Made with Love

What the Swedish Model Gets Wrong About Prostitution

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Unfortunate use of illustration reinforcing stereotype, but otherwise excellent article on Time.com:




Making the purchase of sex a crime strips women of agency and autonomy. It should be decriminalized altogether.


Elizabeth Nolan Brown
July 19, 2014

Today, we’re seeing a global shift in prostitution attitudes that looks startlingly like the one in Victorian England. Many areas have adopted or are considering what’s known as the “Swedish” or “Nordic Model,” which criminalizes the buying, rather than the selling, of sexual services (because, as the logic goes, purchasing sex is a form of male violence against women, thus only customers should be held accountable). In this nouveau-Victorian view, “sexual slavery” has become “sex trafficking,” and it’s common to see media referring to brothel owners, pimps, and madams as “sex traffickers” even when those working for them do so willingly.

The Swedish model (also adopted by Iceland and Norway and under consideration in France, Canada and the UK) may seem like a step in the right direction—a progressive step, a feminist step. But it’s not. Conceptually, the system strips women of agency and autonomy. Under the Swedish model, men “are defined as morally superior to the woman,” notes author and former sex worker Maggie McNeill in an essay for the Cato Institute. “He is criminally culpable for his decisions, but she is not.” Adult women are legally unable to give consent, “just as an adolescent girl is in the crime of statutory rape.”

From a practical standpoint, criminalizing clients is just the flip side of the same old coin. It still focuses law enforcement efforts and siphons tax dollars toward fighting the sex trade. It still means arresting, fining and jailing people over consensual sex. If we really want to try something new—and something that has a real chance at decreasing violence against women—we should decriminalize prostitution altogether.

Read full article HERE
 
Didn't France say no to it?. Said it was too dangerous for the SP if I remember correctly.
 
It's a stupid law being pressed on by evangelicals and ex workers complaining they were abused, boohoo get to a cop, CONFINEMENT TORTURE ECT is and always has been illegal. These are the only sex workers the feminist and abolitionists want to speak to and protect, they do not give a rat's ass about putting consensual sex workers in harms way with their stupid laws.
 
A Swedish model receiving Swedish relaxation massage
 
Since Harper threw Mike Duffy under the bus and what Harper did to the other senators, maybe there is a chance that the senate will vote against it. Maybe just maybe a slight chance??? :Praying:
 
One thing we haven't tried yet is calling for a National day of Prayer and Fasting in the industry. Wouldn't that flip out the religious people that want to criminalize us?

:Praying: :Praying: :Praying: :Praying: :Praying: :Praying: :Praying: :Praying: :Praying:
 
Didn't France say no to it?. Said it was too dangerous for the SP if I remember correctly.

I don't know how that could work out. I lived in France and in the apt next door was a "Lady of the Evening". It ruined my life.
I couldn't get weed delivered because the fucking cops were always there as clients.
 
One thing we haven't tried yet is calling for a National day of Prayer and Fasting in the industry. Wouldn't that flip out the religious people that want to criminalize us?

:Praying: :Praying: :Praying: :Praying: :Praying: :Praying: :Praying: :Praying: :Praying:
Would be interesting to see how they react...
 
I always thought of Scandinavian countries as progressive and it kinda surprises me seeing their stupid model.

I am not surprised that France did not pass it- to my limited knowledge one of the few countries that people have a clear voice on every matter and don't leave the decisions to the hand of Politicians, even when they have voted for them. Look at how many strikes and demonstrations happen over there that are successful. Or at least that's my perception of that country. It seems to me that in most of the other democratic countries people just vote and after getting the seats, the politicians don't care what people think, they just do whatever they think is right, even though lots of time it isn't; then have to wait another term to change them...


Seems New Zealand has taken the lead in solving this issue in the most civilized and rational manner Praise-Bowing
 
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