Belgium is working towards new laws regarding sex work, making the workers eligeble for pensions, healthcare plans, contracts and overall more legal status. This was done in corporation with sex workers, orgs surrounding sex work and my place of work, the Union.

Now, I worked with former sex workers and human trafficking victims myself and I am aware of their struggles. I am not going to outright deny their right to fight for improvement.

What bugs me is the normalization of an industry that is heavily, and I mean very heavily, infested with human rights abuses. For every one empowered sexworker there are a thousand human trafficking victims. Giving them a pension is not helping in the slightest.

And then there is the whole thing of tying things like unemployment benefits to you wanting to look for work. Here in Belgium your benefits can be cut as soon as you refuse a job that is offered to you through government instances. What if we further legitimize sex work and you refuse a sex worker position? There have been caes already of the instances offering unemployed actresses porn jobs, so why not offer them sex workers contracts? And why not cut their benefits of they refuse a fitting job? Right?

And everyone is so happy about it. As if the whole industry is one collective of happy people doing a fun job instead of the horror it is.

Sorry for ranting but fuck me what a mess

  • Lemmykoopa@lemmygrad.ml
    ·
    3 months ago

    legitimately consensual sex worker

    no such thing, really. Not a lotta rich kids signing up to be sex workers.

    • robot_dog_with_gun [they/them]
      ·
      3 months ago

      there's vanishingly little consensual wage labor by that standard

      also "sex work" is an umbrella that includes onlyfans feet posters, not just intercourse

      • amber (she/her)@lemmygrad.ml
        ·
        3 months ago

        What the fuck is are you talking about? Yes, obviously there is basically no such thing as consentual wage labor, we don’t call it wage slavery just to be provocative. I’m so sick of communists turning into libertarians the minute sex work comes up.

        • DankZedong @lemmygrad.ml
          hexagon
          ·
          3 months ago

          It's probably one of the easiest ways to start a fight among leftists, this topic. And in my experience it is men who flock to defend an industry they mainly profit off while women, POC, LGBTQ+ community members are the ones going against it, because they are the one receiving the beatings. Men really need to do better at depornographing and depatriarching their thinking.

          • SadArtemis🏳️‍⚧️@lemmygrad.ml
            ·
            edit-2
            3 months ago

            Personally I think that painting it as particularly "men who flock to defend the industry" strikes me as- incorrect from my experience, when it comes to leftist spaces (then again I generally also stick to LGBT spaces myself).

            Historically, sex work is one of those "industries" that is easily accessible (not that that is or isn't a good thing, but it is filling a need- and no, not a sexual one- continue reading but basically an employment/income need) for those communities historically disenfranchised and stigmatized; women (and some men, and- saddeningly and with no justification whatsoever for those who take advantage, moreso than in other cases- children) coming from bad circumstances, POC, those with disabilities or from persecuted communities, the homeless, and of course the LGBT community in particular- sex work is especially visible wherever the lumpenproletariat is, wherever those who are most stomped on and looked down on are, sex work is most prevalent.

            As someone who has been homeless- and who is a POC, trans woman, and LGBT+ (haven't done sex work before myself, but TBH in the future the honest truth is that- I probably should, simply as a basic assessment of my circumstances I should) this portrayal is completely at odds with what I've seen, from people I've met in-person (not purchasing sex work either, I have never and will never do that- but meeting people in-person from broader community support (non-sex-work related) events, having friends who have done sex work- men included, etc).

            Personally, I saw Kollontai quoted here, have read her take on the subject before, and more or less agree (with caveats). But the fact of the matter is that-

            (A) Sex work exists, and will exist until the motivators/circumstances driving people into sex work cease to exist. That's a fact, and will continue to be one likely well into socialism until humanity has truly developed to such an extent that perhaps could be described as "post-scarcity." It is literally the "oldest occupation," one that has existed long before capitalism and which has its own counterparts (of sorts) within much of the animal kingdom.

            (B) While legitimizing sex work (actual sex work, I'd say that expression through art is a completely different subject though also not without its own complications, and that in regards to videos/film then it gets into the profit motive and consent/etc being a serious issue) may be "icky"- improving the conditions for sex workers is something that we should support, so long as it actually improves the conditions for said workers (and debates over whether it is "work" or not, or talking about how bad it is and how no one should have to do it- which is par for the course in capitalism though I agree sex work, or rather the sex industry (not the workers of course) anyways, is a particularly unique kind of evil- will not change the fact that those under the industry are human beings with the same needs as anyone else and we should be aiding them in acquiring those first- and seriously, until we can say that their needs are covered, pontificating without offering a tangible and immediate alternative is ineffective and in fact counter-productive)

            Basically- ideals are nice and all. And sex work is icky, sure, I agree (or the sex "industry" is icky, anyways, the workers or "workers" aren't). But without an alternative on the table, an alternative we can immediately offer (ie. something that isn't exactly possible without establishing a dictatorship of the proletariat) the best we can do is minimize the harm, aid those who wish to escape this particularly wretched kind of exploitation, and aid the many who- after judging their material conditions (and doing so better than we can for them- as they have their own life, their own priorities, they know the intricacies of their circumstances best, etc) decide they still "want" or rather need to engage in the work- to aid them to have better outcomes, to have better circumstances even if it is within that "industry."

            • Lemmykoopa@lemmygrad.ml
              ·
              edit-2
              3 months ago

              CW sex work related things, cus you mentioned you might

              FWIW I really suggest not doing IRL sex work. Occams razor is they just want sex, but they still lie about STDs constantly (people with undetectable HIV will never admit they have HIV or use a condom), will stiff you, and can be violent at the drop of a hat. From my experience you will get an STD (I got syphilis twice, chlamydia, anal warts, and herpes type 1), they will stiff you, you can't say NO. I was only raped once (although sex work as a whole constitutes rape, even in the best, safest situation) and drugged once (because the dude didn't want to party by homself). Only ever beaten by random queerphobes on the street, then again I also never fight back when someone is forcing me

              And this was while I escorted people who knew me from porn. Porn btw tests the day of the shoot usually, although HIV has a 2 week to 2 month window. Also think you'll only do work online? Well eventually someone will make a really really good offer

              And eventually you'll get old and not make the sweet bucks anymore and be saddled with all that royalty free trauma

              • SadArtemis🏳️‍⚧️@lemmygrad.ml
                ·
                edit-2
                3 months ago

                In hindsight as it got rather long (I ramble)- CW for what I guess is technically suicidality/depression spiel though not active suicidality

                Thanks for your message- it's given me a fair bit to think about. Hearing your experiences was- very different, when I suppose that the one close friend I have who did sex work is a (fit) dude who has since joined the army.

                I'll admit that said, I probably still will end up doing it when I get my shit back together again (losing weight, since a certain mental breakdown quite a while back that's been an issue and just existing as that in itself is- not something I handle well as someone who has serious complexes over pride/dignity/a very certain idea of appearance).

                The honest truth is that (while my circumstances aren't "everything is on fire" for now) the money could genuinely and immensely improve my life, and that of those I love. And I suppose the honest truth is that I don't have much self worth if any (whatever I have has always been tied to how much worth- not necessarily measured by capital, but how I measure the worth of continuing to live is I suppose- I'm not suicidal and still aspire for much more/am not done with life, but frankly the greater part of the equation alongside that is that I can't "afford" to die either- not while I have unfinished business wherein my loved ones and some things I care about have to be taken care of first).

                Thanks for sharing your experiences all the same, and- I'll probably think twice about IRL sex work as such (but the truth is money is money- and probably everyone has a price, for something where it's just myself on the line I know I certainly do). I'm - I dunno. A shitty person though, someone who's already enough of a wreck and has always been such, whose whole mentality since I was a kid is that I came from "trash" and have to aspire and work to be more.

                Obviously I'm a communist, and have- not just my ideals, but my genuine beliefs and understanding of how things should be, can be, and why they are as they are. But if I were to describe it- well, the main or only reason I'd want to get old as-is would be to not leave my partner. And I'm not someone who I think should exist, nor would want to exist in an ideal world or even just a somewhat better/improved world, in the sense that once I've finished my business, at least as I see it now, it's best on my end to have an expiry date as I already figure that my accumulated experiences, trauma, personality and being are... well honestly pretty miserable and bitter, and not something I want to have to deal with for an overly long time (which I suppose is suicidality of a sort itself).

                My circumstances aren't great, but more than that is also that I simply also am not fine and can't imagine myself being a level of fine (in truth even if the material conditions improved) to overly care about myself, certainly not more than the people and things I care about or even just my specific sense of pride/dignity/avoiding shame (none of which would be overly affected if at all by sex work as I have no values against it nor care about those values of others in that regard, and all of which admittedly have to do with either material conditions and physical appearance).

                If I get old, if I live to get old, it'll be a burden (on myself, mentally) that I'll have put up with only for other reasons on the table (things unfinished, also to spend time with my partner or others I care about). Living as is already is a burden in that sense, though I'm not actively suicidal as I have hopes and things I want to do all the same, I have my partner and want to continue living with them, and I have people and things I can't afford to die on just yet. Past that though- I can't say living overly long can appeal to me anymore, even in the most ideal of circumstances where all material and physical things were dealt with I'd at least want a mind wipe.

    • cayde6ml@lemmygrad.ml
      ·
      edit-2
      3 months ago

      That's not exactly as profound as you think it is. Plenty of people enjoy their job or aspects of it, but hate the commodification of their labor.

      I think what you're saying is somewhat chauvinist, even if you do have a point. Sex workers themselves aren't a monolith, and I think marxist sex workers deserve a bigger voice.