There is this very false and
detrimental belief among young people that anything and everything that a woman
does is empowering and that anyone who critiques, evaluates, or disagrees with women’s
collective behaviors is slut shaming and imposing rigid respectability politics
rules in order to control and oppress women.
This concept is damaging and unhealthy not only to the women who get
offended by any sort of critique of women’s collective behaviors but to the cause
of fighting for women’s liberation and for real feminism.
First, let’s CORRECTLY define what
slut-shaming is and isn’t. Slut shaming IS
the act of placing an inferior or stigmatized status on women for the normal,
healthy expression of their sexuality.
Slut shaming IS denigrating women for having pre-marital sex, for seeking
out and using birth control, for having an abortion, or for having multiple sex
partners. Slut-shaming is telling women that they can’t
have certain kinds of sex, that they are immoral or unworthy if they aren’t
virginal and chaste, it’s the male-dominated society’s double standard that
tries to shame women for being sexual. Slut-shaming
IS criminalizing women for their participation in prostitution and men getting
a free pass.
What slut-shaming IS NOT stating
that sex work/prostitution is not empowering.
Sex work is, in fact, participating in the objectification of women, it
is reinforcement of patriarchal, sexist, misogynist, violent, abusive,
degrading, demeaning roles for women.
One can condemn sex work and not sex workers. Sex workers are women who feel that they have
no other viable skills, that they want to sell whatever they have that men will
pay for, they are all too often victims of domestic abuse, molestation, and
unhealthy home environments that lead them to sell their bodies. Sex work has been made out to be empowering
because women are getting paid and, supposedly, the financial exchange, the
fact that women have agency in their own objectification, is supposed to negate
the fact that they are still being used by men as cum dumps, as things, as less
than human beings. Slut-shaming is not
critiquing the entire hierarchy of the sex work industry that deems that blond,
educated, surgically enhanced, articulate white women are sold for more than
even her Black counterpart.
This false notion persists that
sex work is glamorous, that it’s getting paid to do what you do for free any
way, that it’s taking advantage of men’s weakness, their stupidity, their
willingness to part with their money for something as simple as a few minutes
of sex. The reality is, sex work is
degrading, it’s dehumanizing, it’s not at all empowering. Young girls are convinced that being a porn
star or a stripper or a prostitute is easy money but it never is. There is always a man pulling the strings,
setting the price, demanding more than was negotiated for, taking out his frustrations,
and treating ALL women like things he can use.
COUNTLESS documentaries have been made to chronicle the stories of women
who said they got into porn thinking it would be easy money and how they got
strung out on drugs and were forced to do 12-16 hours of endless gangbangs, how
they suffered physically and ended up in the hospital with STDs and displaced
uteruses and other horrific things because some porn producer or director kept
pushing them to do more and more and then they didn’t get paid or got paid less
than what they contracted for. There are
far too many women who have told horrific tales of being raped and beaten by
johns yet the masses still insist that prostitution is empowering. The trafficking of children is an alarmingly
dangerous byproduct of prostitution and young women don’t seem to grasp that it
is a very real consequence to the normalization of prostitution. Critiquing prostitution is NOT
slut-shaming. Critiquing prostitution is
making an effort to dismantle the false belief system that tells women that
their most valuable asset lies between their legs. Critiquing prostitution is trying to destroy
the sexist mindset that allows men to think women are objects and things to be
used and thrown away.
Rationalizing that sex work is
empowering is the equivalent of rationalizing that cutting or bulimia is
empowering. I am not shaming the women
who cut themselves or who have bulimia, they are women led to self-destructive behaviors
because of low self-esteem in a society that doesn’t value them or their
personhood. The solution is not to
insist that cutting or bulimia is perfectly fine as long as the person doing it
considers it empowering. Sex work is the
commodification of sex, of women’s bodies, it places a value on them for what
they can do for men, how they can please men.
Just because women can get a purse or expensive pair of shoes from it
does not mean it’s empowering. This
concept that money is the great equalizer, that if a woman can get paid, then that
makes getting used by men just fine, great in fact. The propagation of this false narrative that
sex work is great because you get to sleep with a basketball player or a rapper
and get to live this glamorous life and be wined and dined, and maybe even end
up the Real Housewife of one of these men drives dozens of young women to doing
cam shows, and then dancing, and then selling it outright.
The false narrative is that sex
work is no big deal, that it’s easy money, that women (or male or trans
prostitutes) are taking advantage of men, calling the shots, that they are in
control. You are NOT in control of a
male-dominated situation where men have decided how much they want to pay to
use you. Even for the less than 1% of
young ladies who find their way to the Presidential Suite during All-Star Week,
you are not setting yourself up to be in a healthy relationship, not one of
your johns is going to see your value as a human being, they are not going to
consider you a partner with whom they need to compromise, share, negotiate, or
respect, you are an object, a pretty possession that can be replaced when the
next pretty object comes along. It is
not empowering to perpetuate the concept that women have price tags on their
pussies. AGAIN, that is not slut-shaming
the women who sell their bodies. I am
not saying that the women who sell their bodies are bad, sinful, shameful,
wrong, dirty, despicable, or any other negative or pejorative term. It’s simply stating that the system of misogyny
and sexism that manifests in the sale of women’s bodies shouldn’t be validated
or normalized because it’s not healthy.
“Well, I know lots of women who
just like sex and they do it because they want to, and they weren’t abused or
molested or anything.” Most women who enter into prostitution were
molested however. They were raped, or
victims of domestic violence, they were violated as young women and girls. Most women (and men) become drug addicts,
they are raped, they have horrific tales to tell of sick, twisted, perverted
sexual acts they were made to perform. Normalizing
your abuse isn’t empowering either. “Well,
some women don’t have any other options, they don’t have any other skills.” That, in and of itself, is the problem. We shouldn’t be teaching young girls that
what’s between their legs is a marketable product. Young women refuse to hear that. They are convinced beyond the shadow of an
intelligent, logical, reasonable doubt that sex work is great.
I get it. Young women want to feel validation, they
want to feel like they are justified in their choices because they don’t want
to be made to feel embarrassed or stigmatized or shamed because that makes them
feel insecure and defensive. They
rationalize that because they aren’t selling it on the street corner, because they
are college-educated and they are paying off their loans, because they are only
doing every once in a while to pay the rent or their car note, or because they
have kids and their baby daddy doesn’t pay his child support that there is
nothing wrong with it. They don’t want
to be made to feel bad about their choices.
But not all choices are healthy, even if you are a willing participant,
and negative consequences result from many a bad choice.
Because we live in a society where
young people have NO concept of what a healthy relationship is, they
immediately dismiss any model of a symbiotic, mutually beneficial partnering
that I may suggest as an alternative because they know of no other reality
other than the dysfunctional one they have been raised with. Let’s say you hit the jackpot, your first
time out you find the basketball player who just signed the $7 million contract,
he doesn’t ask you for anything too weird or degrading or hurtful, and he is so
mesmerized with your nana and your bedroom skills that he wants to make you his
#1. If you enter into a relationship
with this man who has purchased your body, do you sincerely think that he will
not cheat on you, or that he will respect your rules and boundaries? He will not only not value you as a person or
a partner, your opinion, your other talents and abilities, but he will not even
blink when he is offered an opportunity to bed another woman because you are
nothing more than a trophy, a thing he paid for to show off. That is not empowering!
Sex work is participating in the
objectification of women and that is NOT empowering. Participating in sex work is reinforcing that
women are “less than”, that they shouldn’t seek sexual expression that is based
on love, respect, commitment and mutual cooperation, it’s saying, “That stuff about
women being respected and loved is fairy-tale bullshit that doesn’t happen in
the real world, the best a woman can hope for is that she finds a rich dude who
has more money than common sense.” If
fact, if I suggest that sex should be based on love, should be based on
respect, should be based on a level of commitment to a relationship, I’m supposedly
imposing respectability politics on the free sexual expression of women. But that’s not what I’m saying at all. I’m not saying that women shouldn’t be able
to have casual sex. I’m not suggesting
for a moment that if a woman has sex purely for pleasure in the restroom of a
club with a total stranger whose name she doesn’t know that she’s a bad
person. Our rape/porn culture has convinced young
women that the only valid form of sex is degrading/humiliating/objectifying sex
and that there is no other alternative other than some 1950s oppressive model
of vanilla, conservative boring sex. That will be the downfall of our society,
believing that women were created to be slapped, choked, spit on, gagged, and used
as a hole for men’s pleasure and that getting paid for that is empowering.
The goal of Feminism 2.0 should
not be for women to be as sexually indiscriminate as men because men are
unhealthy and warped in their views of sex.
That’s not something we should be striving for and equality on those
terms is conforming to sickness. We
should be evolving in our views on sex.
We should be seeking to view sex in a healthier, more holistic, more
empowering way. Instead we are
reinforcing and normalizing the objectification of women, we should be looking
to use sex as a tool of communication, of meditation, of connection, of YES,
even of love. I’m not trying to impose
puritanical rules on sex, I’m not saying that sex should be boring and only for
procreation, that isn’t healthy at all either.
Sadly, the masses can’t see any other way to view sex other than to
simply reinforce the status quo, to participate in the unhealthy practices that
have become the norm. Sex should be something that is earned with
trust, with communication, with vulnerability, with intimacy. Until we grasp that, until women decide that
there is no price that a man could pay for her most sacred space, that as a
holy sex priestess, she will only allow men who respect, revere, and cherish
her to enter her sacred walls. Then,
when a man has earned that right, fuck like animals. Fuck the sheets off the bed, wake the neighbors,
experiment with anything safe, sane, and consensual. When you find a partner with whom you can
share your secrets, your vulnerabilities, your dreams and fears, then is when
you can share your nastiest fantasies and make them a reality. THAT IS EMPOWERING.
1 comment:
Interesting.
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