Usually, when I devote a whole column to picking on a news article, it’s because said article is so hilariously bad or deeply disturbing (or both) that I can’t bear to limit myself to a quick jab of the knife in a news column, and instead prefer to lovingly vivisect it until the entire virtual room is spattered in blood. But this is, alas, not one of those cases; the article’s author, Sonja Sharp, clearly believes herself an ally of sex workers, or is at least open-minded to the idea that sex workers deserve human rights, yet she can’t quite bring herself to shake off her childlike trust in government and her belief that cops are the “good guys”. So what we get is an article that is generally supportive of sex worker rights, yet fails to properly place the blame for our oppression on the prohibitionists; instead, it adopts a kind of mealy-mouthed “moderation”, pretending that there is a legitimate “debate” to be had between those who say humans own ourselves and have unalienable rights, and those who pretend that individuals are owned by the State, which has the “right” to use violence to “protect” us from choices with which our owners disapprove. There’s very little point in quoting the good parts, so I’m just going to concentrate on pointing out the bad ones.
[When] Police Commissioner James O’Neill and the city’s First Lady Chirlane McCray…[announced] the NYPD would bolster the size of its vice squad in order to stamp out sex trafficking…the hope on part of some advocates was that sex workers might see relief from the pressure traditionally brought to bear by police…
I have no idea who these “advocates” Sharp refers to are, but none of them are sex worker rights activists; we know better than to harbor naive beliefs that doubling the size of a police unit could in any way signal “relief” for those the unit is specifically intended to oppress.
…a growing number of law enforcement agencies…are forming their own anti-trafficking units—often using grants from the feds—and deploying similarly gallant rhetoric despite limited evidence their arrests do much to stop exploitation…But alternatives are time-consuming and remain opaque to most law enforcement agencies, which have been deputized to fight human trafficking in part because it’s widely understood to be synonymous with illegal sex work…Modernizing their approach is still a work in progress, to say the least…
Because the writer can’t bring herself to question the institution of policing, she buys into the claim that cops are interested in “stopping exploitation”; she imagines that the idea of just leaving people alone instead of persecuting them for private, consensual activities is “opaque” to cops, rather than recognizing “sex trafficking” as a boondoggle intended to disguise the ugly persecution of sexual behavior under a mask of “helping”. The idea that cops’ behavior needs to be “modernized” is the most asinine of all; what they’re doing now IS the modern approach, by definition, since it’s less than 20 years old. What we really need is a return to the approach which predominated throughout most of human history: recognizing that sex work is normal and not a government matter, and leaving it the fuck alone.
…Jean Bruggeman, executive director of the national anti-trafficking organization Freedom Network USA [says] “I think in their zeal to help [cops] are doing some very wrongheaded things,” including mass arrests of sex workers and John stings using fake Backpage ads…
…In what appears to be a more concerted approach than that of the NYPD, LA Sheriff’s detectives bring an outreach worker with them whenever they approach sex workers…always offering them diversion first, before an arrest is made…”if they flat-out refuse, we book them, and then they’re sent to the appropriate court,” where they are then [forced into] a system of mandatory services…It seems like progressive approach, one most people—even those who think sex work should be legal—might be able to get behind…
Yeah, it’s “progressive” all right, considering that the Progressive movement spawned the concept of Prohibition in the first place. To pretend that people who want to suppress consensual sex are actually trying to “help” anyone but themselves is disingenuous in the extreme, yet Sharp just can’t see that attacking peaceful people and then forcing them at gunpoint to accept the government’s idea of “help” is evil even if implemented exactly as planned, both in theory and in practice.
…demand reduction…is hotly contested among advocates and experts. While less explicitly harmful than arresting sex workers, opponents say it does little to rout traffickers, while those who endorse it argue arresting Johns makes sexual exploitation less attractive as a business…
Aaaaaaaand I’m gonna stop right there before I am seized with the urge to disembowel Sharp along with her crappy article. No, “end demand” isn’t “hotly contested” among anyone who actually gives a shit about human rights, nor is it less harmful than arresting sex workers (indeed, in the US it always includes arresting sex workers despite the rhetoric). There is no legitimate “debate” over whether people own their own bodies, nor whether they have the right to consensual sex with other adult partners; pretending that there is such a “debate” is nothing more than catering to evil control freaks and sucking the dick of power. The pretense that cops are some kind of sweet, well-intentioned social justice squad, and that it isn’t their fault the laws are bad, is so incredibly nauseating it boggles the mind. Stories like this, written by sheltered little girls barely out of their parents’ houses, are vile apologies for evil policies that enable uniformed rapists and soft-peddle operations intended to destroy lives, enable armed robbery of citizens and increase the real “modern slavery”, mass incarceration.
What most folks don’t realize is that cops are frequently given “arrest quotas” — they are required to make a certain minimum number of arrests in a given time period (the numbers vary by department) to show they are being “productive”. That means they have to churn out arrests like an assembly line in a factory. And what better way than to engineer drug and prostitution stings?
The problem with Sharp and other well-intentioned liberals is that their idea of how police do their job comes from police dramas on television, where cops are good guys and “bad apples” get caught and punished. Their ideas about prostitution and sex-trafficking are probably also coming from prime time TV as well.
“And what better way than to engineer drug and prostitution stings?”
Exactly. Cops are the enforcement arm of the political class. They’re taking marching orders. They paid to do, not think. If tomorrow they banned alcohol, you’d see them suddenly become True Believers in the eeevils of alcohol, going into liquor stores and smashing up bottles.
The way to get the cops off the backs of hookers and johns would be legalization. I don’t see that happening in the US, which is out-and-out sex phobic. Where I live, there is a human trafficking “task force” run by older women who look like unkempt, evil versions of the Church Lady. The police hang on their every word, at least judging from their Facebook posts.
I also agree the police dept. isn’t like what you see on TV. If this were “Blue Bloods,” Tom Selleck would call these prudes out for being the hysterics and for attempting to exert undue influence over the police department.
It’s nice to read an article by someone who remembers that there is a difference between “dissect” and “vivisect”. It annoys me when people use the former word instead of the latter.
All I can say is, “Come to Netherlands.” Living in a place, where (for the first time in my life) both the cultural and legal values are so nicely in tune with my own… has made all the difference.
People are against sex work because of the idea that many are forced into the industry. Moran discusses her personal story where she is found by a pimp at 14 and was forced into sex work. Her story is a compelling one showing that no laws should protect pimps, especially those that coerce people into the work (Moran) Moran makes the mistake in her article of assuming her experience is universal of all sex workers when she was actually a victim of trafficking. Moran also exposes her bias in the article by framing Amnesty International’s attempt to help sex workers’ rights as protection for pimps and traffickers (Moran). Amnesty International voted on policies in 2015 to protect sex worker’s rights, but it did not mention protecting traffickers or people that coerce or force people into the industry (“Global Movement Votes …”).
“Global Movement Votes to Adopt Policy to Protect Human Rights of Sex Workers.” Amnesty International USA. N.p., n.d. Web. 15 July 2017. .
Moran, Rachel. “Opinion | Buying Sex Should Not Be Legal.” The New York Times. The New York Times, 28 Aug. 2015. Web. 15 July 2017. .
This is a passage from a research paper I am working on for my English 122 class at the moment. I think it relates to what we’re seeing in this article. There is a moral desperation for people to find “the bad” in sex work and criminalize it. The article mentioned and cited by Moran is an example of a trafficking victim that has equated trafficking to sex work. My paper discusses how these stings hurt tax payers as well as workers. I touch on how cases have mentioned workers being taken advantage of by cops. I discuss how other countries have dramatically reduced trafficking by decriminalization or legalization. Any way, I am a fan of your work! Thank you for all you do.
Unfortunately, that’s not why people are against sex work; it’s an invented excuse for a form of bigotry that long predates the myth of widespread coerced prostitution. Furthermore, Rachel Moran was never a sex worker, forced or otherwise; she’s merely a liar who was hired by prohibitionist nuns to sell an invented story of evil “pimps” who don’t exist as she describes them. The fact of the matter is that there is no basis, legal or moral, for banning sex work; it’s an exercise in bigotry no different from anti-homosexuality laws, a moral abomination which our descendants will be just as ashamed of as we are of Jim Crow,
I wonder if Natalie has read Rachel Moran’s book. Unlike other similar authors Moran is not saying that pimps forced her or anyone else to become prostitutes. She wrote that she was forced by homelessness. Her boyfriend introduced her to it at 15. In 1993 there was a new law in Ireland which made it difficult for women to work on the street. She had to start working indoors and had a pimp then. Up till that time she did not have ‘paid intercourse’. She did not have vaginal penetrative sex up till 1993 (or paid anal sex ever), just handjobs and blowjobs. Moran espouses the Nordic model, but the Nordic model treats women who work together for safety as pimps. It also threatens their landlords with conviction under pimping offences unless they evict them. When the Nordic model came in in Northern Ireland, the first man to be arrested was arrested along with 3 women. And yet they pretend that prostitutes don’t get arrested under the Nordic model.