Below is an article I wrote eight years ago. After recently seeing Sound of Freedom, I feel compelled to re-share such jolting material because, obviously, the world needs it more than ever.
Trafficking, pornography, prostitution, and more — it’s all connected and it’s all stoppable.
So, I present my old article here with very minor edits and some notes:
This was before the trans agenda — as we all now know it — went into full effect. So, my use of terms like post-modern, queer theory, and libfems pre-date current terms like “non-binary” and all that.
Also, a strong trigger warning: This piece contains graphic verbatim accounts from sexual assault survivors. It can be disturbing.
Please stop reading now if this might be more than you can handle.
Let the “Sex Workers” Speak for Themselves! (2015)
Here’s how it goes: You write something critical (backed with boatloads of evidence) about pornography and/or prostitution and the liberal feminists/queer theorists come out of the woodwork to rally the allies.
They label you “sex-negative” and try to silence you by chanting in unison: “Let the sex workers speak for themselves!”
I decided to test their receptiveness by recently interviewing a survivor but that didn’t seem to quell the post-modern crowd. They prefer to only heed “sex workers” like the woman who appeared in a recent Cosmopolitan article called: Sex Worker Answers All Your Questions About What It's Like to Work at a Legal Brothel.
This “sex worker” — or as she eloquently calls it, “therapist who also maybe touches your weiner” — was Sarah Greenmore and from her, I learned:
She’s always been “a very sexual person” but her job is “not about my pleasure, it’s about his.”
“Making people feel good is my job, first and foremost.”
Before a rough day of perhaps seven “clients,” use a lube that has Hyaluronan in it, which “helps repair skin cells.”
She’s “not interested in dating anyone who wouldn't call themselves a feminist.”
Hmm…“letting” this “sex worker” speak for herself wasn’t as liberating as the libfems promised and certainly didn’t answer “all my questions.” Thus, I had to seek out more “therapists who also maybe touch your wiener.”
To follow are some of my queries along with answers provided by a wide range of survivors I found online. Btw, I easily found all these voices without even needing an advanced degree in Gender Studies (or any degree at all)!
(Major trigger warnings for rape and sexual abuse survivors)
Q. What’s it like getting started in this business?
Linda Lovelace: “My initiation into prostitution was a gang rape by five men, arranged by Mr. Traynor. It was a turning point in my life. He threatened to shoot me if I didn’t go through with it. I had never experienced anal sex before and it ripped me apart. They treated me like an inflatable plastic doll, picking me up and moving me here and there. They spread my legs this way and that, shoving their things at me and into me, they were playing musical chairs with parts of my body. I have never been so frightened and disgraced and humiliated in my life. I felt like garbage. I engaged in sex acts for pornography against my will to avoid being killed. The lives of my family were threatened.”
Ayesha: “To ‘break me in,’ I was raped several times a night for nearly a month before the madam started selling me to men for money. It was typical for me to have ten to twelve buyers every night. They were usually abusive, treating me as if they owned my body. I have a deep scar on my neck from a knife blade, which I got trying to save a young girl in my house from being gang raped. It almost killed me.”
Q. But it’s a “choice,” right? Surely you can come and go as you please?
Ayesha: “I tried to leave that dungeon many times. Memories still flash in my mind of my hair being pulled, of being dragged through the dirt streets by the brothel owner after a failed escape. Even though I cried, screamed for someone to help me, people just stood by watching, without even a look of sympathy. Tears stream down my face as I think back to that day. If even one man had tried to save me, my life would have been changed. But all of them stood there like mute spectators. When people tell me that women choose this life, I can’t help but laugh. Do they know how many women like me have tried to escape, but have been beaten black and blue when they are caught? To the men who buy us, we are like meat. To everybody else in society, we simply do not exist.”
Q. Okay, that doesn’t sound very “transgressive” to me. I’ll bet things are better in the glamorous and high-paying world of porn. What’s it like to get started in that business?
Jenna Jameson: “Most girls get their first experience in gonzo films — in which they’re taken to a crappy studio apartment in Mission Hills and penetrated in every hole possible by some abusive asshole who thinks her name is Bitch.”
Alexa James: “The first shoot I did was with a man who was probably 40 and he was as thick as a soda can. He held me down and shoved it in me with no lube tearing my vagina. When I started to tear up and cry he flipped me over and continued from behind me so they wouldn’t get me crying on film. He pulled my hair and choked me over and over again even when I told him it hurt and I could barely breathe.”
Alexa Milano: “My first movie, I was treated very rough by three guys. They pounded on me, gagged me with their penises, and tossed me around like I was a ball! I was sore, hurting, and could barely walk. My insides burned and hurt so badly. I could barely pee and to try to have a bowel movement was out of the question.”
Please watch and share:
Q. Wait, is that a job choice or photographed rape? Didn’t you have a say while filming?
Corina Taylor: “I arrived to the set I expected to do a vaginal girl-boy scene, but during the scene with a male porn star, he forced himself anally into me and would not stop. I yelled at him to stop and screamed ‘No’ over and over but he would not stop. The pain became too much and I was in shock and my body went limp.”
Jersey Jaxin: “Guys punching you in the face. You have semen from many guys all over your face, in your eyes. You get ripped. Your insides can come out of you. It’s never-ending.”
Jessi Summers: “I did a scene where I was put with male talent that was on my ‘no’ list. I wanted to please them so I did it. He put his foot on my head and stepped on it while he was doing me from behind. I freaked out and started bawling; they stopped filming and sent me home with reduced pay since they got some shot but not the whole scene.”
Q. How in the world can anyone — especially women and girls — possibly survive, day-to-day, in either prostitution or pornography?
Jessie Jewels: “People in the porn industry are numb to real life and are like zombies walking around.
Loreta: “I was in prostitution from age 15 to 19. My friends and I lived in one apartment with the madam. We worked from 4 pm till late night or early morning with three to four clients a day. Sometimes we used condoms, but sometimes we didn’t. Most of the clients were foreigners who didn’t speak my language and didn’t care about my age. I didn’t know how to contact the police and I didn’t know if the police would even care. I wanted to run away but was scared the gang would find me and kill me. My self-loathing grew, so I began injecting myself with drugs. I tried to numb myself from the pain so I wouldn’t feel anything at all.
Q. And the clients don’t care if a “sex worker” is underage?
Rachel Moran: “I answered enough phones in enough brothels to know the most common question is always: ‘What is the youngest girl you’ve got?’”
Q. But this is not what the post-modern sex theorists say. We’re told such different stories when it comes to prostitution and pornography. Have you ever heard how the liberals describe your life?
Anita Cannibal: “Yeah, there are a lot of cover-ups going on. There is a lot of tragedy. There are a lot of horrible things.”
Well, that sure answered a lot more of my questions than Cosmo did. How about you?
If you need more evidence, here are over 100 personal stories of “harm or negative effects from pornography, prostitution, stripping, sexual slavery, rape trafficking, sexual harassment, sexual abuse, and our pornified society.”
Also, if you haven’t heard my very recent podcast with Samantha Berg, this is the ideal time to listen:
Again: Trafficking, pornography, prostitution, and more — it’s all connected and it’s all stoppable.
If not now, when?
That was not the most uplifting start to my morning, and I simply can’t stick that little heart thing on it even though it’s brilliant, but it is something that needs to be shared. Hell, it needs to be shouted from the rooftops, over and over, until everyone understands that the vast majority of these women do not choose this life, do not want to be treated as objects for abuse. And for those who think it’s not your fault, that you have no part in it - you do. Anyone who has ever visited a prostitute, been to a strip show, viewed pornography (even the most vanilla), or just turned a blind eye to those who do - you are complicit in an industry that rips women apart, both physically and psychologically. Thank you, Mickey, for shining a light into those dark corners where most of us would prefer not to see, because we need to be made to look, and to understand exactly the harms our participation or our silence cause.
Is there any woman who wants to be a prostitute? you must be out of your mind if you do. I think almost all came in by force. (I only read a bit of the article, realizing I was probably right)