by Furry Girl
07.29.11
I'm excited to see that everything is on track to raise $7300 for SWAAY's billboard. It's 36% funded after 11 days, and we have 19 more days to get the rest. (The billboard is being done through Epic Step, a company that works like Kickstarter for billboards.) I know we're in a recession and everyone's watching their money, but this project is guaranteed get a huge amount of attention from the general public. Not BDSM conference attendees, not sex blog readers, not feminists, not sex radicals - but regular people who have probably never even heard the term sex work. This is exactly what I want to do with SWAAY. Please donate here.
And, if this billboard is funded, you can also get some cool stuff. Check out the list:
* Anyone who donates $7 or more gets a 10-pack of SWAAY stickers.
* The first person to donate $325 and email swaay AT swaay.org gets a one-of-a-kind handmade horror doll from Norma Jean Almodovar, one of the godmothers of the American sex workers' rights movement.
* Sex workers who donate $100 or more get 3 free months from Safe Office. This offer is open only to adult service providers, not the general public. Here's the info:
Safe Office is a subscription based website designed specifically for erotic service providers. Users can track their contacts, schedule, projects, and more in a secure environment. Get sensitive data off PCs and phones that are notoriously NOT secure and at risk of theft, damage, or seizure. Enjoy the privacy and reliability of offshore venue and hosting. Protect the privacy of both service providers and their clients. Although it is often denied, all professionals keep data in some form, YOUR CLIENTS WANT YOU TO PROTECT THEIR CONFIDENTIALITY by keeping it safe. If you are using a spreadsheet, "black-book," software on your PC, or a website that is not specifically designed for security, you need Safe Office. Track an unlimited number of Alias Names, Handles on Boards, Email Addresses, Phone Numbers, and more. Make Notes about Client Preferences. Use the Mailing List feature to announce your next Tour per City. We have many tools to allow separation of a provider's work life from their personal life. Also included is a comprehensive Resource-List of professionals friendly to the industry; and a Watch-List of clients, hotels, and others that are reported by members to be unfriendly to the industry. We help you organize your business, increase your profits, protect your privacy, and keep you safe.
We are offering three months added to your Safe Office subscription if you contribute $100 or more to SWAAY's "Sex Work Definition Billboard" project (click here for details). Existing subscribers will get three months added to their current subscription (so whether your current plan is monthly, quarterly, or yearly - your next payment is moved forward three months). If you are not currently a subscriber to Safe Office, we will setup an account and your first three months are free (new subscribers must be verified as established providers).
With all of these freebies, make sure you email your donation receipt to swaay AT swaay.org after August 17th if the billboard is funded. With Norma Jean's doll, email right away to claim that, since that offer is only good for one lucky donor.
by Furry Girl
07.28.11
Unlike some other people in the sex blogger world, I am totally appalled by No Man's Land, a self-published book of photos of supposed sex workers taken from Google's Street View. The seller of this self-published book has no way of knowing whether or not the women in the photos are actual sex workers or not, although some of them do look more "hooker-y" than others. The point is, none of the subjects of this photo book gave their permission to have photos of them appear in a book of "women soliciting sex." If these women are not sex workers, they would probably be horribly offended at having their photos in a book about rural and urban prostitutes. If these women are sex workers, they probably don't want to be outed as such by a British hipster artist who wants to make money off of them.
Violet Blue is one of the people defending and promoting this book, and rather than rehash what I already posted in her comments, I'll just repost both sides of our disagreement, and you can decide for yourself whether No Man's Land is in the right for selling these images.
Furry Girl:
I hope that if any of the women unwillingly appearing in this book find out about it, they sue the shit out of the guy selling it. While some of the images do look more “hookery” than others, I imagine that many of the women in these photos merely happen to be outdoors when the Google car was passing. This is no different than when police publish mugshots of sex workers against their will. Both involve outsiders sensationalizing and preying upon vulnerable and unwilling photo subjects. There’s nothing hip or arty about some dude selling an expensive collection of photos (which he didn’t even take) where he accuses the subjects (whom he has never met) of being sex workers. It’s a collection of stolen material where the author tries to out women as whores. Barf.
Violet Blue:
I see it very differently, but thanks for your constructive criticism. I find all the cultural dilemmas interesting – in addition to seeing it as raising awareness, however you slice it. I’m sure Google isn’t pleased. I think it’s very different than mug shot publishing for a lot of reasons – Smoking Gun, for example. But were they unwilling? I don’t feel comfortable in assuming how these women would feel about anything, let alone their blurred images in this book – fwiw Google did not ask them, either, and these images are globally publicly available. I don’t see labeling someone as a sex worker as being an ‘accusation’ but I am not a sex worker, nor do I see it as a bad thing. I do agree it’s expensive.
Furry Girl:
I personally know no sex workers from Eastern Europe, where these images originated. You are right in that I cannot know for certain that these women would not want their images put in a hipster art book about rural prostitutes. But is it better to assume that all women *would* want to be featured in the book, whether or not they are prostitutes? When faced with a decision about how to err when you don’t know a person’s wishes, I think it’s best to err on the side of not exploiting them or labeling them as prostitutes. It’s an issue of consent. Lack of saying “no” does not mean “yes.” While Google Streetview also did not ask these women for their permission to photograph them, Google isn’t the one saying that they are probably hookers, either.
What do you think? Is it best to err on the side of collecting photos of women you find online, labeling them as hookers, and selling those photos in an "art" book? Or am I the one being paternalistic and oppressing the women in this book by assuming that they don't want some strange guy calling them hookers and profiting off of their images?
Since no real book publisher is going to publish a book of images lifted from Google's copyrighted Street View collection, No Man's Land is for sale on a print-on-demand web site called Blurb.com. I've already sent a complaint, but I hope more people will join me. Please email Blurb here and ask for them to cease production and hosting of No Man's Land. (The "book" is also hosted by Blurb and available for free online in its entirety.) I imagine Blurb cares more about someone publishing copyrighted images that belong to Google than they do about sex workers' right to privacy or civilian women's right to not be called hookers by some hipster "artist," so take which argument angle you think works best. Here's an update, an email from Blurb:
Thank you for your message and for raising your concern about potential copyright issues with the book titled 'No Man's Land". As you know, Blurb takes copyright issues very seriously. Being in the business of user-generated content, we rely on our community to spot potential copyright violations (we do not edit, monitor or review the content of our authors, as we are not a publisher).
We have initiated an investigation as to whether the book you reference violates Blurb's End User License Agreement. Since the copyright in question is not yours, we will not follow up with you with regard to the outcome of the investigation -- but we do sincerely appreciate you flagging the potential issue.
Also, there's a hosting platform called Issuu that is providing free hosting for this photo collection as well. Since they have a convoluted help ticket system, the easiest way to reach them might be on Twitter. Tweet @issuu and ask them why they're hosting a collection of stolen photos that could be considered libel.
We can't stop people from creating offensive and exploitative representations of sex workers, or of women in general. But we can make complaints to companies that provide free hosting services for such materials.
Update: I am no longer going to be publishing comments from people who want to smugly pontificate about whether this counts as "art." That's utterly irrelevant, and I'm tired of men telling me that the issue here is that I "just don't understand art."
by Furry Girl
07.27.11
Though she's been an adult entertainer since the 1980s, Kimberly Kupps is currently best known as half of the Florida couple who was arrested for shooting porn in the privacy of their own home. Like me, Kimberly operates her own independent porn site, so it's a case that definitely caught my attention. Some sex workers mistakenly view porn as legal, easy, and even dismiss it as "sex work lite," because supposedly, those of us who make porn don't break any laws and face no risk. As a pornographer, even if you are trying to stay within the bounds of the law and don't shoot anything "extreme," you can find yourself dealing with an obscenity prosecution, as Kimberly and her husband have learned this summer.
The pair was arrested on June 3rd by their local Polk County Sheriff, who is going after them as a part of a war on porn to clean up the conservative area. (Sheriff Grady Judd is also facing a federal civil rights lawsuit for allegedly harassing another local woman for her atheist organization.) Kimberly and her husband are being represented by well-known first amendment attorney Lawrence Walters. Walters is donating part of his fee, but there are still plenty of costs being incurred with mounting a strong legal defense, so Kimberly has set up a defense fund. Please donate if you can. You know you would want the same done for you if you were facing a legal battle due to your own adult work - whatever type of work that may be.
Although their computers were seized by the police, Kimberly recently took the time to do an interview with me from her iPhone.
Furry Girl: First, can you tell us who you are, what you do, and how long you've been involved in the adult industry?
Kimberly Kupps: I started dancing in Houston, Texas in 1980 at Ricks after seeing an article in Playboy magazine that the dancers there could make up to $1,000 a day. Having worked at the University of South Florida as a medical secretary, hardly making anything, it looked very attractive. I stayed there for almost 10 years, then I heard of some girls getting large implants and doing magazine shoots and touring as a feature dancer. Since my husband and I both loved to travel, we went for it in 1990, going with the name Kimberly Kupps (Kimberly since I liked Kim Bassenger). I danced all over the US and Canada, also shooting over 100 magazine sets (for Gent, Leg Show, Busty Mag etc). After a few years, the fans and clubs wanted to see the feature dancers "in action." Having been with a husband who loved me in all situations (we are both nudists) we jumped right in and went to Los Angles and started shooting XXX sets on a regular basis. That is fun, and you start getting a following of fans who then come to your stage shows and buy items such as magazines you have been in and Polaroids taken with them after the show. After over a million miles of driving all over the US and Canada, working 6 days a week, the business got less attractive since more and more girls were starting, and by then it was not a unique thing any more. When the world wide web was starting, we opened KimberlyKupps.com, both running the site and taking the photos.
FG: Was your web site your sole source of income, or do you have a day job?
KK: Having created an extensive worldwide fan base due to the 100+ adult videos I have been in, it creates a oportunity of ongoing sales of "personal videos," which is when a fan creates a idea that he wants to see me doing, mostly by myself talking to the camera saying "his" name so he gets the video as if I was there with him. The website is our primary source of both income and reference to others of where I might be performing or shooting my next video. Both my husband and I have met some wonderful people all over the world.
FG: What charges are you and your husband facing, and what are the maximum sentences and fines you could be looking at?
KK: 13 charges of selling obscenity, one felony of commercial distribution of obcenity for the both of us. We have not asked the sentences nor fines since we whole heartedly believe in our innocence and the US's freedoms.
FG: What specifically about your content has the state alleged to be obscene?
KK: I will answer vaguely since they might use anything against us. We did get questions on a "POV" [point-of-view] clip, but it is a solo one. They think it is me with [a fan in person], but it is me talking to him as if he was there. We have NEVER done fisting, rape style content, underage people, BDSM or bondage with sex. We do not understand [our prosecution] when we can get all this stuff on DishNetwork on our TV now!
FG: How did the local and national media reacted to your arrest?
KK: From what our friends told us about the media coverage (in the Lakeland Ledger) and a few TV news reports, the commentary has been 95% positive.
FG: You've started a defense fund to help with your legal costs. How has response and support been from others in the sex industry?
KK: Support has been okay, but since it is not yet a national issue, others either forget or do not care since it is not their problem. But if [the state wins], the next county over will say, "Hey let's do it, too," and it starts a domino effect.
FG: Is there anything else you want people to know about you and your case?
KK: It DOES affect all citizens of the US to choose what they want to view in the privacy of their own home. This invasion of our privacy and first amendment freedoms need to be defended at all costs! Please do not take the freedoms you think the constitution guarantees for granted.
by Furry Girl
07.25.11
Sex work activism, by the nature of our industry, doesn't naturally lend itself to a multi-generational struggle. So many people who do sex work do so only when they are young, and for brief periods of time (perhaps even only once). While there are some older sex workers' rights who are still around, ours is a movement made up largely of those under the age of 30. (I'm 27, and having recently passed the 9 year anniversary of my first porn shoot makes me feel like an old lady.)
The lack of longer-term perspectives is why I'm so happy to have an interview with one of the original American sex work activists, Norma Jean Almodovar, and have her share her views from several decades of experience. She also explains her amazing-sounding multimedia project that's currently in development,"Old Whores and Aging Porn Stars- First Person Accounts of the Sex Worker Rights Movement in America."
If you want to own a cool piece of Norma Jean's art and history, check out this offer to get one of her handmade horror dolls by donating to the billboard campaign. For those of you short on time, I bolded some favorite parts of the interview, although I consider the whole thing a great read on our history.
...
Furry Girl: For those who haven't read your book, Cop to Call Girl, can you summarize how you came to be a sex worker?
Norma Jean Almodovar: To make a very long story short, in 1972 I was hired by the Los Angeles Police Department as a civilian traffic officer after my first husband, Mr. Almodovar, turned down the opportunity to join the force. He had sent for an application for a job with the LAPD but by the time they sent it, he was then working as a carpenter, making fairly good money and was no longer interested in the job. I filled out the paperwork and within a year, I was hired and started at the police academy. In 1972, women were not hired as police officers- although there were policewomen, they were only allowed to work in the office or in the jails but not on the streets or driving a patrol car. To be a police woman, the height requirement was 5'8" and I was 5'4" and not about to have a growth spurt. I took the job as a traffic officer because it allowed me to work outside and I knew that eventually the height requirement would be lowered and I could become a sworn officer. However, in the ten years that followed, I became more and more disillusioned with my job, the LAPD and police work in general. Corruption ran rampant and there was no one to turn to who could or would do anything about it. I learned I had to keep my mouth shut or I might end up dead, as several cops and prostitutes did who squealed on the bad officers.
In the beginning, I was quite attracted to my fellow officers and had a number of affairs with them. I learned from a female colleague that if I wanted to advance in the department, I would need to learn how to "give head" to the right people rather than just have promiscuous sex with every handsome cop I met. I never followed her advice and continued to date whomever I wanted for whatever reason that suited me. Unfortunately, I also learned that those same cops I went to bed with believed that women who enjoyed sex were whores... and they couldn't be bothered to give me sexual pleasure during our encounters. Eventually I stopped dating all cops when I met the man who later became my second husband and who is the love of my life (and still is after 35 years). Toward the end of my career with the LAPD, there was a Captain who was retiring and who had always wanted to get into my pants... so two cops I knew approached me and offered $200 if I would be the going away present for this Captain. I was insulted and told them that if I was ever going to be a prostitute, the cops were not going to be my pimps. That incident did get me thinking about prostitution and I really had to reexamine my own beliefs about sex, morality and money.
My normal assignment throughout most of my career was working the nightwatch in Hollywood, Rampart and Downtown LA from 6:00 pm to 2:00 am or even as late as 4:00 am... depending on the number of stolen cars I had to recover, or if there was a major incident like a fire or a homicide at which I was to direct traffic. Usually I worked by myself, always without a gun, driving a patrol car into the wee hours of the morning even though I was only a "civilian" officer. Assigning me to this late shift was part of a pilot program to see if women could be assigned to work out on the streets safely. So in essence I was a guinea pig for all future female officer who now get to work in the field because I managed to survive my dangerous assignments.
So there I was on April 18, 1982, driving my patrol car up on Hollywood Blvd. when my vehicle was rear ended by a drunk driver in a stolen car filled with stolen property. It was about 2:00 am and I was making my rounds on Hollywood Blvd and about to make a left turn onto a side street where I was to impound a stolen car. But before I could make the turn, I saw a car come racing erratically up behind me in my rear view mirror, and it plowed into the back of my car. The driver backed up and took off again while I called for help.
The driver was caught after a short chase by some undercover officers who were working nearby. I was taken to the hospital for x-rays, and by 5 am, I was released and sent home. I had re-injured my back and would be on workman's comp for a while... but that was the end of my career with the LAPD. I went home after getting out of the hospital, tore up my uniform and cut up my shoes and vowed never to go back to work for the LAPD again in any capacity.
When my disability payments were about to end and it was time to either go back to work for them or to find some other line of work, I decided to become a call girl. I knew several call girls from my days on the department and I went to one of them and asked her to introduce me to her madam. I took to the work like a duck takes to water! I found my calling and for the years I was able to work (before the trial and incarceration happened), it was the best time in my life. I loved my work, my clients and the fact that I had time to do all the other things I enjoy- like writing and creating art. Not to mention lots of time to spend with the man I love- the man who shares my life and has for over 35 years now.
Was there a particular event that motivated you to become an activist?
In addition to needing to earn a living while pursuing my other interests, there was a major consideration for me in becoming an outcast whore- and that was to be able to make a public statement about the police corruption (in particular surrounding enforcement of laws prohibiting consenting adult prostitution) and how the laws perpetuate abuse and corruption. I witnessed the abominable treatment of underage prostitutes- whom the public expected were being "rescued" from a life of horror on the streets of Hollywood. Instead, the cops emotionally tortured and harassed these girls, ridiculing them and forcing them to urinate on themselves while handcuffed to the bench in the police station where they were kept for hours before being processed into the system. When I questioned the practice, I was told that it was better for them than having to be out on the street and forced to sell their bodies for their pimp. I wondered how that was possible... that it was better. I don't think the girls felt that they were better off.
When I decided to become a prostitute- at the risk of being disowned by my family and friends- from the very beginning it was my plan to expose the corruption and challenge society to do something about it. And the only way to do that was to become an activist and go public. I was very fortunate that my family and friends did not disown me... and years later, when I was released from prison, my fundamentalist born again Christian mother joined me on a national talkshow (Sally Jessie Raphael) and told Sally that I hadn't made any worse choices than her other children (she had 14) and that it wasn't her job to judge me- that was God's job.
As one of the founders of the American sex workers' rights movement, how do you see things as having changed over the years?
When I first became involved with Margo St. James and COYOTE, I really thought that we were close to decriminalizing consenting adult prostitution. We were all very optimistic that the work she and the others who were in the movement before me had done now seemed to be bearing positive results. That was in 1983 I think. In San Francisco she and COYOTE were getting a lot of positive attention and the conferences she organized got some good press. By this time I had been arrested on one count of pandering and was facing three to six years in prison. I did many interviews with journalists from the local and national papers then and all the journalists seemed very favorable to our cause. Even the conservative Ben Stein wrote a column about my case and the fact that it was a clear violation of my first amendment rights.
But in the early 1990s, we all noticed a change in the media. The graduates from womens' studies classes in which they were taught how "horrible" prostitution was and how it exploited all women were now getting jobs writing for those media outlets. There was a definite change in the way we were portrayed. All the media allies from the earlier years were afraid to write positive stories about our activities... because the radical feminists were out there taunting them and saying that they supported the enslavement of women if they wrote positive things about sex workers.
I was an NGO delegate to the 1995 UN Women's Conference in Beijing, one of five prostitutes from around the world who attended the conference with the sole purpose of changing some of the wording of the Platform for Action, the document which is used to enact legislation in member countries world wide. There were two paragraphs especially that concerned the sex worker rights activists, and we five lobbied the government delegates for two weeks and in the end, we were successful. Unfortunately, the radical feminists have ensured that the changes we made had absolutely no impact on how the laws are enforced.
Here are the paragraphs- original and after we got them changed:
Paragraph# 100
Old version:
100. Sexual and [gender based] violence, including physical and psychological abuse, trafficking in women and girls, other forms of abuse [and prostitution] place girls and women at high risk of physical and mental trauma, disease [and unwanted pregnancy]. Such situations often deter women from using health and other services.
Amended Text:
100. Sexual and gender-based violence, including physical and psychological abuse, trafficking in women and girls, and other forms of abuse and sexual exploitation place girls and women at high risk of physical and mental trauma, disease and unwanted pregnancy. Such situations often deter women from using health and other services.
Paragraph #225
Here's the way the original text read:
225. Violence against women both violates and impairs of nullifies the enjoyment by women of human rights and fundamental freedoms. There has been a long-standing failure to protect and promote these rights and freedoms in relation to violence against women. Gender-based violence and all forms of sexual harassment, prostitution, pornography, sexual slavery and exploitation, including those violations resulting from cultural prejudice, racism and racial discrimination, xenophobia, ethnic cleansing, religious and anti-religious extremism and international trafficking in women and children, are incompatible with the dignity and worth of the human person and must be eliminated...
Amended text reads:
225. Violence against women both violates and impairs or nullifies the enjoyment by women of human rights and fundamental freedoms. Taking into account the Declaration on the Elimination of Violence against Women and the work of Special Rapporteurs, gender-based violence, such as battering and other domestic violence, sexual abuse, sexual slavery and exploitation, and international trafficking in women and children, forced prostitution and sexual harassment, as well as violence against women, resulting from cultural prejudice, racism and racial discrimination, xenophobia, pornography, ethnic cleansing, armed conflict, foreign occupation, religious and anti-religious extremism and terrorism are incompatible with the dignity and the worth of the human person and must be combated and eliminated. Any harmful aspect of certain traditional, customary or modern practices that violates the rights of women should be prohibited and eliminated. Governments should take urgent action to combat and eliminate all forms of violence against women in private and public life, whether perpetrated or tolerated by the State or private persons.
As you know, the abolitionists/ prohibitionists has persuaded the legislators to ignore that word "forced..." because they claim there is no difference between "forced" and "free choice" prostitution.
What was the most difficult thing sex workers' rights activists fought for or against in the beginning, and has that changed over time?
Margo's crusade started because of police harassment and abuse, and that's really what got me involved in sex work and the prostitutes rights movement from the beginning. Because prostitution is against the law, it gives police officers unparalleled opportunity to extort us for sex, money and information. Obviously decriminalizing consenting adult prostitution would take that power away from the cops and so for me and most all of the old whores the issue was decrim, decrim, decrim...
From the very start of my career as a call girl and in becoming an activist, I always came from the perspective of having witnessed the corruption from the other side, so for me, decriminalization of all consenting adult commercial sex is the most important thing I have been and will continue to fight for. The best way to do that is through education- not of sex workers necessarily, but of the public. That's why I founded ISWFACE- International Sex Worker Foundation for Art, Culture and EDUCATION... because if we don't tell the public who we are and what their idiotic laws do to us, who will? Educate them by sharing our art, our films, our websites, our writings, and let them get to know us as people with lives, families, futures. Let them know the consequences of bad laws- the erosion of our civil liberties, the corruption of law enforcement and the judicial system.
Unfortunately it is very difficult to get heard when the radical leftist feminists and religious conservatives have essentially shut us out of the public discourse about our lives. The media continues to hammer away at this idea that we are all sex slaves- victims of trafficking, exploitation and degradation. We must find a way to be heard - so that the public can't ignore us or our message. That was what we fought for back then and we must continue to do so. That hasn't changed... only the way we go about it has changed I think. We must be media savvy and train new activists to be the same.
Could you share a story about an activist failure or disaster you have experienced, and how you were able to recover and learn lessons from the set back?
I think the biggest disaster I was part of was the ill-fated 1999/2000 summer project in Butte Montana. The project would have been terrific if we had been aware of the history of the man from whom ISWFACE was buying the Dumas Brothel to turn into our international headquarters and a museum. Unfortunately, those who viewed us as saviors of the historic building said they did not want to scare us off by telling us what kind of man the owner of the building was. If I had known what this man was like, I probably would have gone ahead with this venture, but I would have done many things differently.
When we had this amazing opportunity to purchase the Dumas and move up to Montana, I had visions of having an annual Whore Camp, where sex workers from around the world would come every summer to help us restore this wonderful old building in Butte- a city that once had the second largest red light district in the US. In addition to the restoration project, we planned to have cultural events to which the local community was invited so they could get to know sex workers as real people. And, it would also be an opportunity to bond sex workers together and recruit more activists and teach them how to do what us old timers had been doing. We planned workshops and seminars- all as part of our "ICE" camp (International Cultural Exchange) or Whore Camp (which is what WE called it, but some of the local citizens of Butte were offended by that term). We had a fabulous biker rally that first summer, which was stolen from us by Butte resident Evel Knievel... and during that first summer, former US Surgeon General Dr. Joycelyn Elders came to Butte to dedicate a condom postcard that was "found" in one of the basement cribs. (The Dumas Brothel was built AS a brothel in 1890 and ran as a brothel until 1982...making it the longest running house of prostitution in the United States. It is the last intact example of Victorian/Western brothel architecture anywhere)
To make a long story short, after I got all sorts of publicity for the brothel and our project, including a small piece in Time Magazine, this man decided he wanted the brothel back so he could sell it to someone else for more money. We were paying about $95,000 for it, even though it needed SO much work and was falling down on one side. We gave him $15,000 cash and were making his mortgage payments on that building as well as his house... and he was operating five businesses out of the huge building. Anyway, we took him to court, we lost, it cost us over $150,000 plus equipment that belonged to me personally, and he got everything. Why did we lose when we had solid documentation of his lies? Because we were whores from out of state and he was a native son.
It took me three years to get over the anger and disappointment of this experience. The lessons I learned were that no matter how "whore positive" a community may appear to be, doing one's due diligence is a must for any sex worker project. I still think that Whore Camp is a viable project- but something that I don't want to be a part of. I am getting too old and am in too much pain to attempt such an ambitious project again in my lifetime. (see attached images from Time Mag and Biker Mag)
Here are some of the original workshop plans for Whore Camp 1999:
Health and safe sex into the next millennium- [2 workshops] Dr. Joycelyn Elders
Fiction Writing workshop
The Image of Women in Western Film lecture
History of Butte’s Red Light District lecture
History of Alaska/Yukon Gold Rush Red Light District
Photography workshop
Sculpting workshop
Women in Business workshop
Video Workshop-I
Makeup and Glamor workshop
Performance art/ acting workshop
Stain glass workshop
Jewelry design workshop
International cooking
International crafts workshops
Self-defense and Yoga
Business and financial planning workshops
Unionization and labor issues
Some of the cultural events we planned:
Special midnight tours of the Brothel, conducted by celebrity sex workers
Design and build one or more floats for the 4th of July parade and a portable “crib” for the New York and international exhibits
Field trips/ swimming, fishing, hiking, horseback riding, various sports
Kids week begins last week of June (June 27- July 5). [To coincide with Butte’s 4th of July celebration, we are planning a “kids week” for sex workers with children. We are organizing special workshops and other activities that will be of specific interest to kids of all ages and nationalities, such as athletic competitions between local Butte resident children and the kids of sex workers. The kids should enjoy helping the adults create a special float for the 4th of July parade.]
Trip to Helena (with picnic) [possibly monthly outing]
JUNE CULTURAL ACTIVITIES:
Evening of Comedy
Evening of Music/ Dance
Movie nights: classic mainstream movies dealing with sex work (Cheyenne Social Club, Risky Business, Best Little Whore House in Texas, etc.)
Poetry Readings: sex worker poets from around the world
International Cuisine Nights (based on how well the cooking classes go!)
Interaction with students and academics
STUDENT /ACADEMIC PARTICIPATION:
The brothel restoration project offers students and researchers alike a rare opportunity to interact on a daily basis with real individuals from one of the most studied groups of people in the world. Because this project integrates a number of interrelated fields, it is an ideal “living” classroom and offers students in those many fields a chance to learn “on the job.”
In this casual environment, students who major in archeology, mining, history, engineering, anthropology, language, sociology and so forth, will be working in tangent with sex workers to preserve a valuable piece of American history.
We asked professors from various universities to develop a summer course for students majoring in the following areas, which would give them course credits for volunteering their time for the brothel restoration project. Naturally, the professors will also be invited to participate.
•archeology •art
•sociology dept. •anthropology
•history •women’s studies
•language studies •engineering
•mining •architecture
•film •photography
•criminal justice/ criminology •health/social services department
•journalism •political science
•museum studies
You get the idea.
What do you think sex workers' rights activists were better at doing in the early days?
I don't have an opinion on this... sex worker rights activists have always been unpaid volunteers and we always do whatever we can whenever and however we can... I don't know if we did it better back then or not.
What about the current crop of sex workers' rights activists impresses or inspires you?
I hate to say this, but it seems to me that many of the new sex worker activists have no clue about many of the activities and activists from my day. I have read some of the websites created by sex worker activists and they leave out so much of our history and don't seem to know of the conferences and other events that we old timers put our hearts and souls into organizing.
In 1997, for example, COYOTE LA co-organized and co-sponsored the International Conference on Prostitution (ICOP) with Cal State University Northridge- we had the first international hooker's ball and brought sex workers from all over the world... and we (not the university) got Dr. Elders (former US Surgeon General) involved in this issue. But somewhere I read that the recent Desiree Alliance conferences were the "first time academics and sex workers got together..." leaving out all the other conferences which Margo and others organized that did exactly that.
So I am kind of disappointed that there isn't more accuracy in presenting our history out there, which is why I decided to make this an ISWFACE project- a history of our movement from the activists themselves... not a book about our history as told by some academic who was not there... The multi-media project is titled "Old Whores and Aging Porn Stars- First Person Accounts of the Sex Worker Rights Movement in America." Eventually I hope that all the sex worker activists around the world will join this project and we can expand the website portion to include their stories and history. ISWFACE will be announcing this project very soon. We are putting our proposal together for funding and we already have the domain name for this project... www.oldwhoresandagingpornstars.com
While the project begins back when the sex worker rights movement got started, it will encompass all the current activists and info, as follows: individuals, organizations, events and outcomes. It will be formatted as an ongoing conversation - weaving in and out of the dialogue between activists. We are looking for volunteers who can help us process all the information and also who can do video and audio interviews which will be posted on the website.
Have your views on activist strategies and campaigning changed over the years, and if so, how?
Our strategy must focus on educating the public. We have to counter the lies told by the abolitionists/ prohibitionists. The public hears only what the numbers are- and don't understand how these fake statistics are obtained. The public is our only hope- they can persuade the legislators to change the laws, but only if they understand the problems with bad laws. We must work with academics who are pro-decrim and get research funded which counters the fraudulent claims of those prohibitionists.
We must find ways of funding our efforts to educate the public. Back when I got involved in activism, we were just so eager to get out there and we did not cultivate clients or allies for the purpose of having them help fund our campaign. Like so many of us old timers, I self-funded most of my activities and ended up a broke old whore. We have to change that if we expect other sex workers to become activists. If I knew how to cultivate big donors, I would do so. One of the things I learned after ICOP was that we had to form non profit organizations so we could raise money and offer tax incentives to those brave enough to contribute to our cause. ISWFACE was the first 501(c)3 organization among sex worker activists groups that I know of. COYOTE was/is a political organization and cannot get a 501(c)3 designation... so ISWFACE focused not on political activism, but educational activism. We are a repository for sex worker writings, artwork, history, culture and information. Our physical library contains newsletters and 'zines from sex worker organizations around the world. Click here to read our mission statement and purpose.
We are in the process of digitizing all the material we have in our library and make it available on our website where it can be accessed by everyone, anywhere. Unfortunately because we do not have the financial resources to pay people to help us do this, it is a very long term project. Volunteers get overwhelmed and burn out. We need funding to pay for this work to be done. It is not easy to find sources of funding even with our non profit status because being on this side of the issue is not politically correct and donors want to "help victims of human trafficking" not help intelligent, independent and competent sex workers educate the public. We need to get this information into colleges and universities where the next generation of journalists and elected officials will hear a different point of view and go out into the world with this knowledge.
More sex worker groups have to find a way to get their non profit status or they cannot accept large contributions - because most people and foundations that offer grants require that the money go to a 501(c)3 organization. It is expensive and time consuming to do the paperwork for obtaining a 501(c)3 designation, but it is well worth it when you can find someone to make a substantial donation. Without a significant source of funding for all our sex worker organizations, ten years from now we will be exactly where we are now- nowhere.
What are the most pressing issues you would like to see sex work activists focus on in the coming 10 years?
I think this question is answered by many of my responses above: raising money, funding sex work positive research, educating the public, challenging the laws...
What message would you like to share with people who are thinking about getting involved in sex workers' rights activism, but have so far hesitated?
Becoming an activist is a huge commitment... and once it gets into your blood, you can't stop. I know, I've tried. I promised my husband a hundred times that I was never going to be an activist again. But yet I am still here- still spending all my waking moments (other than taking care of him now that he is disabled and mostly bedridden) engaged in activism.
I will never benefit from any positive changes we make in the laws- I am too old to work in the profession I love, and have no desire to be an employer for others (working as a madam). That aside, the only reason I continue to spend every dime I ever had and every waking moment on this is because I want to live in a world in which I have the right to make choices for myself of which others may not approve. I wish to live in a world in which women can be sexual AND be artists AND be writers and everything else we may want to be and not have our sexuality suppressed either by the religious right or the radical feminists. I want the saying "My Body, My Choice" to mean exactly that. If I am not willing to fight for that right, who can I expect to fight for it for me? And if the coming generations of sex workers are not willing to fight along side us old timers, all I can say is that they will deserve everything they get. Getting arrested is traumatic. Going to prison is not fun. If we do not decriminalize consenting adult sex work soon, more and more sex workers will experience the horrors of captivity- all in the name of protecting us for our own good.
If you think those of us who are out here putting our time and money into fighting for YOUR rights are going to be here forever so you don't need to do this... think again. Either you fight back or you allow it to happen. The alternative is to take a job working 9 to 5 for an abusive boss who can sexually harass you and get away with it because you were a sex worker. You can join the "solid citizens" who are trapped in jobs they hate working for bosses who are most likely the clients of your sex worker friends, go into the office/factory/sweatshop every day until you retire- or you can fight for your right to do whatever you want with your body. It won't be easy, but then working at a "normal" job for 40 years until you are eligible for your pension and social security benefits isn't easy either. Those are your choices. Well, there is one more- become a socially acceptable whore and marry someone with lots of money. No one will try to rescue you or throw you in jail.
...
Norma also sent me some media clippings from 1999 about the brothel in Butte, Montana. The first three are from Biker magazine, and the fourth is from Time Magazine. (Can you imagine getting an entire page of good press in Time Magazine now?)
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by Furry Girl
07.22.11
First, thank you to everyone who has pledged for SWAAY's billboard so far. After just 4 days, we've raised 18% of the cost, and now I have a great offer for anyone who would like to keep that going with a larger pledge.
Norma Jean Almodovar, one of the US's most legendary sex workers' rights activists and author of Cop to Call Girl, has offered one of her unique handmade horror dolls. Here's your chance to support a good cause, and get one-of-a-kind art made by a long-time activist.
For first person to make a new pledge of $325 or more, Norma Jean will send you your choice of one doll: Madam Panama Hattie (in black) or Madam Gypsy Shafer (in red). These beautiful dolls are even made of re-purposed lingerie worn by Norma Jean during her sex work days, so they are truly special bits of our history. The dolls are 18" tall, hand signed and numbered, and inspired by old-time brothel owners in New Orleans.
To be the lucky doll owner, go to EpicStep.com, pledge $325 or more, and forward your confirmation email to swaay AT swaay.org indicating that you pledged for the madam doll (and tell me which one), and your shipping address. If the billboard is fully funded next month and your pledge is accepted, Norma Jean will ship you your awesome gift. When this premium has been claimed, I'll update this blog post to let you know. (Though I hope you'll keep the donations coming!)
Thank you, Norma Jean!
by Furry Girl
07.18.11
Yup, you read that right. SWAAY has just kicked off a campaign to put up a billboard in Los Angeles for one month. Go to EpicStep.com and pledge your support!
Why LA? Because for better or worse, as we've learned from Ashton Kutcher's dangerous bumblings, LA is filled with people that influence the nation, so I want to try and influence them. But, even if no one "important" ends up mentioning the campaign or helping it create buzz, there are still countless members of the general public that are going to see the billboard. (If this is successful, I'd love to run this billboard in other cities. Next on the list would probably be New York City, Washington DC, and Chicago.)
What is Epic Step? Epic Step is a great idea for a startup - Kickstarter for billboards. They handle dealing with the outdoor media company, collecting money from SWAAY's various supporters, and have assured us that they love a good controversy.
Why not buy a billboard directly? Two important reasons. For one, SWAAY simply does not have thousands of dollars sitting around waiting to be spent. Secondly, since Epic Step collects your donations and pays the billboard company directly, SWAAY doesn't receive that money and therefor, doesn't have to pay taxes on it. Epic Step's markup is less than the taxes SWAAY would pay on fundraising $7k directly. Plus, I would rather see a cut of your donations go to a politically-inclined startup than the government. Especially since the Seattle city government, where SWAAY is incorporated, has decided to declare war on escort ads and kiss up to the Demi and Ashton Foundation.
How much? $7300 for 4 weeks in a high-exposure location in LA. I know how huge that number seems, but I also know there are a thousand people out there who care enough about sex workers' rights to kick in $7 each. In the event the billboard is not funded, your card will not be charged. We have 30 days to raise that amount, and you won't be billed until and unless it ends in success. (I was informed that Epic Step apparently puts a hold on your card for the amount you pledge, which will either go through as a charge or be released at the end of the fundraising period.)
Why this particular design? I spent a bunch of time thinking of what I most want to convey to the general public about sex work. But then, I realized that I was getting ahead of myself, since very few people even know the term "sex worker." So I want to start small, and educational. I want to just tell people what "sex worker" means, as well as a topical point about how sex work is not sex trafficking. I had a longer version initially, but it just had too many words on it for a billboard. My design sense is generally to keep things simple, and I based this billboard idea on the God billboards you see in flyover land. They stand out not just because of message, but because of simplicity amongst more colorful and visually cluttered ads. It's my hope that in a city of fashion and ostentatious displays, something this simple will stand out.
Please support this project! Donors who pledge $7 or more also receive a 10-pack of SWAAY's stickers. We have 30 days to get this funded, so please help now and share the link. To get your stickers, forward your confirmation email and mailing address to swaay AT swaay.org if the billboard is funded.
Support my outdoor billboard campaign, SWAAY's Sex Work Definition Billboard on Epicstep!
by Furry Girl
07.16.11
A favorite photo of mine from when I was in Buenos Aires. That city has sex work ad cards all over the place, like you would see in Las Vegas.
Yesterday, Argentina's president Cristina Fernandez banned sex work ads in print, supposedly to combat sex trafficking. Fernandez is Argentina's former first lady who succeeded her husband to the presidency, and is the country's first elected female president. She drew criticism as a senator for having unfair influence through her husband's office as the president, and her most commonly mentioned personality traits are her love of fashion and being unable to handle criticism.
With an election coming up in October, people are asking questions about whether her true motive on banning the adult ads is simply to take advertising dollars away from newspapers who don't favor her. This could be another sad case of sex workers getting caught in the middle, and bearing the dangerous fallout, of other people's political ambitions.
Highlights from the Rueter's article for those of you short on time:
Argentina's government is banning prostitution ads in newspapers and other mass media as of Friday, saying it is combatting violence against women.
[...]
But some of the president's opponents fear it may be used to punish opposition media this election year by removing an independent source of revenue for an industry that in many cases depends on official advertising, a flow of revenue that press freedom groups say has been unequally directed toward the government's supporters.
[...]
Fernandez specifically took aim at the newspaper Clarin, a frequent antagonist. She cited the opposition paper's Area 59 section as particularly unethical. Area 59 has included columns of ads for escorts, "gym teachers" ''massage therapists" and "underwear models" offering "pleasures without limits." Until now.
[...]
In Argentina, most media organizations are aligned either with the Fernandez government or its opposition. Many on both sides have run solicitations for sexual encounters. But Grupo Clarin's conglomerate of newspapers, magazines, broadcast stations, internet providers and web sites may have the most to lose.
Marketing director Emiliano Szlaien of the LectorGlobal media research firm estimated the ban could cost the Grupo Clarin $5 million.
by Furry Girl
07.15.11
It's somewhat strange for me to be talking about forced trafficking so much lately, because while I do care about how anti-trafficking organizations hurt consensual adult sex workers and ignore genuine victims, and have read much more on the subject that most other people, I will be the first to tell you that I am no forced trafficking expert. My only real blog post about trafficking is advocating that people seek out better sources for information. After a couple of weeks of peeking at the Twitter feed of Ashton Kutcher's fans talking about trafficking, it's very clear that most people lobbing opinions on the subject (and angrily contacting their elected officials) know nothing beyond sensationalist crusades led by celebrities, covered by media outlets who gussy up the story to be as dramatic and upsetting as possible. I might not be an expert, but I certainly have a more informed opinion than most other people publicly blathering about the subject.
I need help in creating an important resource that does not seem to exist yet. Unlike the mainstream anti-trafficking and anti-sex work groups that view all males as probably drooling for a chance to rape a child sex slave, I want SWAAY to show real consideration and appreciation of clients who strive to be ethical. I think the American sex workers' rights movement is missing out by neglecting to court clients as allies or consider them potential supporters.
For one, I am still still seeking short pieces of advice from current and former sex workers on how clients can be respectful and ethical towards us. I am hugely disappointed that after a month of the site being live, not a single sex worker has submitted a suggestion for how clients can treat them better. (Admittedly, I am limiting my scope to sex workers who have worked in the US and are willing to post a photo of themselves. But I personally know oodles of sex workers who show their face online, and they've not shown any interest in reaching out to clients through this part of the site, despite my mentioning it regularly.) We all tweet and blog gripes when clients do something that pisses us off or violates our boundaries, but there's almost nothing written about how to not be that douchebag who gets ranted about. Let's do something positive and help people understand how we do want to be treated. What seems like common sense to us can be a confusing and vague world to others.
Secondly, since I have not seen such a resource anywhere yet, I'd like to add information specifically for clients of sex workers who might be concerned about seeing an underage prostitute or someone who is being abused. Clients are in a better position than celebrities, NGOs, and even sex workers to locate and report potential victims of exploitation. Yet, I don't believe I've ever seen anything from the sex workers' rights movement targeted at clients to give them information about how they might attempt to identify and report suspected forced trafficking, abuse, or underage victims. The short answer is "call the police from a payphone in an area without security cameras," but that's not good enough.
The DNA Foundation, as well as other anti-sex work anti-trafficking organizations, have their own hotline for people to call to report abuse. (I sincerely wonder what kinds of calls those numbers get if the organizations running them train people to consider all sex workers as victims who need saving. "Hello, Mr Kutcher! This is Bob in San Franciso. I wanted to report a strip club I saw, which no doubt filled with trafficked slaves. Am I hero now?") Does anyone on "our team" have a phone number people can call?
I do hesitate to tell people to phone the police. What if a well-meaning client triggers a raid on an area of prostitution (like an hourly motel) and ends up just getting a lot of hard-up people arrested who are not victims? What if the police do indeed find a 16-year-old engaging in prostitution, arrest them, and ship them back to an abusive family from which they escaped and are desperate to never see again? There's no easy solution, especially since "rescue" means arrest first, ask questions later, and can mean sending people into more abusive situations. (As someone who was kicked out shortly before turning 16, yet never engaged in sex work at the time, I know that I would have been fucking livid if someone had tried to "help" me by involving the police. I might not have had a stable address and enough to eat at all times, but I vastly preferred that lifestyle to other options.)
But where do we start? How can we genuinely work to include clients in the fight against both forced trafficking and serious abuses, as well as the inadvertent mistreatment of consensual sex workers? What are answers that don't involve arrests and involvement of the state, which can make things worse on already disadvantaged people? Would clients carry a business card-sized list of non-governmental shelters and support services to give to anyone they think might want to seek help? These are the tough questions I'd like to see the sex workers' rights movement addressing.
Edited to add: a commenter pointed out this awesome-looking UK resource: Redline. It seems to be exactly what I wish we had here in the states.
by Furry Girl
07.12.11
"One hardly ever sees mention of prostitution anymore where human sex trafficking is not also invoked. It's bizarre, this assumption that the vast majority of men are not only paying for sex, but willing to pay for sex with unwilling partners. Says a lot about what the people making these assumptions think of men, I guess."
-- Dr Brooke Magnanti, in Sex + Sport = Trafficking Hype on sexonomics-uk.blogspot.com
by Furry Girl
07.06.11
Until they notice and modify it, any tweet with the word "trafficking" is posted on the front page of demiandashton.org, a celebrity foundation that conflates child sex slavery and consensual adult sex work. They will no doubt start screening featured tweets soon, so jump on it now. This bug/feature has been used by sex workers' rights supporters since about noon on Wednesday, and is still in effect, please use it to post real information about trafficking and sex work, such as:
Video: SEX WORKERS WANT TO STOP TRAFFICKING http://bit.ly/goDVC7
Videos from sex workers in developing world often cover how anti-trafficking orgs harm them http://sexworkerspresent.blip.tv
Learn about real trafficking issues from researcher Laura Agustín: http://www.lauraagustin.com
Want to help trafficking victims? Don't give your money to celebs, give it to shelters like Youthcare: http://bit.ly/qlW5eJ
The clients of sex workers are not boogeymen hoping to rape children. They don't deserve to be lumped in with trafficking.
Sex workers support the fight against trafficking. See a list of our own orgs here: http://www.swaay.org/groups.html
Guerilla warfare is about small groups going up against a strong, larger enemy, and using that large enemy's own resources against them. Come participate in some electronic guerilla warfare that uses these celeb's fame to tell the world what's actually going on about sex work and human trafficking. Hat tip to @iamcuriousblue for pointing out the Twitter widget on Kutcher's site, which was ripe for re-purposing once I figured out that it posts anything mentioning the T-word.
The long-term question is, after the site gets modified to exclude criticism, how can sex workers' rights supporters use Kutcher's fame campaign against him to publicize truths about sex work and how to really help trafficking victims?
Update: Belle de Jour suggested buying up misspellings of the domain and pointing them at better resources. I bought DemiNAshton.org/.com, which are now forwarding to SWAAY.org. Viviane suggested keeping an eye on these charity event calendars if we're looking for DNA events to protest: CharityHappenings.org and Eventful.com. If anyone knows of an upcoming event/appearance for Kutcher/Moore/the DNA Foundation, please share the info so it can be met with a sex worker-led protest!
Furry Girl: a good time not yet had by all.
Activism
- I operate SWAAY.org, an accessible sex workers' rights site that educates the general public about our lives and our issues.
- I've been vegan for 12 years because it's the easiest way for an individual to contribute to less violence, suffering, and exploitation.
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- Cocksexual.com: Strapons
- EroticRed.com: Menstruation
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- TheSensualVegan.com: Store
- VegPorn.com: Herbivores
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New to my blog? Some favorite posts
- "You have no right to dislike feminism after all it's done for you!"
- An argument for more sex workers to be out?
- Degrading, violent desires
- Do you have what it takes to be an empowered sex worker?
- Feminism is the shitty relationship you had in your early 20s
- How are we branding sex workers rights in the US? (Let's focus more on *worker*, less on *sex*!)
- How to do your homework on trafficking, "rescue", and the affected communities
- Loving my enemy and ineffective activism: "ally" commentary surrounding the Stop Porn Culture conference
- Musings on ethical porn and the red herrings of "feminist porn" and "violent porn"
- My call for a "working" class uprising against inaccessible discourse and the over-representation of dabblers
- Sex trafficking is the new crack: manufactured "epidemics" as political tools
- The common logical fallacies deployed by anti-sex worker activists
- Things I've gained from being a sex worker: an anti-paternalistic perspective
- Three out of four ain't bad: my thoughts on Audacia Ray's post on the dominant narratives of sex work
- Vigilantism and 'crushing bastards': in praise of anger, hatred, and taking joy in the smiting of one's enemies
- Want to play BINGO with the antis?
- Watch out for psuedoscience: my long-time nemeses of concern trolling and "teaching the controversy"
- What do I mean when I say "sex worker"? Why I'm against an overly-broad definition
- Why I call them "anti-sex worker" rather than "anti-porn" or "anti-prostitution," and why you should too
Favorite sex/ho blogs
- Amanda Brooks
- Asia Pacific Network of Sex Workers
- Belle de Jour
- Born Whore
- Bound, Not Gagged
- Dan Savage on SLOG
- Danny Wylde
- Jiz Lee
- Kat's Stories
- Laura Agustín
- Lux Nightmare [2006-2007]
- Maggie McNeill
- Our Porn, Ourselves
- Sequoia Redd
- Serpent Libertine
- Sex Worker Pie Charts
- Sex Worker Problems
- Sexerati [2005-2009]
- Sexonomics by Brooke Magnanti
- Shit They Say to Sex Workers
- Stuff Sex Workers Eat
- Whore Madonna
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