Monday, 26 September 2016

Paying for sex and other historical setbacks















Macu Gimeno
The Feminist Platform of Valencia
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"I myself have never been able to find out precisely what feminism is: I only know that people call me a feminist whenever I express sentiments that differentiate me from a doormat or a prostitute".

Rebecca West

When I was young the world of prostitution was unknown to me. I lived through Franco’s dictatorship when sex, like so many things, was a taboo subject. In those days you didn't see semi-naked women in the streets or on the roadside. Its space was confined to the city’s Chinatown or the illegal clubs. That barrio chino that I knew from my grandmother, and that I had to cross quickly, passing by the women that we used to call fulanas, or ‘tarts’. They were Spanish women, very few were migrants.
As the years passed I became aware of the poverty and humiliation they were subjected to. I didn't know whether they did it voluntarily, but I thought it was shameful that someone would pay to have sex with women that had to exhibit and expose themselves to all kinds of violence. They were bodies without identities, bought by men.
In those years there was also the constant harassment that we all suffered in the form of touching, catcalls, insults and flashing. Going to the local cinema became a mission which I undertook armed with a big safety pin, which my mother taught me to use if I needed to. But my biggest fear was not that something would happen to me, but that everyone would think that I had allowed it to happen. That would have meant I was a slut, a whore. I thought I would end up like those women from the barrio chino.

"Rape entered the law through the back door, as it were, as a property crime of man against man. Woman, of course, was viewed as the property". 

Susan Brownmiller

Relationships with men were based on power and sexual domination. I started to see society differently, to understand what patriarchy was. I felt the hatred in my flesh; the humiliation of sexual assault, that "everything is permitted because you're a woman ", a slut, a whore. I realised that even my most progressive male friends defended women’s supposed freedom to prostitute themselves, and fantasised about submitting women to their will. These days it still happens to me quite often.

"Prostitution is a matter of equality, not sex. It is not a body or sex that men buy, but rather the traditionally masculine fantasy of domination".

Beatriz Gimeno


Far from disappearing, the prostitution industry has continued to grow over the years, to the great profit of the pimps and mafias rather than the women. The face of prostitution today bears little resemblance to those years, although it remains founded in the same patriarchal society, where men have the quintessential right to objectify and buy women’s bodies.
Globalisation, war, the refugee crisis, poverty and hunger are all powerful weapons for today’s human traffickers, who take advantage of the most vulnerable people in these situations - women and children – in order to enslave them. Spain is a paradise for these mafias.


"Human trafficking is not a gender-neutral crime...it disproportionately affects women, not only because they make up the majority of its victims, but because the forms of exploitation they are subjected to are usually the most severe, especially in trafficking for sexual exploitation". 

Action plan against Trafficking in Persons for Sexual Exploitation.2015-2018, Ministry of Health, Social Services and Equality


These organised crime networks exist because of the demand from the sex buyers. Some 20% of men in Spain admit to having used prostitutes. Half of them suspect that the prostitute may be a minor. All of them think that the situation of the women who they pay and fuck has nothing to do with them. They buy them, use them and toss them aside. Nothing else matters to them. Over the years I have discovered shameful things about the tastes of sex buyers: pregnant women, minors, the voiceless and vulnerable. They don't want to know about the rapes, kidnappings, beatings and isolation.

"Prostitution in itself is not innate to women, but is based on the social construction of women as beings that are owned by and serve others. Defined by their erotic sexuality and reproductive capacity, all women’s bodies and sex are for the sexual pleasure of others".
Marcela Lagarde

According to official data, 80% of human trafficking victims in Europe are women, of which 95% are sexually exploited. Regarding the percentage of women that supposedly prostitute themselves "voluntarily", the published figures range from 10 to 20%.

"I love my job, I feel free. I prefer this to working for some businessman".

Antonella, prostitute since the age of 15 (El Diario, 23/10/ 15)


Talking about the rights of this percentage of women must not make us forget the brutality of the slavery that the rest are subjected to. We aren’t allowed to talk of rescues, or of any other morality that prevents me, as a human, from turning a blind eye to slavery.
Prostitution continues to be a forbidden subject in feminist debate. We need to focus on issues that unite us, not divide us. We don't make progress because we continue to ignore the fact that, without the men that pay for sex, prostitution, and therefore trafficking,  would not exist.
While the debate continues to be sealed off, the number of prostituted women and children grows, and men use prostitutes to celebrate special occasions. It is difficult to talk about equality while this continues.

"Boys are taught that having lines of naked girls at their disposal is their right and that women do not matter. If this is not a school of inequality then what is?"

Ana de Miguel

According to the UN, prostitution is the second most profitable business in the world. Over 4 million people are trafficked every year, generating 5-7 billion U.S. dollars in profits. Here in Spain that means 370 million in annual profits for the mafias and pimps; poverty and violence for the prostituted women.
If you are a man you can pay to rape a woman. You can buy her dignity, her life, whatever you want. Looking back, I have the impression that we have made very little progress. The sexual assaults that I talked about earlier continue to be habitual. Everyday violence that we have to put up with, simply for being women. Where is the limit?

Translation by Ben Riddick

Monday, 12 September 2016

The prostitution of women: democracy's harem
















Ana de Miguel Álvarez
Professor of moral and political philosophy at the University of Rey Juan Carlos
20/01/2015


The start of a new year is a time to take stock and make resolutions, so it is a good chance to reflect once again upon one of society’s most controversial issues: the prostitution of women.

Let us begin with two facts. First, all forecasts indicate that prostitution is on the increase in Spain, a society supposedly committed to equality. Second, this growth comes at the expense of thousands of increasingly younger girls, brought in from some of the world’s poorest, most sexist and least developed countries.

In the face of these facts, there is a tiresome tendency to spread the message that prostitution is just "a job like any other" and should therefore be regulated. But before we act, there is a lot to think about. And when it comes to thought, philosophy can help us to analyse and question reality through critical reflection.

Of course this demands dedicating time to the subject at hand. Philosophy does not accept thinking through slogans and stock phrases such as "prostitution has always existed, so the best thing is to regulate it", or "there’s nothing we can do about it, others have tried and failed". The last thing philosophy does is accept such a fatalist and traditional worldview. Nor does it accept the idea, as publicised in the media, that submission to the market is somehow rebellious or transgressive; leading people to declare that "everyone uses their body to work", or "I make a living on the streets too". Philosophy demands that we criticise these ideas and put them to debate. To sit down and think!

Let us begin by thinking about what questions we should be asking about prostitution, which is so often depicted positively in films and in the media. The first question is one of definition: What is prostitution?

Before we can discuss it, we need some concepts that allow us to see the reality of prostitution. The official definition is “the practice of engaging in sexual relations in exchange for payment”, and in a world where money is the supreme value, what could be wrong with that? This definition works to normalise prostitution and is convincing because it follows neoliberal logic: all of us buy and sell something. There are even people and organisations that claim to be staunchly anti-capitalist and anti-system yet, somewhat paradoxically, defend the trade of women's bodies as a progressive and transgressive cause. To them I put the question; if using prostitutes has always been the norm for men, just as it was for their fathers and grandfathers, what exactly is being transgressed?

Philosophy’s critical intent can lead us to question the official definition of prostitution, just as Socrates questioned the youth on how to define ‘justice’. A new definition is needed because the emphasis on "exchanging sex for money" actually disguises two of its fundamental real-life features. First, the key fact that prostitution is gendered: the vast majority of prostitutes are women, and almost all consumers are men. Second, the fact that what is sold is not 'sex', but a certain type of sex: a man using a woman's body for his own pleasure. The old definition must change because it falsifies and hides this reality. It is useless because it prevents us from seeing the truth.

Let us look at this alternative definition: prostitution is a regulated practice which grants men, as a group, access to women's bodies.

Access to the body for rent is granted to men ‘as a group’, because all men are entitled to stand in line for it. Prostitution is a public service, democracy's harem. It is true that money is required, but that condition does not invalidate the accessible, open-to-everyone character of the prostituted woman. Access is ‘regulated’ because the transaction is by no means natural or spontaneous, but one that follows a set of established and respected rules: the prostitutes are required to be in a particular place, and a price is established for a particular service.

Open access to women's bodies is guaranteed in almost every part of the world. Wherever a man may travel, from Valencia to Pernanbuco, Taiwan to Egypt, it is enough to stop a taxi driver and ask a simple question: "Where can I find a woman around here? Where are the girls? You know what I mean". The universal language of patriarchal society means he will be understood. The symbolic meaning of ‘woman’ could not be expressed with any more simplicity, achieving the kind of clarity and distinctiveness that René Descartes attributed to ‘self-evident’ truths.

Prostitution as an international, globalised institution is based in supporting every man’s right to satisfy his sexual desires in exchange for a variable quantity of money, no matter who it affects or what the consequences might be. If families from those countries most devastated by inequality and sexism sell their daughters into prostitution, that is not the clients' problem. Maybe they are in too much of a hurry to get home to their own families and daughters to care.

Philosophy also asks us to question the concept of humanity that underlies the institution of prostitution. The normalisation of buying sex teaches men, fathers and adolescents alike, that their own pleasure is the arbiter of what is good and bad; that ‘money buys you the right to rent another human being to manipulate for a while’. Now we can see prostitution emerge as a great school of human inequality, in which the boys and girls play very different roles to the ones they thought they played in class, when they all appeared equal behind their desks. In prostitution the girls become "fresh, beautiful, very young", sometimes offered up as insatiable sluts, other times as childish and submissive, but all of them bodies that men have the right to access. What the hell, why not? They're only women after all.

What kind of men are being made each day by this education in Spain’s brothels?

I want to end with a message to men. There is a very big difference between the trafficking of women and other problems that we find to be equally, or even more, morally repugnant. Try as we might, individuals cannot just choose to end hunger, gun trafficking, rape and war today. But it is in the hands of every individual man to put an end to prostitution. It would be enough if every man chose not to go out and buy a woman’s body today, just as women have chosen all of their lives; and here we are, we haven't died. It is men, our companions, who finance the pimps and mafia networks with an incessant demand for prostitutes. How many men got up this morning, looked in the mirror and said "I deserve to treat myself. What shall I have today? A black woman? A Chinese girl maybe...Wait, I’ve got it! A blonde, or how about a...”

The futures of so many girls being born today, all over the world, depend on every individual man and his one simple decision.


Translation by Ben Riddick