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I've never thought about this topic before, and from your comments it shows you have given it careful thought, so probably this is going to have some fundamental flaws, but I was just thinking: We do seem to have found solutions, however imperfect, in other domains where workers were always vulnerable. How do you know your new tech gadget wasn't produced with child labour, or in some horrible sweatshop? There's a long list of things, probably including at least labour unions, investigative journalism, and a lot of legislation. But for all those things to work, it has to all be a somewhat legal enterprise to begin with. You probably can't build a brand for a brothel-chain that's widely recognised to treat their workers well, if that's an illegal activity. What strikes me as patronising about the nordic model, that you mention up in the thread, is this: if I'm legalising your job, but still go after your customers, that means I'm still not taking your job seriously, or? |
For the both the necessary and optional physical products, there should be more involvement in campaigns for favorable trade legislation and worker conditions, and I think we're all guilty of lack of participation in this, which is only made easier by the entrenched influence of the companies involved.
From reading a lot of different people, I don't think the feminist advocates for the Nordic model "don't take sex work seriously". I think they identify porn and prostitution as socially harmful to women as a class and physically and psychologically damaging to individaul women in a too-large amount of cases, and would rather see women exit en masse through programs that help them find support and work elsewhere, than anything else -- toward the eventual abolition of prostituion. (I think the opinion is split on whether prostitution is inherently harmful -- that is, in a post-gender world where there is no trance of social definition of women as stores of resources to be extracted for pleasure and service, would prostitution still be socially harmful? -- but I don't think it matters for the questions at hand.) Here are some links to introduce a camp of thought that is never given a chance in the mainstream:
http://antipornfeminists.wordpress.com/2013/12/20/qotd-the-p...
http://sarahditum.com/2014/02/24/who-do-you-listen-to/
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KbxBJf9UtWg
https://firewomon.wordpress.com/2013/12/08/is-choice-really-...
http://www.thepinkcross.org/pinkcross-articles/october-2011/...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9HvC_sEURXA
http://www.bad-housekeeping.com/2014/01/08/violence-teenager...
http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2014/oct/24/pornogr...
http://uts.cc.utexas.edu/~rjensen/freelance/pornographyisale...
http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2011/mar/05/convers...
If any of these links are broken, I suggest trying the WayBack Machine.