Dave Chappelle - PIMP and Lizzie Borden film on capitalist distortion on sex work. video below

WHY don’t major women organizations like mass now not weigh- in on decriminalization?

why are some “sex worker activism spaces” avoiding major women organizations?

Some sex work activism spaces advocate for decriminalization without enough protection for women. With labor laws greatly favor brothel owners and lack data privacy laws .

Are sex worker business in danger?

The Oligarchy spend millions dollars to divide and conquered women with social media campaigns and astroturfing. We need think tanks !!!

However, decriminalization is a band-aid solution that fails to address the root of the issues surrounding harms related to sex work. Decriminalization does not stop predatory capitalism. The billionaire class knows it's about enforcement; something can be illegal, but if it's not enforced, it's the same as predatory capitalism. This group is focused on critically thinking about decriminalization and its economic impact on individual women-owned businesses or sex worker-owned businesses. If you're a decriminalization corporate lobbyist working for a porn company or bad-faith nonprofit, this is not a group to attend so that you can recruit for decrim. There are a lot of sex work activism spaces, But decriminalization does not stop predatory capitalism because it's not just about whether it's decriminalization or legalization. The billionaire class knows it's about enforcement; something can be legal, but if it's not enforced, it's the same as predatory capitalism.

Bankrate's latest survey results found 56% of U.S. adults lack the emergency funds to handle a $1,000 unexpected expense and one-third (35%) said they would have to borrow the money somehow to pay for it. So why do brothels want to labor outsource and racial segregation???

West Virginia Mind wars.. labor outsourcing..

When you decriminalize sex work, you're not just decriminalizing for working-class people but for sex traffickers, brothels, and massive under ground unregulated and undocumented corporations. The outcome is obvious. Women's income is made more vulnerable in a capitalist system designed to steal from the poor and give to the rich. Criminalization is harm reduction–it prevents more significant and private capital investments, protects small business data on a microeconomics level, and preserves individual autonomy. study your working class history.. remember the West Virginia Mind wars.. labor outsourcing. study history !!

Patten of retelling history to fit Predatory capitalist

A paper by Harvard Law School Japanese legal studies professor J. Mark Ramseyer that claims sex slaves taken by the Imperial Japanese Army during World War II were actually recruited, contracted sex workers generated international controversy, academic criticism, and student petitions at Harvard this week. By Ariel H. Kim and Simon J. Levien, Crimson Staff Writers

February 7, 2021

SEOUL, South Korea — A paper by Harvard Law School Japanese legal studies professor J. Mark Ramseyer that claims sex slaves taken by the Imperial Japanese Army during World War II were actually recruited, contracted sex workers generated international controversy, academic criticism, and student petitions at Harvard this week.

The paper, “Contracting for Sex in the Pacific War,” made headlines across South Korean media and was met with widespread public anger. Ramseyer’s work is set to be published in the March issue of the International Review of Law and Economics. Korean outlets picked up the news after Ramseyer’s paper was featured in a Jan. 28 press release in Sankei Shimbun, a Japanese newspaper.

Well-known worldwide for its conservative, nationalist bent, Sankei shared Ramseyer’s abstract with his permission, while adding that memorials to “comfort women” across Asia have spread a “false image” of Japan.

“Comfort women” — a loose translation of a Japanese euphemism for “prostitute” — refers to women and girls forced into sex slavery by the Imperial Japanese Army. Comfort women were held at brothels, or “comfort stations,” adjacent to Japanese military facilities to serve soldiers. The number of women enslaved from Japan’s occupied territories is disputed, but estimates range from the tens of thousands to up to 410,000, with many being of Korean descent.

Since World War II, Japan has propped up and dissolved compensation funds, dealt with lawsuits and investigations, and issued and walked back apologies to comfort women. Of the few surviving comfort women today, many have said they are still waiting for justice.

The U.N. Commission on Human Rights, Amnesty International, and many notable scholars in Korea, Japan, the United States, and other countries have published extensive reports documenting the explicit sexual slavery of comfort women.

Ramseyer argues in his paper that comfort women were not coerced, but voluntarily employed under the terms of a contract.

Based on the title of Ramseyer’s professorship — the Mitsubishi Professor of Japanese Legal Studies — many Korean media outlets and scholars suspected that he may be sponsored by the Japanese corporation.

Yuji Hosaka — a political science professor at Sejong University in Seoul often cited in Korean press — suggested in an interview the possibility that Mitsubishi donated money to the University to establish the professorship and give Ramseyer this role.

for more info google artical

https://www.thecrimson.com/article/2021/2/7/hls-paper-international-controversy/

mass