History of Feminism
Related: About this forumIndigenous Women Against the Sex Industry Continue to Fight for the Abolition of Prostitution
We see an opportunity for all of us to work toward a better future a future in which our daughters are not handed over to pimps and johns to be violated, abused, and thrown away. We see hope in the supreme courts decision to decriminalize prostituted women and girls. The next step is to stand up for the rights of Indigenous women and girls by criminalizing the source of the harm in prostitution the pimps and the johns. This would be a truly progressive act in the interest of womens equality.
In addition to laws that criminalize the pimps and the johns, we also demand funding for social policies and programs that prevent women and girls from entering prostitution in the first place, and that help us as we exit and heal. This includes, but is not limited to, safe and affordable housing, guaranteed livable income, counseling, job training, and women-only detox and recovery services. We also demand the government educate itself and the public about prostitution as a form of colonial male sexual violence against women and girls.
We ask the public and policy makers to stand in solidarity with us and to adopt the Nordic Model of prostitution policy. Do not be tricked into supporting the decriminalization of pimps and johns as progressive legal and social policy. We are Indigenous women and girls who have survived hundreds of years of colonialism, male violence, and capitalism, and we are not going away. We are proud to be part of a global feminist abolitionist movement, and we ask you to join us in our fight for freedom.
http://feministcurrent.com/8436/press-release-indigenous-women-against-the-sex-industry-continue-to-fight-for-the-abolition-of-prostitution/
zazen
(2,978 posts)given that orgasming to escalating sexual transgression, usually against whoever occupies the role of gender female, is argued to be "natural" (as much as it's been catalyzed by the capitalist pornography industry).
I often think that if women organized around "racism" in pornography they'd get more of a hearing, at least from liberal men. Few liberal men are going to openly defend using N words and other blatant racist stereotypes, since at least in the 21st century the "blacks are naturally inferior" argument isn't publicly acceptable, at least among 70% of white society.
We shouldn't have to do that--pictures of torture from Amnesty International aren't seen as sexy when they're men and they should be defensible as natural when they're women--but somehow if the women achieve a status as member of another oppressed group of which men are members, the harm is a little more valid to the liberal pro-porn crowd.
ismnotwasm
(42,433 posts)Creating an other, to separate themselves from those poor brown people.
No, we shouldn't have to do that-- at all.
seabeyond
(110,159 posts)in trafficking and getting the sex slaves into the u.s. i was concerned with what canada did.
redqueen
(115,164 posts)as indigenous women are exploited, abused, murdered, trafficked and sold abroad... including here in the US.
Anyway, I'm reminded of a quote by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie:
This is why I hope Canada will follow the same path that Sweden, Iceland, Norway and France have started. The full humanity of women cannot be recognized while the commodification of women's bodies is legitimized by the state.