Ett pressmeddelande från SWANK: Sex Workers Action New York, SWOP - NYC: Sex Workers Outreach Project NYC, PONY: Prostitutes of New York samt Desiree Alliance angående guvenör Eliot Spitzers avgång i New York.
Via SWOP samt Bound, Not Gagged.
Uttalande från mina kollegor i New York handlar om det sexarbetare i Sverige och i hela världen kämpar för, mänskliga rättigheter för alla människor inkl. sexarbetare…
New York, NY
In the wake of former Governor Spitzer’s resignation, sex workers and human rights advocates remain concerned about the representation and future of “Kristen” and other sex workers, who do not have the legal and social privileges that will be afforded to Mr. Spitzer. The identity of the sex worker implicated in this case has already been made public, a situation mirroring many a sex worker’s worst nightmare. “Kristen’s” exposure may entail not only bring her legal repercussions, but invasion of privacy, financial hardship and social opprobrium.
Rather than continuing to sensationalize Spitzer’s actions and those directly involved, we urge the press and the public to shift their focus to the legal climate under which sex workers operate, while respecting “Kristen’s” agency to have chosen sex work as a viable source of income.
“Everyone wants to know how high her rates were, all the salacious details, but the real issue at stake here is that the hypocrisy of criminalizing sex work has been exposed!
It’s a part of our society, of every society, and we need to take this opportunity to stop with the value judgments and start coming up with policies that respect the human dignity of all people, sex workers and all workers.” says Dylan Wolfe of SWANK (Sex Workers Action New York).
Former Governor Spitzer took a lead role in developing the NY State Anti-Trafficking Law as well as other initiatives that stigmatize sex workers and their clients. It is the stigma of sex work that leads many individuals like “Kristen” to keep their occupations a secret, creating further isolation and opportunities for exploitation. This same stigma compromises the safety and well-being of people like “Kristen” when their private lives become public knowledge.
Sex workers are then forced to work further underground, rendering them more vulnerable to abuse, while denying them access to the basic civic participation, health and social services available to other people.
“Hopefully Mr. Spitzer’s unfortunate public decline will send a message to all like him who pass laws that endanger the safety of sex workers while indulging in the service themselves,” Sarah Bleviss of SWOP said, “Sex workers clearly provide them a very valuable service; it’s time for lawmakers to return the favor.”
Too little attention has been paid to what the repercussions of this case will be for those most directly concerned, sex workers, and more generally to the impact of laws and attitudes that marginalize them. It is time for a change.
Spitzer pushed through penalty enhancements against clients of all sex workers. Sex worker advocates fought against such provisions because these policies drive people who need help further underground. Often prostitution is wrongly conflated with trafficking and vice-versa. People are trafficked for many kinds of work, be it domestic labor, farm work or other jobs, and this kind of exploitation undoubtedly needs to be addressed.
The majority of men, women and transgendered people working in sex work, however, are ’normal’ members of society who have used their own intellectual agency to decide to make a living in a sexually-oriented way.
Laws, like the Mann Act (against inter-state transportation for the purposes of commercial sex), are too often used for punishing sex workers and their clients rather than those who profit from their exploitation.
Sex workers make a living in an industry with the potential for high risks and little by way of protection from abuse. The stigma surrounding our work can be lethal at its most extreme: we are often the targets of notorious serial killers, like the Green River Killer, Gary Ridgway who targeted prostitutes because he thought he “could kill as many of them as [he] wanted without getting caught.” If sex work were decriminalized and legitimized as a form of paid labor like any other, or seen simply as an intimate exchange between consenting adults, the associated harms would be greatly diminished.
Furthermore, sex workers could access their basic human rights and social services without fear of legal reprisal or personal upheaval. “Eliot Spitzer has represented himself to the public as a law and order man, and ironically, has been in the vanguard of further criminalizing sex workers and clients. . . However, it’s a shame that so much time, energy, and tax payer resources are being spent to criminalize consensual sex between adults. It’s time to decriminalize prostitution.” says Sarah Blake of Prostitutes of New York (PONY).
Incoming Governor Paterson and other law-makers need to create policies that actually reflect the realities of their own lives and those of their constituents, including sex workers, rather than the harmful legislation of morality, whereby private matters become public scandals.
Contacts
Madeleine Dash, Sex Workers Action New York (SWANK),
877-776-2004 x 2 swank@riseup.net
Audacia Ray, 718.554.1714
Sarah Bleviss, Sex Workers Outreach Project NYC (SWOP-NYC), swop.nyc@gmail.com
Prostitutes of New York (PONY), pony@panix.com
Desiree Alliance
http://www.BoundNotGagged.com
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Läs mer om “sexskandalen” i New York:
De senaste rubrikerna om skandalen i DN: “Kristen”: Jag är inget monster, En ny attraktion på Mayflower hotell och New Yorks guvernör tvingas gå.
Aftonbladet skrev igår: Hon fick Eliot Spitzer på fall och naturligtvis har även SvD skrivit om New York guvernörens avgång.
Jag uppmanar media i Sverige att ta till sig budskapet ovan från New York och tänka efter lite innan man publicerar artiklar om sexarbetare.
Bland de största tidningarna så har Sydsvenskan som vanligt skrivit minst om den här affären, de har enbart en rapporterande artikel från TT.
Och den mest tänkvärda artikeln om detta finns idag på ledarsidan i Sydsvenskan: Linje lusta i politiken, signerad av Mats Skogkär. Han skriver att finländarna kanske är Nordens fransmän. För i Frankrike betraktas den politiker som inte har några utomäktenskapliga förbindelser närmast med misstänksamhet…
“Den inställningen är knappast gångbar i Sverige, den omskrivna svenska synden till trots. Här hävdas arbetslinjen, inte linje lusta.
Men den trygge landsfadern Per Albin Hansson, statsminister 1932-46 och socialdemokratisk partiledare 1925-46, levde under många år ett komplicerat dubbelliv med två kvinnor, på den tiden en offentlig hemlighet. Det skulle nog inte gå idag.
I Sverige är dock pengar i allmänhet en betydligt känsligare fråga än sex – förutsatt att sex inte byts mot pengar.”
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Andra bloggar om: prostitution, media, politik, horstigma, New York
mänskliga rättigheter, sexarbete, sexarbetare, Eliot Spitzer, USA
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March 14th, 2008 at 6:37 pm
Citat:
It looks like the big winner in the Eliot Spitzer scandal isn’t David Paterson—it’s “Kristen,” aka Ashley Alexandra Dupre, whose song has been downloaded more than a million times from Amie Street in the past few days at $0.98 a pop, with 70% going to her. And now Penthouse wants to pay her… for something or other. She’s going to come out of this very wealthy.
http://amiestreet.com/ashleyalexandradupre
Det där kan man ju hoppas att det stämmer, och lika gott åt den dubbelmoraliserande Spitzer, blä.
March 14th, 2008 at 6:52 pm
Det hade ju varit kanon om det visar sig att hon drog det längsta strået.
March 15th, 2008 at 12:38 am
Amerikansk media fullständig översvämmas av artiklar som ofta har tusentals kommentarer (t.ex en i USA today 5.500) oftas handlar diskussionerna om prostitution ska vara legalt eller inte. Jag har roat mig med att läsa lite.
Här är en intressant artikel http://www.latimes.com/news/printedi…,5719205.story
av en kvinna som
“spent a year working at a legal, state-regulated brothel in Mexico, a nation in which commercial sex is common, visible and, in one-third of the states, legal. I was not working as a prostitute but as an anthropologist, to study and analyze the place of commercial sex in the modern world. I spent my days and nights in close contact with the women who sold sexual services, with their clients and with government bureaucrats who ran the brothel.”
boken i fråga
http://www.ucpress.edu/books/pages/10526.php
´
+ några videointervjuer med “high-paid hookers” i legala bordeller i Nevada
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/21134540…88192#23602355
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/21134540…88192#23586723
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/21134540…88192#23588192
Thoughts on Thoughts on Spitzer
http://www.reason.com/blog/show/125429.html
The oldest question about the oldest profession.
http://www.slate.com/id/2186243/pagenum/all/#
http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2008/mar/13/usa.gender
A governor who pays for sex should know to mould social policies on reality, not morality
March 16th, 2008 at 10:39 am
du är citerad i washington post
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/03/15/AR2008031501532.html?nav=hcmodule
March 16th, 2008 at 11:35 am
WOW! Så kul! Det får jag skriva ett inlägg om ….
March 19th, 2008 at 6:51 am
Försvarar du trafficking? (som de skrev att Spitzer lagstiftat emot) Det jag vet om trafficking är att de som smugglas hit och dit är mer eller mindre kidnappade och fruktansvärt utsatta.
March 19th, 2008 at 7:05 am
ok. nu har jag läst down the rabbitholes inlägg om trafficking, mycket intressant! som vanligt finns det fler sidor av verkligheten än den man får sig serverad i media… För jag tror ju att den verklighet som skildras i “Lilja forever” också existerar - du kan inte säga att antingen bara det ena eller det andra finns, oftast finns båda två.
March 19th, 2008 at 10:57 pm
Problemet er, at de fleste som “bekæmper trafficking” i virkeligheden er optaget af andre agendaer (om seksualmoral osv.), og at trafficking-temaet bruges som et “cover”, som disse andre agendaer kan retfærdiggøres under. Medier og almenheden vil også lade være med at kritisere såkaldte anti-trafficking-organisationer.