Sex-workers' rights activists marching in Soho in 2014 (Photo by Jake Lewis)
"In particular, the inquiry will assess whether the balance in the burden of criminality should shift to those who pay for sex rather than those who sell it," reads the launch statement.So this will be the scope of the investigation: it's not a question of if someone must pay the price for the sordid transaction, it's just a matter of whom. It's like launching an investigation into the legislation around weed and framing the debate as: "We all agree that cannabis is evil. So should the dealer or the smoker go to jail?"Before the inquiry even begins, its terms of reference are so loaded with assumption that objective debate has already been stifled. And this is a tragedy because real change is desperately needed.At present, fucking for a living is legal, but you can be arrested for brothel-keeping. Unfortunately, "brothel-keeping" could simply mean your friend hangs out in the next room to keep you safe. Meanwhile, it's perfectly legal to exchange blowjobs for cash, but touting for business on the street can land you a record for soliciting (unless you work in Leeds' new regulated zone).This bullshit legislative situation, which doesn't put workers' safety as a primary concern, has real implications. Since 1990, 151 sex workers have been murdered in the UK and an estimated two-thirds have experienced violence at work. This is your ducking stool, hookers: how much danger and persecution can you take until you realise what you're doing is an affront to the moral order?
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