Love & Sex Magazine

In the News (#1124)

By Maggiemcneill @Maggie_McNeill

March 31, 2021 by Maggie McNeill

Sex workers are a gift to people who stir up fake outrage for a living. - Mistress Matisse

Caring Professionals (#138)

It's been a while since I've seen this topic addressed so well:

Both...my stylist...and...microblade artist...are care workers. Their bodies-their hands-are necessary to their labor. Massage parlors...exist in a similar realm of personal care, like hair salons and permanent-makeup studios. These are all places where clients can pay for the intimacy of touch, the pleasure that touch affords. The difference, of course, is that what we call sex work-a kind of care work that is criminalized and socially opprobrious-happens here. And because it is labor that carries the threat of penalization, the burden of stigma and illegitimacy, the women who do this work become simultaneously more vulnerable, while their essential contributions to society remain invisible, devalued...

The Puritan Recrudescence (#892)

There's a reason I've repeatedly called this cult "dangerous":

I had been leading an independent lab for nearly 10 years studying various aspects of genital responsiveness, but the death threats first came when I published a study that did not support [the notion of] pornography addiction. The death threats were thick with misogyny and anti-semitism, which seemed bizarre as they simultaneously bragged that they were liberal bastions for equality. I went quickly to being physically stalked, moving my home multiple times, and now living in address protection...the Atlanta murder[s]...seemed to manifest the incredible vitriol I have watched grow. All of this occurred through "pornography addiction" forums on the Internet. Scientists have started studying these communities...as a part of a new anti-sexuality movement, which includes (1) anti-pornography feminists, (2) Internet porn addiction activists, and (3) religious morality groups...

Welcome to the Future (#1092)

I hope Pasco County, Florida is bankrupted by this lawsuit:

...a group of [Pasco] county residents, represented by the Institute for Justice, is suing the county over...years of harass[ment]...by cops...because [a "predictive policing"] system identified them as potential offenders. When the residents lost patience with the continued police presence in their lives...the red tape of the endless regulatory state [was used] against them to encourage compliance or to simply cause pain...In [one] case, deputies cited [their victim] for tall grass, but failed to notify him of the citation. Then, when he failed to appear for a hearing that he was never told was happening, they arrested him for failure to appear...The slow torture of tickets, arrests, and disrupted lives drove some to pick up and move out of Pasco County to avoid harassment...

In the News (#1124)In the News (#1124) Traffic Jam (#1107)

Mistress Matisse on why even not-quite-prohibitionist sex work documentaries are not quite good:

There are some hard-working sex workers in Hulu and ABC News' new documentary, Only Fans: Selling Sexy, and I respect them...being in a documentary about doing sex work is a gigantic leap of faith. We're rarely treated with respect, and sometimes not even with much humanity...such filmmakers favour drama and controversy, and choose to sensationalise the lived experiences of myself and my sex work peers...Hulu/ ABC News did better than most with their documentary - it's smoothly made, and it only made me wince a few times. But...in media, anyone who does sex work is deemed not to be a credible witness to their own life, so there are always non-sex workers in these documentaries who serve to confirm (or more often deny) what we say is real. Irony in 2021 is watching a glossy TV show inspired by a sex work website, which features non-sex working actors saying to the camera, in serious tones, that giving sex workers "all this attention" might make us "go too far". Ask yourself: why does that sound a little hypocritical to me?...

The bipartisan war on the internet moves us another step closer to idiocracy:

Senator Mark Warner['s]...SAFE TECH Act...is one of the worst 230 bills I've seen and would effectively end the open internet...Warner doesn't understand what he's talking about. At all...He...doesn't...understand how 230 works...or how...websites actually handle content moderation ...[he keeps] claiming that Section 230 has "turned into a get out of jail free card for large online providers"...Yet...this bill would help Facebook and Google by basically making it close to impossible for new competitors to exist, while leaving the market to those two...many critics have noted that smaller platforms would inevitably be harmed by Warner's bill...Warner...[claims] he's open to talking to smaller platforms, which is kind of laughable, considering that his staffers have been going around...lying about people...that have pointed out the problems with his bill...

Pyrrhic Victory (#1114)

The NY Times pretends to be critical of mass surveillance, yet opens this article with copsucking:

Clearview...deploy[ed its software by stealing]...billions of photos from the...internet...After Clearview's activities came to light, [politicians bloviated for the cameras and passed do-nothing local laws easily circumvented by cops]...It seemed entirely possible [to the hopelessly-naive] that Clearview AI would be sued, legislated or shamed out of existence. But [of course] that didn't happen. With no federal law prohibiting or even regulating the use of facial recognition, Clearview did not...change its practices...it [has] continued to acquire government customers...[and] is valued at nearly $109 million...it [has over]... 3,100 [cop shops and other purveyors of organized violence as]...customers [including the military and]... ICE...The legal threats to Clearview have [only just] begun to move through the courts ...civil-liberties advocates fear the company will prevail, and they are aghast at the potential consequences...

Predictable Consequences

Two more of my friends have thoughts on this tragedy. Kaytlin Bailey:

There are a over a hundred years of propaganda and policy behind the idea that sex workers and immigrants "infect" communities. Asian women in particular have been fetishized and demonized, becoming the first targets of anti-prostitution and anti-immigration laws in the United States ...In 1875, the Page Act barred Asian women from entering the country, for presumed "lewd and immoral purposes," and police...began arresting droves of Asian women for prostitution. US officials openly hoped that by driving out Asian women, they could prevent Asian people from settling and starting families here...

And Liz Brown:

...Blaming women for male lust is an old and all-too-common trope among those who commit or excuse violence against women. And it's a trope thoroughly rooted in common cultural messages about sexuality...we may have come a long way from the assumption that all sexy women are "asking for it," but holding women responsible for men's sexual urges and actions is still far from a fringe attitude. And again and again, we see the milder version of this distorted by the minds of self-loathing psychopaths to hold that women deserve to pay for the desire men feel toward them. Sex workers are particularly vulnerable to this type of misogyny. Which is why it's especially clueless and crass for certain media to be blaming sex work in the wake of the Atlanta massage parlor shootings...

But the big news this week is Polaris' tacit admission of blood on its hands:In the News (#1124)In the News (#1124)

...following the attacks...anti-sex work organization Polaris Project deleted multiple pages that made claims about massage parlors as dens of sex trafficking...Polaris removed its page for "human trafficking in illicit massage businesses"...According to an archived snapshot of the site, the...page was up as of March 18, two days after the attacks...by the next day...the page returned a "not found" error. The [memory-holed] page...featured a series of grainy images of massage parlors overlaid with titles like "Massage parlor trafficking networks and organized crime," and "Your role in ending massage parlor trafficking"...


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