
April 1999 Cover
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Why is prostitution so vehemently suppressed? Cops arrest hookers
and hustlers, district attorneys target escort services for sting
operations, and neighbors copy down suspected johns' license plate numbers in
attempts to embarrass prostitution clients. Society assigns to sex workers
the social status of drug dealers and petty thieves. Our culture which
usually worships market economics reacts differently when the commodity
being hawked is sex. Why?
After you strip away all the red herring concerns about traffic
and health and shady business associations (which can all be addressed
through proper regulation, as in any other enterprise), opposition to
prostitution boils down to two assertions: first, that selling sex is morally wrong
and hurtful to society; and second, that prostitution is inherently
and uniquely exploitative of the individual sales people involved. We need
to expose both arguments as hypocritical lies.
Prostitution exists because there is a tremendous demand for
sex. People desperately want more sexual contact than our sexphobic
culture allows. This is one of the lessons that gay liberation has to teach
the world. If everyone were getting laid more regularly, could anyone
doubt that we'd have fewer uptight, neurotic, and frustrated people being
mean to one another in serious and sundry ways? Sex may not be the solution
to all the world's ills, but the lack of sex certainly is at the root of
many of them. By filling niches in the sexual market left void by
other institutions, prostitution has the potential to address some of
the destructive sex-denying dogma that so pollutes our culture.
The assertion that prostitution exploits the prostitute can be
true just as it can be true that the textile industry exploits mill workers
or grape growers exploit migrant laborers. As in any
wage-for-labor undertaking, there exists the possibility that the compensation will
not be commensurate with the work rendered and risks endured. Those
truly concerned about exploitation will press for careful regulation
and collective bargaining.
Anti-prostitution crusaders' professed concern about sex
workers' well-being is revealed as hypocrisy when one realizes who is wielding
the club. Those who claim that sex work per
se is so demeaning that it should be banned are themselves the ones who snub, ostracize, and
denigrate prostitutes. If prostitutes were accorded social respect as
skilled providers of a valued commodity, there would be nothing "demeaning"
about selling sex. Again, the problem lies in those who claim to have an
exalted view of sex, but who actually see it as shameful and wicked. If sex
were properly valued, prostitution would assume its rightful status as a
noble profession.
Prostitution is suppressed by those who fear sex, the same people
who fight to keep queers in closets. Let us fight alongside hookers
and hustlers to liberate everyone from the deadening fear that spawns
guilt and hypocrisy. Let us use our selves and our bodies to provide
pleasure and satisfaction to others, whether as amateurs or professionals. **
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Editorial from The Guide!
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