There is no better indication that an economy is in peril
than a popular brothel no longer being able to bribe the police to look the
other way. On Monday, the Ministry of National Security with much fanfare
publicly announced that they had busted the notorious Chaguanas brothel ‘Dad’s
Dan’, charging the owner with human trafficking offenses and keeping a brothel.
And sure enough by Wednesday we learnt that the TT dollar had depreciated
against the US dollar.
For readers unfamiliar with the seedy underbelly of Chaguanas
nightlife, 'it’s alleged' that Dad’s Dan has been a house of ill repute for
decades. During this time it has been routinely raided by the police, and even
burnt down a few years ago.
Yet despite all this, Dad’s Dan has proven to be the most
resilient building in the entire country, continuously being maintained and
reopened. It makes you wonder if someone would finally repair the historic
buildings making up the Magnificent Seven if they each started offering lap dances.
I am going to go out on a limb and suggest that Dad’s Dan
won’t remain closed for very long. I would also suggest to the Ministry of
National Security that if we genuinely care about stamping out criminality in
the sex trade then the best solution would be to simply legalize prostitution.
Firstly, a distinction needs to be made between human
trafficking and prostitution. Human trafficking involves the abduction and
violent coercion of persons into sexual slavery. Prostitution involves a
consensual trade of sex by adults; with the seller getting paid and the buyer
getting sex and a free serving of repressed shame and guilt. We should be doing
all we can to stop Human trafficking. We should also realize that the best way
to deal with the world’s oldest profession is to pull the covers off it.
Legalizing prostitution has many potential benefits. First of
all it would make sex workers safer. As it stands, sex workers who are victims
of violence are less likely to turn to the police. That wouldn’t be the case if
prostitution were legal. Furthermore, a regulated and licensed Brothel would
need to ensure the safety and well-being of their employees if they wanted to
keep their license.
Secondly, legalization would help limit the spread of
Sexually Transmitted Diseases. Sex workers could be required to get regular STD
tests and brothels mandated to dispense condoms to ensure safe sexual practices
were being followed.
Thirdly, legal prostitution could be a source of tax revenue.
Prostitution is pretty much a recession proof industry and it could provide a
steady stream of revenue that could fill state coffers. After all, the state
already taxes the vices most of us indulge in, such as alcohol, tobacco and
believing we can actually win the lotto.
The arguments in favor of legalizing prostitution carry a lot
of merit, which is why there appears to be a deliberate attempt to undermine it
by the now peculiar way law enforcement and others blur the lines between human
trafficking and prostitution.
In their press release about the Dad’s Dan bust the Ministry
of National security claimed to have "rescued" two Venezuelan
women, bringing the total to 26 people “rescued” since the counter trafficking
unit was established in 2013. They don’t say if these women were indeed being
held against their will and forced into sexual slavery, but judging by the
self-congratulatory tone of the Ministry’s release, you would swear they just
liberated Auschwitz.
This conflation between human trafficking and prostitution is
no accident. As journalist Elizabeth Nolan Brown points out in her excellent
piece for Reason Magazine, “The war on sex trafficking is the new war on
drugs”. The term ‘Human Trafficking’ has become useful for religious
groups, anti-prostitution groups, feminists and other killjoys who simply want
to target prostitution.
Exposing how federal statistics on human trafficking are
either false or inflated to encompass prostitution, Brown writes, “A federal
war on prostitution doesn't play well with large segments of Americans.
Fighting human trafficking, on the other hand, is a feel-good
cause.”
There is good reason to believe that a similar modus operandi
is at work here in T&T. After all, the headline, “Cops bust human
trafficking ring” sounds a lot better than, “cops apparently with nothing
better to do arrest two women at Dads Dan”.
Ultimately the difference between Human Trafficking and
prostitution has to do with freedom. No one has the right to infringe on the
freedoms of others by forcing them into sexual slavery.
Likewise no one should have the right to limit the freedoms
of those who choose to be sex workers. That’s why local advocates against human
trafficking should also be passionate champions for the freedom of sex
workers.
1 comment:
What??? Do something as progressive as legalizing prostitution? What's next the decriminalization of marijuana and homosexuality? Never!!!!
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