likely, cannot be maintained in the context in which the work is sex. One can argue that an exception can be carved out for this type of âworkâ, but then what does that say about the relative value of these âworkersâ as opposed to every other worker who is entitled to such protection? Moreover, exceptions are permitted only in ârare and extraordinary circumstancesâ where it is judged that health and safety are put in jeopardy by the use of personal protective equipment.[33] Even further, as noted above not all STIs can be protected against by condom use, or even gloves. âSyphilis can be transmitted through skin-to-skin contact and does not require exposure to semen or vaginal fluids.â The same is true of herpes, molluscum contagiosum, and HPV, among other infectious diseases.[34] Direct skin on skin contact puts âworkersâ at risk. Hence, direct skin-to-skin contact is not compatible with OSHA regulations governing exposure to potentially infectious materials.
5. In the event of exposure OHSA requires: âThe source individualâs blood shall be tested as soon as feasible and after consent is obtained in order to determine HBV and HIV infectivity. If consent is not obtained, the employer shall establish that legally required consent cannot be obtained. When the source individualâs consent is not required by law, the source individualâs blood, if available, shall be tested and the results documented.â[35] This means that if any employee is exposed to a potentially infectious material, despite using personal protective equipment, the source individual (the buyer in the case of âsexâ work) needs to be tested for HIV and HBV. In all of the places in which prostitution is legal it is the sellers not the buyers that are mandated for testing, which of course protects the buyer to an extent, but does nothing to protect the seller/worker.
Obviously the OSHA standards were not created with sex work in mind, however that is irrelevant to the key point being made hereânamely, if these are the regulations deemed necessary to protect worker safety in every other work environment in which exposure to potentially infectious material is a risk of the job, why should they not apply in the context of âsex workâ? If selling sex is work like any other form of work, then the safety of these workers is just as important to protect as the safety of workers in other contexts. The retort that condom use will be required by law and that is sufficient to protect the health and safety of âsex workersâ is simply not true. Condoms may reduce risk in some cases, as noted above, however they do not âminimizeâ risk nor do they protect against all potentially infections transmissions (STIs) as noted above. Moreover, where the selling and buying of sex is currently legal and condoms required by lawâNew Zealand, Australia, the Netherlands, parts of Nevada, e.g.âthere is ample evidence of clients preferring sex without condoms, offering to pay more for sex without condoms, and a lack of enforcement among âmanagement.â[36]
The attempt to draw attention to worker safety in the sex industry is not new. In 2012, voters in Los Angeles voted for âMeasure Bââa law requiring condom use in the pornography industry as a means of protecting worker health and safety. Â The result of the law was not, in fact, increased worker safety. The result was that applications for permits to film in L.A. County dropped 90%; porn production companies either stopped filming in L.A. County or stopped filing for permits and continued to film illegally.[37]
The fact is the buyers drive the market, as is true generally in commercial exchanges. If the buyers donât want to use condoms or follow other âworker safety protocolsâ as would be necessary to protect the safety and health of workers, then we have little reason to be confident that legalization and regulation will effectively protect those who sell sex.
Sexual Harassment
Sexual harassment is defined as âunwelcome sexual conduct that is a term or condition of employment.â[38] Such harassment can take the form of a quid pro quo (when âsubmission to or rejection of such conduct by an individual is used as the basis for employment decisions affecting such individualâ) or in subjecting the employee to a hostile work environment.[39] The standard kinds of cases of sexual harassment involve a supervisor or co-worker harassing, in one form or another, a co-worker. Presumably, in the context of âsex workâ a supervisor or co-worker demanding sex as a condition of employment or creating a hostile work environment could be adjudicated similarly to other work contexts. A more difficult kind of case to consider in the context of âsex workâ is harassment by a client. Hence, it is important to note: âThe harasser can be the victimâs supervisor, a supervisor in another area, a co-worker, or someone who is not an employee of the employer, such as a client or customer.â[40] So, âclientsâ or âcustomersââpurchasers of sex in this discussionâcan also be found to have sexually harassed someone from whom they are purchasing sex, under the current legal standards.
It is a serious question as to how sexual harassment laws can possibly be enforced in a context in which sex is a commercial exchange. Â Where every âjob taskâ potentially involves unwelcome sexual conduct as a condition of employment, because sex is the job, how can we possibly enforce sexual harassment law? Will we carve out an exception for commercial sexâsexual harassment laws donât apply in this context? Or will we continue to stand by our judgments that sexual harassment is a form of sex inequality, from which employees deserve protection? In which case, legalization of prostitution is simply incompatible with sexual harassment legislation that protects âall workers.â
To see precisely how the legalization of the buying and selling of sex is inconsistent with the logic of sexual harassment law, consider the following.  First, as noted above âunwelcomenessâ is the legal standard for whether some act constitutes sexual harassment. Whether the victim of the harassment voluntarily complied is not a defense to sexual harassment. â[T]he fact that sex-related conduct was âvoluntary,â in the sense that the complainant was not forced to participate against her will, is not a defense to a sexual harassment suit brought under Title VII⌠. . The correct inquiry is whether [the victim] by her conduct indicated that the alleged sexual advances were unwelcome, not whether her actual participation in sexual intercourse was voluntary.â[41] âThe Eleventh Circuit provided a general definition of âunwelcome conductâ: the challenged conduct must be unwelcome âin the sense that the employee did not solicit or incite it, and in the sense that the employee regarded the conduct as undesirable or offensive.â[42] In the context of commercial sex, what will count at âsolicitingâ or âincitingâ sexual conduct? Will it be because she agreed to do acts x, y, and z, she will have been found to âincitingâ the acts she finds objectionable, refuses, or declares unwelcome? In other words, suppose she does agree to oral sex, vaginal sex, but refuses anal sex. Suppose the client then demands anal sex and conditions payment upon agreement. Suppose she compliesâshe views the overture and the act as unwelcome, it was in fact a condition of employment (payment), whether it was voluntary is immaterial to whether she was sexually harassed. She was. But why should we exempt the first acts, the prior agreed upon acts, from sexual harassment? They were unwelcome in the sense that they were done for the moneyâand not for reciprocal sexual enjoymentâand they were a condition of getting the money (the employment). Submitting to unwelcome sexual acts as a condition of employmentâgetting paid for sexâis sexual harassment; submitting to sexual harassment is the job.
Moreover, there are legal grounds for thinking that the fact that she works in the sex industry and may have welcomed some acts but not others is irrelevant to whether some specific act was unwelcomed and so harassment. Legally, the fact that someone works in the sex industry is irrelevant as to whether any specific act of harassment was unwelcome. So, we can imagine an attempted defense along the lines that âwell, she works as a prostitute. So, the behavior in question could not have been unwelcomed.â However, âany past conduct of the charging party that is offered to show âwelcomenessâ must relate to the alleged harasser.â In other words, the only past conduct of the charging party that is relevant is conduct related to the specific individual alleged to have harassed her.
The EEOC acknowledges âA more difficult situation occurs when an employee first willingly participates in conduct of a sexual nature but then ceases to participate and claims that any continued sexual conduct has created a hostile work environment. Here the employee has the burden of showing that any further sexual conduct is unwelcome, work-related harassment. The employee must clearly notify the alleged harasser that his conduct is no longer welcome.If the conduct still continues, her failure to bring the matter to the attention of higher management or the EEOC is evidence, though not dispositive, that any continued conduct is, in fact, welcome or unrelated to work⌠In any case, however, her refusal to submit to the sexual conduct cannot be the basis for denying her an employment benefit or opportunity; that would constituted a âquid pro quoâ violation.â[43]  Assume for the moment that in the context of âsex workâ agreeing to accept money for specific sex acts constitutes welcomenessâinsofar as doing so can be understood to âsolicitâ or âinciteâ the agreed to acts. Under this assumption, the employee has the burden of showing that any furtherâunwelcome actsâare, in fact, unwelcome. Moreover, the employee must clearly notify the harasser that the conduct is unwelcome, and notify management. If we adopt the language of some of those who defend legalization, and see sex workers as âconsumer service agentsâ engaged in âcustomer relations,â how realistic is it to think that the sex worker is going to be in a position to make meaningful refusals?, to notify the customer that is conduct is unwelcome?, to report to management continued harassment? We know that economic survival is the reason that people do this âwork.â We also know that in work environments that arenât sexual, sexual harassment is underreported due to fear of sanction or loss of job. Moreover, what possible sense can it make to say that ârefusal to submit to the sexual conduct cannot be a basis for denying her an employment benefit or opportunityâ when sex is the condition of employment?
Consider further that Courts have found the presence of âpornographic magazines.â âvulgar sexual commentsâ âsexually oriented pictures in a company- sponsored movie and slide presentation,â âsexually oriented pictures and calendars in the workplace,â all relevant to hostile work environment claims.[44] In Barbetta, âthe court held that the proliferation of pornography and demeaning comments, if sufficiently continuous and pervasive âmay be found to create an atmosphere in which women are viewed as menâs sexual playthings rather than as their equal coworkers.â[45] How could such a ruling have effect in a brothel: where pornography is used as an accompaniment to sex? Where âvulgar sexual commentsâ are the eroticized language of clients? Where sex is the job?
Of course, these rulings and regulations are premised upon the fact that sex isnât the job itself. If the sex is the job, what sense can we make of the claim that treating (unwelcome) sex as a condition of employment is an instance of sexual harassment, and so sex inequality? Â Legalizing prostitution is not compatible with the legal recognition of sexual harassment as a form of sex inequality. And, supposing advocates argue for a carve out, an exception, for this form of âwork,â what message does that convey? Some women are deserving of protection from, or legal recourse in the event of, unwanted sexual harassment while some women are not? And those that arenât are the least advantaged of all âworkersâ? This reeks of the all to common view that women that prostitute themselves are whores by nature and deserve whatever they get.
Civil Rights
Although those advocating for legalization (or decriminalization) often frame their arguments in terms of the civil or human rights of âsex workers,â once sex is a regulated commercial activity the civil rights of the âclientsâ are legally enforceable. Businesses may not refuse service to a person on the basis of race, color, national origin/ancestry, sex/gender, religion/creed and disability (physical and mental), as a matter of Federal Law. Some U.S. states have further legislation prohibiting discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation, gender identity and expression. What this means is that businesses that provide âpublic accommodationâ are not free to deny service to anyone who is a member of such a protected classes because they are member of the protected class. Â To do so is to infringe upon the civil rights of the relevant person. So far, so good. But, how are we to understand this in the context of providing sex, as a commercial service, and so âpublic accommodationâ?
If sexual autonomy is to mean anything, it has to mean the right to refuse sex with anyone, at anytime, for any reason. We may think in oneâs personal life refusing to entertain the possibility of dating or becoming sexually involved with someone solely on the basis of their race, religion or disability is an undesirable preference, especially if such preferences are rooted in prejudice or animus more broadly speaking. Nonetheless, everyone has the right to choose their sexual partners on whatever grounds they subjectively judge to be relevant, including the sex and gender of any potential partner. If someone thinks they absolutely donât want to have sex with anyone over 65, it is absolutely their right to act (or refuse to act) on that preference. We are under no obligation to have sex with someone who might be interested in sex with us. The right to refusal for any reason, whether an âadmirableâ reason, or not is absolute.
However, where sex is a commercial activity, considered to be work just like any other form of work, its hard to see any rationale for defending the ârights of workersâ to refuse service to someone based on their subjective preferences. Should âclientsâ have the right to sue brothels or particular women for ârefusing serviceâ based on their membership in a protected class? If this sounds absurd, consider the evidence New Zealandâs Prostitution Reform Act (PRA) offers: In a report following up on the PRA, five years after its passage, the Review Committee queries, among other things, the ability of âsex workersâ to refuse sexual services to a particular client. They found that 60% of âsex workersâ felt more able to refuse sex with a particular client than prior to the passage of the PRA, which, of course, means 40% did not feel more able to refuse sex with a particular client.[46] Â In interviewing both brothel owners and âsex workersâ, the Committee reports that although âworkersâ have ârightâ to refuse a particular client both âworkersâ and owners held that refusal was acceptable âonly with a good reason.â One brothel owner is quoted as saying, âWe wonât allow nationality to be the reasonâthey [the women selling sex] donât have a right to discriminate.â[47]
Hence, where sex is a âjob like any other,â a regulated commercial exchange, the âprovidersâ are cannot be legally free to refuse clients in protected classes on grounds of their membership in the protected class. Refusing to have sex with anyone over 65 is age discrimination, where sex is a job like any other. Similarly, refusing to have sex with someone because of their sex (or gender or transgender status, where protected) is also potentially a civil rights violation of the client. Â This argument, more than any other, I think exposes the fault lines of the âsex work is work like any other form of workâ argument. Refusing sex is not like refusing to serve someone dinner, do their nails, cut their hair, or other forms of âpersonal service.â Â Refusing to give someone a manicure on grounds of their race, age, sex, etc. is a gross refusal to treat them as an equal person. It is, in fact, to treat them unequally and to deny their basic civil rights. Refusing to have sex with someone, on any grounds, is simply not parallel. Refusing to have sex with someone does not make them unequal, civilly or otherwise.
Beyond the arguments I have presented here there are further questions raised by a system of legalization. Where it is legal to include sex as a condition of employment (in sex work), other types of job descriptions may be redefined to include sex. How will we draw the line? Or is sex potentially legitimate part of any job description? Where welfare or unemployment benefits require recipients to accept available work, will sex work be required of people (women) in lieu of public assistance? Under current contract law, failure to perform agreed upon services is a violation of the terms of the contract and may demand compensation or penalties for the party refusing to fulfill the contract: will this extend to âsex workâ contracts?[48] Simply extending the regulations that currently cover employment law, contracts, and other public benefits to âsex workâ reveals the implausibility of the slogan âits work just like any other form of work.â
One of the primary motivations for the legalization argument is the desire to reduce harm among persons in prostitution, although as noted above many of the harms associated with the selling of sex will not be removed or reduced with legalization, and some, indeed may be exacerbated. However, the harms associated with the criminalization of the selling of sexâarrest, incarceration, inability to report the crimes of rape, assault, and other forms of violenceâneed to be addressed. Even worse, under systems of criminalization of the selling of sex, vulnerable persons (largely, women) are made more vulnerable to assault and coercion into sex by police officers, the very people charged with âprotectingâ them against such abuses.[49] The answer to these harms is not legalization. Rather, it is the full decriminalization of the selling of sex. However, a commitment to sex equality, to the full social, civil, and political equality of prostituted persons does not entail providing buyers full, unfettered legal access through a system of legalization. The buyersâthe demandâfuel the system of inequality that keeps prostitution flourishing. Criminalization of the buying of sex is an essential element of addressing the harms of prostitution, and the harm that is prostitution. Â We need the kind of Copernican Revolution the Nordic Model embodies.â
Lori Watson is Associate Professor of Philosophy and Director of Womenâs and Gender Studies at the University of San Diego. She works at the intersection of political philosophy, philosophy of law, and feminist theory. She is currently writing a monograph with Dr. Christie Hartley tentatively titled Feminist Political Liberalism.
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[1] For a history of the âSex Workerâ movement, see: Chateauvert, Melinda. Sex Workers Unite: A History of the Movement from Stonewall to SlutWalk (Boston, MA: Beacon Press, 2013). For an example of arguments in favor of legalization, see: Weitzer, Ronald. Legalizing Prostitution: From Illicit Vice to Lawful Business (New York: New York University Press, 2012).
[2] See, for example, Nussbaum, Martha. ââWhether from Reason or Prejudiceâ: Taking Money for Bodily Services,â in Prostitution and Pornography: Philosophical Debate about the Sex Industry (Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 2006), edited by Jessica Spector, pp. 175-208.
[3] Men, boys, and transgendered persons also sell sex for money. However, I refer to women throughout the text when I refer to the sellers of sex. I do this because, overwhelmingly, the persons who sell sex are women or girls. The fact that women are the overwhelming sellers, and men are the vast majority of buyers is relevant to discussing prostitution its harms and who would benefit from legalization. Moreover, it makes clear that it is a socially gender institution, which is crucial to an accurate engagement with the issues at stake.
[4] Weitzer (2012).
[5] Various groups such as C.O.Y.O.T.E (Call Off Your Old Tired Ethics) make this claim, see Sex Workers Unite for discussion. Weitzer also makes this argument of some women in prostitution. For example in a table defining âSelected Types of Prostitutionâ he classifies âIndependent Call Girl/Escortâ as having âNoneâ under the category of âExploitation by Third Partiesâ (Table 1.1, p. 17). And, later in discussing the benefits of prostitution, he cites job satisfaction higher among indoor workers including the benefits of âfeeling âsexy,â âbeautiful,â and âpowerfulâ (Legalizing Prostitution, p. 29).
[6] The best examples of these claims can be found in the Occupational Health and Safety Handbook published by St. James Infirmary (edited by Naomi Akers and Cathryn Evans, 2013, 3rd edition). St. James Infirmary âis an Occupational Saftey & Health Clinic for Sex Workers founded by activists from COYOTE (Call Off Your Old Tired Ethics) and the Exotic Dancers Alliance in collaboration with the STD Prevention and Control Section of the San Francisco Department of Public Health.â They are a private, non-profit. The entire handbook has been archived at http://perma.cc/02CetqGsJMU?type=live.
[7] This was part of the argument relied on in Bedford v. Canada (2013), the Canadian Supreme Court Case in which the Court struck down the avails and bawdy house provisions of the Canadian criminal code (provisions which made it illegal to live off the avails of prostitution of another person and to maintain a bawdy house or place of prostitution, respectively). For a thorough analysis of the Bedford case, see: Waltman, Max. âAssessing Evidence, Arguments, and Inequality in Bedford v. Canada,â Harvard Journal of Law & Gender, Summer 2014, Vol. 37, pp. 459-544, available online at http://harvardjlg.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/07/Waltman.pdf.
[8] A variety of sources confirm this, across a range of perspectives on whether prostitution should be legalized, decriminalized, or criminalized in some form. See for example: A study conducted by the Policy Department on Citizenâs Rights and Constitutional Affairs for the European Parliament titled, âSexual Exploitation and Prostitution and its impact on gender equality,â completed in January 2014, available on line at http://www.europarl.europa.eu/RegData/etudes/etudes/join/2014/493040/IPOL-FEMM_ET(2014)493040_EN.pdf; see also, âBehind Closed Doors,â a report by the Sex Workers Rights Project, available at http://sexworkersproject.org/downloads/BehindClosedDoors.pdf, citing âfinancial vulnerabilityâ and âeconomic deprivationâ as the overwhelming reason for entry into prostitution in a study of âindoorâ sex work in New York City; see also, âShifting the Burden: Inquiry to assess the operation of the current legal settlement on prostitution in England and Wales,â a March 2014 report prepared by an All-Party Parliament Group on Prostitution and the Global Sex Trade, available at http://appgprostitution.files.wordpress.com/2014/04/shifting-the-burden1.pdf, citing âpovertyâ as the primary reason for entry into prostitution for 74% of indoor workers. Other routes into prostitution cited by the report include: experience of sexual abuse as a child, drugs and alcohol abuse, being in the foster care system as a female child; they conclude âMore often than not, prostitution is entered out of desperation arising from a number of situation-specific factors.â
[9] The FBI reports the average age of entry for girls into prostitution (in the U.S.) at between 13-14, see: http://www.fbi.gov/stats-services/publications/law-enforcement-bulletin/march_2011/human_sex_trafficking; see also, âMyths and Facts about Trafficking for Legal and Illegal Prostitutionâ (March 2009)http://www.prostitutionresearch.com/pdfs/Myths%20&%20Facts%20Legal%20&%20Illegal%20Prostitution%203-09.pdf
[10] Melissa Farleyâs extensive study of prostitution across nine countries, reports that 89% of those women in prostitution interviewed for the study âwanted to escape prostitution but did not have other means for survival.â See: Farley, et al. âProstitution and Trafficking in Nine Countries: An Update on Violence and Posttraumatic Stress Disorder,â available at http://www.prostitutionresearch.com/pdf/Prostitutionin9Countries.pdf
[11] See: MacKinnon, Catharine A. âTrafficking, Prostitution, and Inequality,â Harvard Civil Rights-Civil Liberties Law Review, 2011, Vol. 46, No. 2, pp. 271-293, available at http://harvardcrcl.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/08/MacKinnon.pdf
[12] See, Waltman. See also, Behind Closed Doors: An Analysis of Indoor Sex Work in New York City, published by Sex Workers Project at the Urban Justice Center (2005), available at http://sexworkersproject.org/downloads/BehindClosedDoors.pdf
[13] See, Waltman and MacKinnon (2011). See also, Moran, Rachel. Paid For: My Journey Through Prostitution (Dublin: Gil & Macmillan, 2013).
[14] As one example, see Moran, Paid For (2013).
[15] According the National Bureau of Labor Statistics report on fatal job injuries in 2011, fishers and logging are the most dangerous jobs in the U.S. (as measured by fatalities). âIn 2011, the fatal injury rates of fishers (127.3) and loggers (104.0) were approximately 25 times higher than the national fatal occupational injury rate of 3.5 per 100,000 full-time equivalent workers. Pilots, farmers, roofers, and drivers/sales workers and truck drivers also had fatal injury rates that exceeded the all-worker rate of 3.5 fatal occupational injuries per 100,000 full-time equivalent workers.â See: http://www.bls.gov/opub/btn/volume-2/death-on-the-job-fatal-work-injuries-in-2011.htm. By contrast, the death rate of women in prostitution is 40 times higher than women not in prostitution. In a study of women in prostitution in Colorado, researchers calculated a crude morality rate of 391 per 100,000 and a homicide rate among active âprostitutesâ as 229 per 100,000. See, âMorality in a Long-Term Open Cohort of Prostitute Women,â American Journal of Epidemiology (2004), Vol. 159, no. 8, pp. 778-785. Based on this study, the death rate of women in prostitution is just over 3 times higher than that of fishers, and nearly 4 times higher than loggers, the two most dangerous jobs in the U.S.
[16] Increasingly States and International Bodies are considering or advocating for the Nordic Model, which recognizes that the criminalization of the selling of sex harms women, and other prostituted persons, and so decriminalizes the selling of sex while continuing to criminalize the buying of sex. Norway, Sweden, Iceland all have adopted this model of legislation. Franceâs parliament recently voted affirmatively in favor the Nordic Model, as did the European Parliament. It is currently being considered in the U.K. as well as Canada. In Germany, trauma experts are organizing against the current system of decriminalization and advocating for the Nordic model as well claiming: âProstitution is in no way a job like any other. It is degrading, torturous, exploitive. On the side of the prostituted, there is a lot of horror and disgust at play, which they have to repress in order to get through it at all.â So says Michaela Huber, psychologist and head of the German Society for Trauma and Dissociation. See: http://www.emma.de/artikel/traumatherapeutinnen-gegen-prostitution-317787, see the English translation here: http://www.sabinabecker.com/2014/09/german-psychologists-and-the-scientific-case-against-prostitution.html
[17] Persons, women, in prostitution are not a monolithic group. The more inequality persons, women, face generally with regard to race, national origin, age, ability, economic status the more unequal they are within systems of prostitution. To the extend that legalization would benefit anyone currently in prostitution, it would benefit the most well-off, the women with the most choice, the most safety, and the most freedom within. Just like any other industry regulated by a capitalist market, there will be (and are) tiers of employmentâhierarchies within the industry. There is no reason to think that legalization will equalize the hierarchies within the sex industry anymore than in any other industry.
[18] See for example: MacKinnon (2011).
[19] âOther Potentially Infectious Materials means (1) The following human body fluids: semen, vaginal secretions, cerebrospinal fluid, synovial fluid, pleural fluid, pericardial fluid, peritoneal fluid, amniotic fluid, saliva in dental procedures, any body fluid that is visibly contaminated with blood, and all body fluids in situations where it is difficult or impossible to differentiate between body fluids; (2) Any unfixed tissue or organ (other than intact skin) from a human (living or dead); and (3) HIV-containing cell or tissue cultures, organ cultures, and HIV- or HBV-containing culture medium or other solutions; and blood, organs, or other tissues from experimental animals infected with HIV or HBV.â See: Occupational Safety and Health Standards, Code of Federal Regulations, Standards, Part 1910, Toxic and Hazardous Substances, Blood Borne Pathogens, (hereinafter, OSHA regulations) available on line at, https://www.osha.gov/pls/oshaweb/owadisp.show_document?p_table=STANDARDS&p_id=10051
[20]OSHA regulations, https://www.osha.gov/pls/oshaweb/owadisp.show_document?p_table=STANDARDS&p_id=10051
[21] Ibid.
[22] Ibid.
[23] See, http://www.cdc.gov/hiv/topics/treatment/PIC/pdf/chart.pdf
[24] See, http://www.cdc.gov/hiv/topics/treatment/PIC/pdf/chart.pdf
[25] See, http://www.cdc.gov/condomeffectiveness/brief.html
[26] âThroughout the world, study after study documents that about half of all johns
request or insist that condoms are not used when they buy sex. Many factors militate
against condom use: the need of women to make money; older womenâs decline in
attractiveness to men; competition from places that do not require condoms; pimp pressure on women to have sex with no condom for more money; money needed for a drug habit or to pay off the pimp; and the general lack of control that prostituted women have over their bodies in prostitution venues. Even though sex businesses had rules that required men to wear condoms, men nonetheless attempted to have sex without condoms. According to an economic analysis of condom use in India, when extremely poor women used condoms, they were paid 66%-79% less by johns.â See: http://www.prostitutionresearch.com/pdfs/Myths%20&%20Facts%20Legal%20&%20Illegal%20Prostitution%203-09.pdf
[27] In a Special Report âThematic Report: Sex Workers. Monitoring implementation of the Dublin Declaration on Partnership to Fight HIV/AIDS in Europe, Central Asiaâ prepared by ⌠reports, âOverall, condom use by female sex workers with clients is relatively high. Reported data suggest that condom use may be lower among male sex workers than among female sex workers but it is difficult to draw firm conclusions as relatively few countries reported data on condom use by male sex workers and sample sizes were generally not representative. Reported data do not provide any information about use of condoms by other sub-groups of sex workers, such as migrant sex workers. http://www.ecdc.europa.eu/en/publications/Publications/dublin-declaration-sex-workers.pdf
[28] St. James Infirmary recommends the use of âdental dams or plastic wrap for both oral-vaginal and oral-anal activity.â Occupational Health and Safety Handbook, p. 18. However, this recommendation is insufficient to meet current OSHA regulations.
[29]St. James Infirmary, Occupational Health and Safety Handbook, p. 18.
[30] Ibid. p. 13.
[31] OSHA regulations, https://www.osha.gov/pls/oshaweb/owadisp.show_document?p_table=STANDARDS&p_id=10051
[32] http://www.dir.ca.gov/dosh/DoshReg/comments/STD%20and%20HIV%20Disease%20and%20Health%20Risks%20Los%20Angeles%20County%20DPH.pdf
[33] OSHA Regulations: âUse. The employer shall ensure that the employee uses appropriate personal protective equipment unless the employer shows that the employee temporarily and briefly declined to use personal protective equipment when, under rare and extraordinary circumstances, it was the employeeâs professional judgment that in the specific instance its use would have prevented the delivery of health care or public safety services or would have posed an increased hazard to the safety of the worker or co-worker. When the employee makes this judgment, the circumstances shall be investigated and documented in order to determine whether changes can be instituted to prevent such occurrences in the future. OSHA regulations, https://www.osha.gov/pls/oshaweb/owadisp.show_document?p_table=STANDARDS&p_id=10051
[34] St. James Infirmary, Occupational Health and Safety Handbook, pp. 21-30.
[35] OSHA regulations, https://www.osha.gov/pls/oshaweb/owadisp.show_document?p_table=STANDARDS&p_id=10051
[36] See: Waltman (2013); Farley, Melissa. Prostitution and Trafficking in Nevada Making the Connections (San Francisco, CA: Prostitution Research & Education, 2007); Malarek, Victor. The Johns: Sex for Sale and The Men Who Buy It (New York: Arcade, 2009), esp. p. 232, where he writes: âThe WHO failed to understand that the very request to wear a condom can get a woman beaten or even killed.â
[37] http://www.latimes.com/opinion/editorials/la-ed-condoms-porn-20140810-story.html
[38] http://www.eeoc.gov/policy/docs/currentissues.html
[39] Ibid.
[40] Ibid.
[41] http://www.eeoc.gov/policy/docs/currentissues.html
[42] Henson v. City of Dundee, 682 F.2d at 903
[43] http://www.eeoc.gov/policy/docs/currentissues.html
[44] Ibid.
[45] Ibid.
[46]http://www.justice.govt.nz/policy/commercial-property-and-regulatory/prostitution/prostitution-law-review-committee/publications/plrc-report/documents/report.pdf, p. 45.
[47] Ibid.
[48] For a thorough development and analysis of these questions, see: Anderson, Scott, Prostitution and Sexual Autonomy,â in Prostitution and Pornography, ed. Spector (cf. fn. 2).
[49] See, âBehind Closed Doors,â available at http://sexworkersproject.org/downloads/BehindClosedDoors.pdf
Not exactly a graceful gecko. #tokaygecko
eight months with clinically rude tween boys and iâm somehow more rousseau-y about childhood than i was when i got hereÂ
protect their little eggshell hearts, also clean out the piercings they do with nails in the khmer school bathrooms
For a moment, letâs put aside our opinions of standardized testing (and the fact this is written in Comic Sans font) and celebrate the teachers who âget it.â
Many tests celebrate only one type of learning: how to take a test well. There are a lot of pros and cons to consider when it comes to standardized testing, especially during our national debate of Common Core techniques. Although these tests can tell us some things, they donât give the full holistic picture of kidsâ aptitude â and certainly not their worth.
Regardless of how we all feel about tests, the one thing that unites us is the commitment to bringing out the best in our kids and finding the hidden talents in each of them. As educators, mentors, and parents, our job may be to teach, but more importantly, itâs also to find the thing that inspires a student to want to learn on their own.
 by Oliver Liria
Mount Rainier Mornings