Spotted today on the Ocado (aka. Waitrose) supermarket website.
Category Archives: thoughts
His Excellency Harry the Cat
Cats are solar powered! Harry enjoying the artificial sun of my desk lamp.
White Bra Man
Seen yesterday morning on the M11 near Stanstead Airport.
Depressing and Predictable
Following on from yesterday’s post about the views on drugs of the Chief Constable of North Wales … Needless to say said Chief Constable has today come in for the “usual intemperate attack” from the Daily Mail and other papers (eg. this relatively well tempered article in the Daily Telegraph).
Bystander over at The Magistrate’s Blog comments in his usual forthright and perceptive style:
… what is most depressing about this is the entire lack of any reasoned debate. Whenever the drugs issue comes up, the tabloids and some of the rent-a-quote politicians … go into a knee-jerk rant mode …
We have now reached the position where there is no chance of any rational approach to our fellow citizens’ increasing appetite for chemical stimulation.
Our politicians long ago gave up leadership, in favour of a marketing-led approach dependent on focus groups and polls.
… elected politicians … are terrified of upsetting anyone.
The ‘War on Drugs’ has become like the later stages of the Vietnam war: it’s unwinnable, but nobody has the guts to admit it …
I really couldn’t have expressed it better myself, even with all day to think about it!
However the “intemperate attacks” are precisely why I think Brunstrom is wrong. The legalisation he is advocating won’t happen; the tabloid press and the tabloid politicians will ensure it doesn’t; they’ll drown out anyone who dares to think about the subject.
Quote: Furnishing the Mind
Since we are destined to live out our lives in the prison of our minds, our one duty is to furnish it well.
[Peter Ustinov]
Dr Alice Roberts
In the latest issue (January 2008) of BBC Focus magazine (science for the intelligent 10-year-old) there’s a mini-interview with one of the few females on TV who really do make my heart beat faster: Dr Alice Roberts, “clinical anatomist, archaeologist, TV presenter and author”, also a very talented artist and a qualified medic. Those of you in the UK who’ve watched either Time Team (Channel 4), Coast (BBC2) or Don’t Die Young (BBC2) will know Alice Roberts as the slightly off-the-wall girlie with the dyed red hair. The interview includes:
What’s the greatest threat to humanity?
Humanity.Who would you clone?
I wouldn’t. Sexual reproduction is much more exciting.What would your epitaph say?
Boadicea, Queen of the Iceni. And I’d be buried in a chariot just to fool future archaeologists.
Seriously Zen Mischief!
Condoms, sex, and 16 year olds
Skatje Myers, over at Lacrimae Rerum has written a very thoughtful post today about condoms, sex and 16 year olds. It is worth reading.
Solstice Reprise!
Wow, things heavenly come in threes? It’s probably always thus, but I’ve never noticed quite so obviously before a whole raft of heavenly celebration:
- Winter solstice: 21 December, the winter festival of light
- New Moon: early hours of 24 December, the monthly rite of the goddess
- Christmas Day
- Boxing Day (26 December): being one of the days for wassailing your fruit trees
- New Year’s Day: being another of the days on which one should wassail fruit trees
Looks like there’s going to be lots of dancing naked round the garden in the next few days. đ
Rejoice!
Yes, Rejoice! The Solstice is gone! From here on it gets lighter — though heaven knows it never feels like it until the end of February. But for those of use with SAD, the corner has been turned once more.
Sex for Sale
Oh dear; oh dear! They just do not understand do they! Harriet Harman, Deputy Leader of the Labour Party, has decided to boil the ocean. According to various news items yesterday (including on BBC News) she has said she wants to make it illegal in the UK to buy sex. This seems to be on the grounds that it is (a) abuse of women and (b) itâs been done successfully in Sweden. At the very least Mistress Harman (and it seems safe to assume she speaks for the disreputable control freaks we have for a government) wants a major open debate on the subject.
The very idea of making payment for sex illegal I find totally abhorrent. And no thatâs not because I use (or ever have used) prostitutes. It is a purely open-minded and pragmatic approach.
So here is my (first?) contribution to the debate:
- Objection the first is that the whole thing will be unworkable. So it will be illegal to pay for sex. Bystander, over at the Magistrates Blog makes a good point: how is it possible to prevent the oldest profession. He observes: âAs a lawyer you [Harriet Harman] will be aware that you belong to the world’s second-oldest profession. What chance have you got of outlawing the oldest?â
- No-one doubts that abuse happens within the prostitution trade. Equally everyone will agree it shouldnât happen. But criminalising payment for sex isnât going to make it go away; itâs going to make it worse: the protagonists will feel that as theyâre already the wrong side of the law they have nothing to lose and that will just make the abuse and violence go underground. So everyone is actually worse off.
- Similarly with the drugs problem which many prostitutes are feeding, especially at the lower end of the market. If theyâre engaging in a criminal activity already then they become even more vulnerable and potential prey for drug dealers. And there will be less funding etc. for those organisations who try to help the girls by providing needle exchange, condoms and sanity.
- There is also a major logic problem with the thinking. Apparently the idea is not to make it illegal to sell sex but illegal to buy for sex. What? How can you sell something legally when it is illegal for someone to buy it? Currently it is legal to sell and to buy sex; prostitution in the UK is not of itself illegal. But many activities associated with prostitution (kerb-crawling, soliciting, pimping, etc.) are illegal.
- Moreover there are ways round the âpaymentâ restriction. As we know many âhostess clubsâ already take large payments for bottles of champagne (or other food or drink) for which one gets the attentions of your chosen handmaiden. Said handmaiden is paid a wage by the club as a member of staff. How are the lawyers going to prevent such scams. John says he didnât pay Kat for sex, he just bought an expensive bottle of champagne and some sandwiches; the fact that they had sex was because he came onto her âcos she was gagging for it and so was he. Kat says she received no money from John, she had sex with him âcos she fancied him and he seemed like a decent bloke. Case dismissed, MâLud.
- In another BBC News article (from February 2007) they look at how the Swedish system â on which Mistress Harman proposes ours should be based â has actually worked. Answer: patchily at best. While it does appear to have reduced abuse and trafficking, it has also reduced the level of support for those prostitutes still working who have drugs habits; and the supply of condoms has also dried up.
- A third BBC News item (this one from December 2006) looked at the more liberal approach of the Netherlands, where they openly allow prostitution and protect their working girls. This works. Prostitution is legal (as long as the girls are registered), they can advertise their services, most work from rooms and few need to work the street. Those who do work the streets are looked after in safe zones. As one Dutch interviewee comments: âProstitution is a reality ⌠and in order to protect those women and men who engage in it, it should be given equal status to other occupationsâ. Incidentally for even further enlightenment read the readersâ comments to this article.
- “Equal status” is an interesting point. What is the human rights position on (the illegality of) prostitution? Is it not a basic human right to be able to sell ones body if one chooses to. And if that means a woman chooses to sell her vagina, mouth or hand in return of cash, or a pig, or loaves of bread, then why should she not be allowed to? I can sell my brain to the company I work for; I donât get abused because the law says itâs illegal. If prostitution were legal then it would be easier for working girls to turn in those who abuse them, because that is already illegal. At the end of the day all work is prostitution of one form or another!
- Finally, something governments always seem to forget. If you make something legal, you can regulate it and tax it. In the case of prostitution this means that the girls would be paying tax and National Insurance, which is ultimately good for them and for the Treasury. It also means that if theyâre regulated (as in Holland) then they can be licensed only if they have regular health checks, which should be good for the girls and ultimately save stress on the health service.
As usual it seems to me that the pragmatic Dutch â who incidentally also have the lowest teenage pregnancy rate in the West; a quarter of the UK rate and 10% of the USAâs rate! â have got it right. Legalise prostitution, donât drive it further underground. Openness and trust does actually work!