History of Feminism
Related: About this forumOjibway former child sex worker says striking down prostitution laws does nothing to help Aboriginal
But one Ojibway former child sex worker cried.
And they werent tears of joy.
It feels as a survivor, someone commercially and sexually exploited, that its a slap in the face. A big slap in the face, said Bridget Perrier, 37, a former child sex worker who was first sold to men in Thunder Bay at the age of 12. We cant put dollars signs on our bodies.
The Supreme Court of Canada unanimously agreed the current prostitution laws in Canada are unconstitutional and has given the federal government a year to come up with something better. The current laws will remain in place until then.
Perrier feels the ruling is a step towards giving men the right to further victimize Aboriginal women and girls who, she says, turn to the sex trade when they no longer have hope.
...
http://aptn.ca/news/2013/12/20/ojibway-former-child-sex-worker-says-striking-prostitution-laws-nothing-help-aboriginal-women/
It's really sad how the man who wrote this article throws in some pro-prostitution editorializing toward the end of this article.
Notice also the framing in the title "child sex worker"? Really?
Shameless.
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Squinch
(53,806 posts)You are dead right, but I bet many reading this don't even catch that.
cinnabonbon
(860 posts)children have the mental capacity to consent to being a sex worker, because they clearly knows what all of that entails.
It is terrible that Aboriginal women and kids have to resort to this. They've been wronged.
Tuesday Afternoon
(56,912 posts)on me ...
ismnotwasm
(42,538 posts)Of the aboriginal person-- historically, economically, spiritually, emotionally- that may reach their very core he very value as a human being; their personhood, their culture.
BainsBane
(55,406 posts)Both my sister and I were regularly solicited for sex starting at age 10. Even though we never forced to sell our bodies, we lived with the reality of that commerce every time we walked down the street. Three years before I menstruated, I was treated as a sexual commodity. That was the case for every girl who grew up in our neighborhood and other neighborhoods were prostitution occurs.