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What I learned about economics and prostitution at the 'Museum of Communism'

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museum of communism

The Museum of Communism in Prague is located above the local McDonald's and next door to a casino — a location the museum's owners are evidently delighted by.

The museum is a fascinating collection of old memorabilia and products, featuring statues of Marx and Lenin next to communist-made motorbikes, and vintage ads for the Czech version of Coca-Cola.

The Czech Republic today is so open and Western-facing that it is hard to believe that after World War 2 the former Czechoslovakia elected a communist government which was forcibly annexed in 1969 when the Soviet Union sent tanks into the country after that government made the mistake of briefly flirting with liberalisation. It was only in 1989 that a "Velvet Revolution" restored democracy, and today Czechia is a member of the EU.

The part of the museum that had the most impact on me when I visited this spring, however, was the section on what day-to-day life was like for ordinary people during the Cold War. How they worked and shopped, what they ate, and what they did for money.

I was reminded of the museum when I read a July 12 note from Barclays analyst Alejandro Arreaza, describing the deterioration of Venezuela. The government there recently reclaimed a Kimberly Clark factory for the workers. Arreaza wrote:

"President Maduro has signaled more radical stance. Last night, he announced a new structure for the government in which all ministers will be subordinated to the Minister of Defence, Vladimir Padrino Lopez, under a new 'great mission of sovereign and secure supply' to control the food, pharmaceutical and industrial sectors. He ordered the immediate occupation of any plants that have stopped operations, starting with that of Kimberly Clark, which announced yesterday that it was temporary closing its operations in Venezuela due to the crisis in the country."

czechThis was exactly what the Czech government tried to do 50 years ago: control the price and supply of basic consumer goods.

In theory, plentiful food and goods at prices workers can afford sounds great. And the fact that Czech communism was a diluted version of hardline Russian Soviet communism meant that by the 1980s the Czech people had a higher standard of living than the rest of the Soviet Union. So there remains a certain allure to the model ... maybe it is actually possible to control the market and make it work for the people, and not The Man?

But the Prague museum has some harsh reality checks for anyone pondering the Venezuelan dream.

The first problem in Czechoslovakia, as the museum describes it, is that price controls led immediately to shortages. Once the government set the price of bread and meat and other staples, food makers instantly knew they would not get paid enough to make or ship their goods. So they stopped. Shelves went bare.

Very quickly, certain professionals became very powerful. Bakers, butchers, doctors and plumbers — anyone who had valuable skills or access to extra food and soap — could trade or barter their goods and services on the black market. They could carve out a comfortable life for themselves, especially if they maintained a secret network of friends.

But most people lost out immediately.

stadionThe communist dream was to serve factory workers, but those workers found their skills outside the factory turned out to be useless: You can't swap your prowess on the assembly line for a bottle of shampoo.

Some of the richest people in Prague were the prostitutes. They were able to trade their skills to Western visitors and diplomats in addition to local clients. Smart women could make a month's wages in a single night, and receive it in valuable foreign currency not the devalued Czech koruna.

So Czech communism replaced the class structure of capitalism with a different (but familiar) class structure of communism, in which government officials and black marketeers did well, and everyone else got screwed. (The museum sells a funny T-shirt summing this up: It says, "You couldn't get laundry detergent but you could get your brain washed.")

You can see something similar happening in Venezuela right now.

Price controls and government supply edicts have led to chronic shortages of everything. Last weekend, tens of thousands of Venezuelans crossed the border to Colombia just to buy toilet paper, which is now impossible to find in their own country.

tesla czechThe Venezuelan black market for toilet paper is now a huge business, because everyone needs it. Companies come up with elaborate trades in order to ensure they get it, in which a truck full of TP somehow costs less than a single roll.

The Venezuelan secret police have begun busting company managers who supply TP for their workers' bathrooms. The most comfortable people in Venezuela right now, in more ways than one, are those with illegal toilet paper to sell.

Citibank, General Mills, Procter & Gamble and Bridgestone have all withdrawn operations from the country or reduced their supply of goods to it.

Not because they're evil capitalists who want to sabotage President Maduro.

But simply because, like a Czech butcher, no one is paying them enough to bother.

Join the conversation about this story »

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Keith Vaz now faces a fresh allegation about his contentious links to prostitution

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Keith Vaz

The scandal involving Labour's Keith Vaz does not look like going away anytime soon as the MP faces new allegations relating to past links with a brothel owner.

Vaz, who resigned as Home Affairs Committee chair last week after a Daily Mirror report said he paid for the services of male sex workers, has now been accused of trying to stop a council evicting a brothel owner 25 years ago. 

The MP was not immediately available for comment when Business Insider contacted his office. 

The new Daily Mirror report alleges that police are currently assessing whether the disgraced MP could be charged on the grounds of abuse of office and personal misconduct over the allegation which dates back to 1991. 

Paul Gosling, a former Labour city councillor, says a man called Nigel Philpot-Jones secretly ran a male brothel at a council flat in Leicester, where Vaz currently serves as an MP. 

In a witness statement, Gosling added that Vaz acted in an inappropriate and bullying way to try and stop the council from evicting Philpot-Jones over missing rent payments. 

Vaz is not subject a formal investigation over the allegations. However, four unnamed people told The Times that they had been interviewed by Leicestershire Police as part of an investigation which has been underway for at least 12 months.

The Mirror's original expose claimed Vaz offered to cover the costs of cocaine for the sex workers and told one of them to bring "poppers" to the flat where they met up — a sex-enhancing drug. As committee chair, Vaz led the inquiry into whether parliament should liberalise prostitution laws, and often took a hardline approach to the risks of illegal drugs. 

At a press conference Business Insider attended last week, Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn refused to be drawn on whether Vaz would face suspension, saying he would leave decisions regarding Vaz's future to the party's National Executive Committee.

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Secret Service agent loses security clearance over an incident at a Maryland hotel

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Secret ServiceAn off-duty Secret Service agent on Vice President Mike Pence's detail was placed on administrative leave after allegedly soliciting a prostitute at a hotel in Maryland, according to a CNN report published Wednesday.

A spokesperson for the Secret Service acknowledged that "an alleged incident" involved one of their employees, and that it was under investigation by the Office of Professional Responsibility.

Citing multiple law enforcement sources, CNN reported that police officers responded to a call late last week, from a hotel manager who grew suspicious of some activity coming from one of the rooms.

One law-enforcement source who spoke to CNN claimed that the agent was caught after police saw him leave the alleged prostitute's room. The agent was reportedly off-duty and did not present himself in his official capacity at the time, the report said.

After being charged with solicitation, the agent self-reported his arrest to the Secret Service, according to the source. Prior to being suspended from duty, he was required to turn in his service weapon and official gear, as well as having his security clearance and access to official facilities revoked.

"We are exploring the full range of disciplinary actions," the Secret Service spokesperson said to CNN.

In 2012, nine agents were accused of bringing prostitutes into their rooms, while in their official capacity, during President Obama's economic summit in Colombia. During the incident, accusers claimed that agents refused to pay the amount that was agreed upon, prior to the alleged solicitation. The complaint eventually made its way from the Colombian national police to the US embassy, where after an investigation, the agents were dismissed.

SEE ALSO: The director of the Secret Service is stepping down

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Marine officers could face charges after allegedly getting drugged and robbed in Colombia

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Marine Col. Roger T. McDuffie

Three married US Marines could face charges after a February incident in Colombia in which they allegedly went out drinking with several women before getting drugged and robbed, the Miami Herald reported.

Col. Roger T. McDuffie, Maj. Andrew L. Mueller, and Maj. Mauricio Saenz may have fallen victim to a "burundanga poisoning" a type of crime where victims are slipped a drug so they can be robbed or kidnapped.

According to a Marine investigation, the men started the night of February 3 by going to two bars with a larger group of Marines.

After the rest of the group went back to their hotels, the three Marines in question went off on their own, apparently meeting four local women and eventually ending up a working-class section of Bogota that Pentagon personnel are not allowed to enter.

At some point during the evening, the three officers drank a highly intoxicating Colombian liquor called aguardiente and were slipped a drug called benzodiazepine.

Security cameras at the hotel filmed the officers walking the women through the lobby to their hotel rooms at 4:30 a.m., past other Marines who were gathering to catch a ride to the airport. They broke a 1 a.m. curfew in the process.

At least two of the Marines blacked out in their rooms while with two of the women, according to a report. Another officer withdrew money from his government travel card and brought two women to his room.

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Mueller's work laptop and iPhone 6 were stolen, as were his personal iPad and iPhone. McDuffie's work iPhone 6, as well as his personal iPhone, iPod, and cash, were also stolen.

This isn't the first time US military personnel have gotten in trouble in Colombia.

In 2012, two Marines and 11 US Secret Service officers were caught paying at least two strippers to go back to their hotel rooms with them.

The three officers could face "appropriate administrative or judicial proceedings,” according to the Herald, which means they could be charged with conduct unbecoming an officer.

Read the full story at the Miami Herald.

SEE ALSO: Former U.S. Navy admiral sentenced to 18 months in bribery scandal

Join the conversation about this story »

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A photographer who spent 5 years at Nevada's brothels found legal prostitution was nothing like what he thought

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Before traveling to Nevada, the photographer Marc McAndrews had never been to a strip club, let alone a brothel. Now, five years later, he's been to every single one in the state.

McAndrews made regular trips to Nevada's legal brothels, staying anywhere from a week to a month each time.

He stayed in bedrooms in the houses, shared bathrooms with the sex workers, and saw a world that few else have.

In 2014, McAndrews shared some photos from his trips inside the brothels with us. You can see more photos and read amazing stories in his book, "Nevada Rose."

SEE ALSO: The owner of America's most famous brothel explains how he promotes a business that's illegal to advertise

When McAndrews began shooting the brothels, he expected them to be seedy and filled with drugs, he told Business Insider. What he found was something completely different.



He started by visiting Moonlite Bunny Ranch, made famous by HBO's "Cathouse" series. When he asked about taking photos, the women thought he was just a nervous customer. He was turned down.



After being turned down by brothels near Carson City, one of the sex workers recommended he try a small town like Elko or Ely, where proprietors might be friendlier.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

Trump's new law targets sex workers using the site 'Backpage' — now they have to move offline to the streets to find clients

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  • The personals site Backpage.com was recently shut down by the FBI after they discovered that it was facilitating illegal sex trafficking.
  • Sites like Backpage are likely to disappear with the introduction of Trump's new law, which combines two bills — the SESTA and the FOSTA.
  • Consequently, the platform for sex workers to advertise their trade online is under threat.
  • They are in an increasingly dangerous position, as they are forced to meet clients on the street as opposed to vetting them in advance online.

When Olivia got a text from a co-worker a couple weeks ago that Backpage.com had been seized by the FBI and shut down, she panicked. Olivia is a sex worker specializing in body rubs and domination who is based in New York City, and for years she's relied on Backpage, a website for posting online personals, to find and vet new clients without having to go through a pimp or work on the streets. "I just told my roommate that I'll maybe have to move out," she told me in an interview. "I relied on Backpage because it is really well-known with clients. I tried using other sites without much luck; they were not as lucrative." She would buy ads on Backpage for about $7 apiece between 3 and 10 times a day when she was working, she told me. She was one of countless sex workers whose presence on Backpage, which investigators say grew from making $11.7 million in 2009 to $135 million in 2014, amounted to a hugely profitable business.

The shuttering of Backpage came after a long Senate investigation into the site's founders, Michael Lacey and John Larkin (who also previously ran Village Voice Media, a chain of alt-weeklies that included the Village Voice) for facilitating prostitution and sex trafficking — and after the Backpage CEO Carl Ferrer pleaded guilty to charges of money laundering and facilitating prostitution. In their investigation, authorities pointed to internal emails that allegedly show how the site's administrators edited posts to hide illegal activity by using software that scrubbed words that signaled illegal sex work with minors, like "amber alert" and "Lolita," from ads rather than passing the information on to law enforcement. In other words, they allegedly knew their platform was being used for abhorrent ends and helped those uses to continue.

But what Olivia used Backpage for and what sex traffickers used Backpage for aren't the same thing: Unlike sex trafficking, consensual adult sex work that isn't prostitution is not necessarily illegal. But because the executives of Backpage appear to have been breaking the law by hosting ads they allegedly knew were helping people engage in illegal acts, the entire site was shut down.

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It isn't the first time a website that hosted sex-industry ads has been seized by law enforcement. MyRedBook.com, a site used by sex workers, was shut down in 2014 for facilitating prostitution, too. Many of the people who used MyRedBook switched to Backpage; the question now is where sex workers like Olivia will go next. "Nothing's going away," said a woman who goes by Josie; she runs a business in New York that rents space to sex workers, and gives sensual massages herself. (Josie isn't her real name, and I've used pseudonyms for the sex workers I spoke to for this article to protect their identities.) Josie has been in the sex-work business for eight years. "It will just take time for the next thing to come along where people can find girls." While Josie is certainly right that sex work — and the existence of websites that facilitate it — won't ever go away, it will be a lot harder now for the next site, whatever it may be, to get going.

That's because just days after Backpage was seized, President Trump signed into law a combination of two bills, the Stop Enabling Online Sex Trafficking Act (SESTA) and Fight Online Sex Trafficking Act (FOSTA), which makes websites that knowingly allow sex trafficking to happen on their site liable for hosting the illegal activity and open to civil lawsuits — which, in turn, is supposed to make it much easier for prosecutors to go after the proprietors of websites like Backpage. The new law chips away at the Communications Decency Act, which has ensured that websites generally aren't liable for what their users post. And the impact of that has been immediate and chilling. Days after the Senate version of the bill passed but before Trump signed the bill into law, Craigslist shut down its personals section, where people would post ads looking for love or sex — ads that could easily include posts from pimps engaged in sex trafficking without the company having any idea what's going on.

"Any tool or service can be misused," reads the Craigslist landing page that shows up when you attempt to navigate to a personals board. "We can't take such risk without jeopardizing all our other services, so we are regretfully taking craigslist personals offline. Hopefully we can bring them back some day. To the millions of spouses, partners, and couples who met through craigslist, we wish you every happiness!"

The Communications Decency Act is widely considered to be one of the most important laws governing the web. Without it, there'd likely be no YouTube or Reddit or Myspace, and the early investors who poured millions into startups that laid the foundation for the internet we use today probably wouldn't have done so, since so many online platforms would be vulnerable to getting sued out of existence for any awful thing one of the millions of people who used their services posted, like defaming a celebrity or hosting hate speech or something even worse. Simultaneous conversation and moderation isn't possible — there's always going to be a lag. Policing everything posted on a global message board is untenable, which is why immunity from what users do has been so important for companies that run communications services.

And it's also why the Internet Association, which represents companies like Facebook and Google, didn't support the new anti–sex trafficking act until it included language that websites will only be liable for content that facilitates sex trafficking if they do so knowingly. Still, website owners still feel the new law leaves some ambiguity — and their anxiety has been amplified by the drama surrounding the shuttering of Backpage.com. Now sex workers are scrambling, unsure how they'll be able to stay in business, pay rent, or take care of their kids. Worst of all, they're worried they'll now be unable to use the web to find clients — and as a result they may instead have to find work on the streets.

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"People don't know how they're going to eat next week," said Hunter Leight, who has worked as an advocate for prostitutes and sex workers for more than a decade in San Francisco. Leight has worked on previous campaigns to decriminalize prostitution and has worked for years to help sex workers find the resources they need to stay safe. "It's like people saying I just showed up at work and the building was burned down and everything was gone." Now, without a safe place for sex workers to find clients online, two women I spoke to told me that they are seeing clients they don't like and whom they would like to not see anymore. "It creates a buyers' market, rather than a sellers' market where clients get to set their prices," Leight said. More importantly, that shift in dynamic puts sex workers who don't have experience doing street-based work, or people who were able to escape pimps or get off the streets, in a position where they're considering going back — and that means more women could be sexually assaulted, raped, or otherwise harmed.

It is true that Backpage and other sites like it have been used by pimps and others engaged in forced or coerced sexual activities. And the protection these sites were granted under the Communications Decency Act did apparently make it harder for prosecutors to go after websites that were hosting ads for sex trafficking and sex with minors. "In case after case, we successfully prosecute traffickers, but we cannot pursue the websites that profited from the ads placed by these vile operations," said Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance Jr. in March, urging the Senate to pass the anti–online sex trafficking act. "FOSTA-SESTA would finally enable action against what are essentially online, open-air bazaars."

Much of the discussion around the shuttering of Backpage has been intertwined with discussions around the new amendment to the Communications Decency Act, largely because the freedom from liability offered by the CDA for years hamstrung prosecutors who tried to go after the website, and the Senate's investigation into Backpage helped inspire the new sex-trafficking bills. The CDA undoubtedly gave websites cover to look the other way while victims of sex trafficking were marketed on their sites, which has placed these victims at the center of a debate about free speech online.

That it could strand people engaged in consensual sex work without an online hub isn't the only problem with FOSTA-SESTA. Another is that it won't necessarily prevent sex traffickers from using websites to peddle their victims. That's because the new law only allows individuals to seek civil remedies if the website is knowingly facilitating nonconsensual sex work — but in criminal law, proving such awareness is a pretty high bar. "At the criminal level, knowing something has to be proven beyond a reasonable doubt, and that provides a lot of protection," says Mary Anne Franks, a University of Miami law professor specializing in tech policy, criminal, and First Amendment law. Franks, who is the policy director at the Cyber Civil Rights Initiative, makes the point that the requirement to know something actually incentivizes companies that are afraid of being held liable for sex trafficking happening on their sites to not look for illegal activity at all.

Which paradoxically, amplifies what was problematic with the Communications Decency Act to begin with: When companies don't have any liability for what their users do on their platforms, it's easy to just not pay attention. It's one reason why hate speech flourished on Twitter for so long, why YouTube has allowed abusive videos of children to be monetized for years, and why neo-Nazi groups have long found a place to gather on Facebook. These companies had no legal incentive to keep watch.

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In other words, the Communications Decency Act might be in dire need of a broad update that would incentivize platforms to pay more attention to what users do on their sites and take more responsibility for the host of problems (read: fake news, Russian interference, neo-Nazis, hate speech, revenge porn, and harassment) that large internet companies have publicly grappled with over the past year and a half. But this new law doesn't do that. Instead, it limits what could be a conversation about making the internet a safer place into a discussion about sex trafficking — and might not even do much to help.

Victims of sex trafficking deserve to seek redress from those who profited off their abuse, which often takes the horrific shape of a mix of rape and slavery and other forms of physical violence, but FOSTA–SESTA might not be the silver bullet its proponents hoped. What it will probably do, though, is push sex workers further underground, as well as the websites where pimps posted ads (that could be used by law enforcement to find traffickers) even deeper into the shadows. And it probably won't make website owners any more likely to watch for and report illegal activity on their sites, either.

When it comes to sex work, those who are affected by these laws often can't advocate for their own needs to begin with. "The only way progress gets to be made is that we get to go out into the streets and speak our mind and protest, but we can't go out into the streets and protest because the nature of our work is illegal," Olivia told me. Eventually, Olivia said she'd like to go into sex education and fight for the decriminalization of consensual sex work, which she hopes would make her chosen profession safer — and make it easier for people in the industry to report when they notice someone might be working against their will. Now, she and the four other sex workers I spoke with for this story all say they're afraid.

"Some of my girls have kids, and I mean, it's horrifying," said Amy, another woman who runs the business in New York City that rents rooms to professional sex workers. "This is punishing consenting adults that have been supporting themselves through sex work. The general public thinks that sex workers are victims that we're forced into it or that we're drug addicts," she continued. "And sometimes that's true, but even if that is true, I still have a right. Even if I am on drugs, and I'm struggling, I have a right to do what I want with my body, how I choose to make money for services. I can't pay taxes without lying about it. In this country, I think it's very sad that certain occupations don't have rights."

And if sex work wasn't criminalized in the first place, then a bill intended to help victims would be less likely to unintentionally victimize people who affirmatively choose the profession. The people who support the anti–sex trafficking bill in the hope that it will help survivors, and victims of sex trafficking, find justice need to be cognizant of the lives of the people who will be hurt by this legislation, too.

SEE ALSO: Backpage.com founders, five others indicted on prostitution-related charges

Join the conversation about this story »

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Self-driving cars raise hygiene concerns, as passengers are likely to leave trash, odors and bodily fluids behind them

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  • Self-driving cars raise cleanliness issues as passengers will leave detritus — or bodily fluids — in their wake.
  • Studies show that passengers in self-driving cars are more likely to experience motion sickness than those in a normal car.
  • If such cars were to facilitate prostitution or pornography, there would be further clean-up required.
  • Uber has not yet revealed how they plan on cleaning self-driving cars.

Who will clean self-driving vehicles?

I found myself wondering this recently as my son and I tidied the family car after a road trip. We'd been driving for only five hours, but we had produced two grocery bags of trash: water bottles, parking stubs, wrappers from lunchtime hoagies, reading material, a roll of Scotch tape, and a ping-pong ball among other miscellany that had accumulated over the short time. It wasn't unusual. In my family, I'm the one who remembers to clean out the car, so I'm all too familiar with the volume and medley of mess that can be generated in vehicle regularly used by adults and kids.

Yet with companies like Uber, Waymo, and Lyft planning to launch their first generation of self-driving cars as shared taxis, it's not yet clear who or what will be there to clean up the half-drunk Starbucks cup, wipe down the mystery stickiness on the seat, or handle even less hygienic situations. It's not just a trivial matter: it's an issue of sanitation and rider well-being — one more pressing for future users than you might imagine.

Consider the many dimensions of mess. As I thought about mess in cars, I wasn't just thinking about cleaning up the slightly gross piece of lettuce from my son's hoagie that had fallen on the floor mats. I was thinking about cleaning up an even grosser kind of mess — the kind that you make if you are carsick.

I have to admit something embarrassing at this point: I am hideously prone to motion sickness. Cars. Boats. Planes. Subways. All of them make me nauseous. Sometimes, the consequences are messy. Reading of any kind makes the problem worse. This includes interacting with screens on mobile devices, which, unfortunately for me, a Carnegie Mellon survey suggests will likely become the most popular activity for self-driving car riders.

I started asking around to find out if other people had thought about motion sickness and self-driving cars. I found University of Michigan researchers Michael Sivak and Brandon Schoettle, two scholars in the vanguard of thinking about robot cars and retching. In a 2015 report, "Motion Sickness in Self-Driving Vehicles," they concluded that people riding in self-driving cars are more likely to experience motion sickness than people riding in conventional cars.

Since motion sickness most often occurs when the movement you feel doesn't align with the movement you see or otherwise anticipate, the pair saw multiple potential triggers for the ailment more likely to be at play in self-driving cars. Among them: a lack of control over direction and speed of movement, a non-forward-looking gaze, and an increased likelihood of participating in activities like reading, texting, watching videos, or playing games.

Because of this, according to the researchers' calculations, 6% to 10% of American adults riding in self-driving cars are likely to experience motion sickness often, usually, or always.

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Think about that for a moment: At least 1 out of 10 self-driving cars will often contain someone who is experiencing motion sickness. That's going to mean an awful lot of cleaning up.

Notice that this estimate doesn't include children or mention pregnant women. Yet they are the first groups that I, and probably most of you, think of when considering who's most prone to the Technicolor yawns.

Most families have some kind of gross story about their kids traveling and tossing cookies. "My son Owen has hurled in the exact same mile marker range on the PA Turnpike, between Mountains and Breezewood, on every road trip to Indiana," writer Monica Yant Kinney told me about her 10-year-old son. "That's two pukes per trip, three to four trips per year. He is a pro at using a gallon-sized Ziploc bag. No mess!" Some research also suggests that women may be more prone to motion sickness than men.

It's already common for passengers to ralph in ride-share vehicles. Typical is the story a graduate student recently told me about a time she ordered a Lyft after an 11-hour flight from Tokyo to Boston.

"I'm prone to motion sickness, especially around menstrual stuff," she said.

After the long, exhausting flight, she got into the car with and started chatting with the driver. Then it hit. "All of a sudden, I smelled a floral scent from somewhere in the car, and I started feeling nauseous," she said.

The driver gave her a full bottle of water, which, she said, turned out to be the wrong strategy: "I took a sip of water every time I felt nauseous. Then, I projectile-vomited on myself and the car." They pulled over, at which point the student opened the door to finish outside.

She said the kindness of the driver — stopping the car, asking her if she needed a minute to breathe, giving her a box of tissues, showing that he wasn't angry with her — meant a lot in what was an uncomfortable and embarrassing situation. Still, it was all over her and all over the car. She said she apologized profusely. She also said she tipped him $25 on a $25 ride, and thus avoided the $25 to $250 fines that Lyft, Uber, and some municipal taxis are known to allow drivers to collect for such "damages." After all, it's on the driver to clean up the mess.

Motion sickness is only one dimension of the many reasons that people yak in cars. There are also the drunk people, and the babies who spit up, and the people who are ill with gastrointestinal issues.

There's other unexpected discharge, too. One woman recently wrote in the Guardian about giving birth in an Uber: It was, like all births, messy.

Sick and injured people are also known to take taxis or ride-shares to the hospital instead of calling a pricey ambulance. But average cars, including the driverless models currently in testing, do not have the wipe-clean surfaces of an emergency vehicle's interior, let alone the plastic-y seat covers of many cabs.

Have you ever wondered why New York City taxis have smooth vinyl surfaces instead of molded plush seats of conventional passenger cars? It's a design decision that comes out of long experience with a wide variety of humans.

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Then there are the other body fluids — the ones usually managed in private. In Driverless: Intelligent Cars and the Road Ahead, authors Hod Lipson and Melba Kurman write about autonomous vehicles' potential to become a kind of rolling No-Tell Motel.

In one scenario, they imagine a new line of driverless cars that includes a "bed bus" model, complete with shaded windows for privacy. In other, they imagine a comfortable mobile environment for viewing entertainment on screens or with virtual reality goggles. Naturally, this could include one particular type of media product: porn.

This notion that driverless cars could become pornography hubs on wheels is quite common in futurist circles. Jeffrey Tumlin, a strategist at transportation consultancy Nelson/Nygaard and interim head of the Oakland, California department of transportation, predicts that self-driving cars could become vehicles for prostitution services — essentially fitted out to be self-driving brothels.

Putting aside for a moment the very serious questions a sex-on-demand robot car raises about safety and human trafficking, think about the mess. Perhaps these vice cars will specialize.

But even so, it's still not a stretch to imagine that people — teenagers, adulterers, or other couples caught up in the moment — will avail themselves of the perceived privacy of a driverless car during a standard trip. Do you really want to be picked up by a self-driving taxi that has someone's used condom on the floor?

Some tech has been proposed to deal with preventing some of the mess, including motion sickness. In 2016, Uber filed a patent for a "sensory stimulation system for an autonomous vehicle" designed to combat it with haptic feedback (think lights, vibrations, or bursts of air). Waymo also has patents for devices to curtail motion sickness, including a head-mounted VR device. As someone who's experienced motion sickness with every VR device I've ever tried, I was more optimistic about the Uber strategy.

I spoke with Molly Nix, the UX lead for self-driving Uber cars, and one of only two product designers working on what the company deems the "self-driving Uber human experience," which includes everything from the app interface to the logistics of motion sickness.

As it turns out, Uber's haptic feedback technology might not become reality. Nix explained that the patent is a reflection of the kinds of things the Uber team is thinking about, but that, "It's important to remember there is such a thing as over-engineering a solution to a problem like motion sickness," she said. "Nothing beats windows."

Staring outside may be the best remedy for passengers, and choosing when you need to open a window may be better than relying on a hyper-designed haptic feedback system giving you bursts of air.

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But even less thought seems to have been put into cleaning. When I asked Nix what would happen if someone made a call on a porcelain telephone in a self-driving car, she declined to answer. I asked if she and her team talk about it at the office. She again declined to answer. What will any kind of self-driving car garbage cleanup look like in reality? "We are still envisioning what it might look like," said Nix.

Sarah Abboud, an Uber spokesperson, said that the company doesn't have a plan for dealing with the aftermath of people getting sick or making other serious messes in self-driving cars, in part because the vehicles Uber's testing now still have backup human drivers.

"Since we have an operator in the car, we have not really explored exactly what that looks like," Abboud said.

She added she imagines that such messes would probably be handled in the same way the company plans to handle general cleaning: dispatching the car to a facility for a human to clean it and get it back on the road. There are currently two operation centers that clean the driverless cars Uber is testing, one in Phoenix and one outside Pittsburgh. Perhaps Uber would create more of those, Abboud suggested.

The same seems to hold for other companies. Waymo, for example, has partnered with rental car titan Avis for routine maintenance of its self-driving vehicles in Phoenix — though the few available details a Waymo spokesperson sent to me simply suggest that cars will "need to be charged and refueled, cleaned, and presentable for riders." The overview did not include information about how, exactly, this happens. (Lyft did not respond to a request for comment on the cleaning issue.)

It's possible that companies could program cars to return to a home base for upkeep after every ride. But it's an unlikely solution considering the potential for wasted time, wasted energy, and increased congestion. Instead, as of now, solutions still seem to rely on human intervention. Someone will likely need to alert Uber or Waymo to any mess in a car. Then someone will need to clean it. (No Roombas for car interiors yet.)

Abboud alluded to a potential mechanism that might help Uber's systems identify such messes in the future, but wouldn't say if that would be a video camera inside the car or something else. "We don't really have that figured out yet," she said.

The lack of strategy from these companies seems to reflect a naïve view of what people are like and of how much invisible labor drivers put in to keep their cars clean. According to Nix, Uber expects passengers to take out their own trash today, and "expect[s] that to continue for self-driving ride-sharing." But that ignores the way the dynamics will inevitably change. Today, people may have social guilt about intentionally littering in the car of a person inches in front of them in the driver's seat.

Even if they don't, if a passenger leaves the odorous, crumpled remains of a late-night McDonald's run or a mess of a more biological nature behind in a taxi, a human driver will be there to see it, clean it up, and maybe roll down the windows to air out the car. Oh, and to ding the passenger with a cleanup fee. A human can do these things easily. A robot can't: There's no sensor for grime, mess, or stink.

When the driver disappears, we already know what happens: Cars get dirty, smelly, and damaged. Just look at Zipcar, the car-sharing service owned by Avis, which relies on an honor system for cleaning.

As Business Insider detailed, Zipcar's currently got a "D-" rating from the Better Business Bureau for customer service — and has been struggling for it — in large part because of complaints from users who find their rented cars are dirty and damaged from past use.

Sure, customers can report such issues to Zipcar. And, in the future, they may be able to use an app to flag unhygienic cars for Uber or Waymo. But that's a lot of time and frustration to potentially put on users.

I'm not surprised that companies like Uber don't have a robust plan to deal with cleanliness. The company seems to exemplify the kind of biased worldview that I call technochauvinism. Technochauvinists tend to prioritize technical issues solved by engineering and math, while overlooking the human factors that shape how platforms or systems can and are used in practice.

This results in strategies like pouring millions into developing apps that edge out the competition and computers that get its driverless cars onto the road fast over making sure that, for example, women passengers don't get harassed or assaulted, or that people like me don't get physically ill from riding in its cars. However, if you are trying to design a fully autonomous system that involves 2-ton potential killing machines — which is what robot cars are — the stakes are high. Human factors matter a great deal, and not just because humans are the other drivers on the road.

Fortunately, I can also attest that there is one surefire cure that works every time I get motion-sick as a passenger in a car. Instead of riding, I drive.

SEE ALSO: Adults in the UK may soon have to buy 'porn passes' from corner shops to prove their age online

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Amnesty International just endorsed a policy that would decriminalize consensual sex workers

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LONDON (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - Amnesty International voted on Tuesday to endorse a contentious plan to support the decriminalization of sex work, a move that will lead to pressure on governments by the prominent rights group not to punish millions of sex workers worldwide.

"Sex workers are one of the most marginalized groups in the world who in most instances face constant risk of discrimination, violence and abuse," Salil Shetty, the organization's secretary general, said in a statement.

"Our global movement paved the way for adopting a policy for the protection of the human rights of sex workers which will help shape Amnesty International's future work on this important issue."

Amnesty said it took the decision after two years of consultation and research, drawing on evidence from U.N. agencies and the findings of research missions to Argentina, Hong Kong, Norway and Papua New Guinea.

The group has come under attack by women's rights campaigners and Hollywood stars, including Meryl Streep, Kate Winslet and Emma Thompson, since a draft of its proposed policy was leaked.

Amnesty defended its new policy, saying it was the best way to defend sex workers' human rights and reduce the risk of abuse including beatings, sexual violence, arbitrary arrest, extortion, harassment, human trafficking and forced HIV testing.

It added that the policy had been shaped by discussions with sex worker groups, HIV/AIDS activists, groups representing former prostitutes and anti-trafficking agencies among others.

"I am thrilled," said Laura Lee, an Irish sex worker and activist. "It is the best way forward to take sex work out of the Dark Ages and give us the rights and protection we deserve."

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Regarding human trafficking, Amnesty said the practice was "abhorrent in all of its forms, including sexual exploitation, and should be criminalized as a matter of international law".

"Amnesty just lost its soul and it lost its legitimacy to call itself a human rights organization," said Taina Bien-Aimé, spokeswoman for the U.S.-based Coalition Against Trafficking in Women, which helped put together an open letter against Amnesty's proposed policy.

"Amnesty has sided with the sex industry," she told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

Laws legalizing or decriminalizing the sex trade have been introduced in The Netherlands, Germany and New Zealand.

Other countries, such as Sweden, Norway, Iceland, Canada and Northern Ireland, have adopted the so-called 'Nordic model' which aims to punish clients without criminalizing those driven into prostitution.

"What we don't agree with is the decriminalization of pimps, buyers and brothel owners ... They are the ones which create demand," Esohe Aghatise, anti-trafficking manager with women's rights group Equality Now, told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

But Amnesty policy adviser Catherine Murphy said: "We have to be careful with words like pimp because people often interpret that to mean an exploitative third party and we would not be calling for the decriminalization of an exploitative third party."

"What (the new policy) would mean is the decriminalization of laws on consensual sex work," she told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

"Laws that relate to exploitation or trafficking within sex work would still be criminal offences. So the low level operational aspects of sex work such as working together for safety, renting premises, organizing together... these things would no longer be criminal."

 

(Additional reporting by Joseph D'Urso, editing by Tim Pearce. Please credit the Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters, that covers humanitarian news, women's rights, trafficking, corruption and climate change. Visit www.trust.org)

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This new app is being described as the 'Uber for escorts'

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A new German-based app wants to cut out the middleman in the sex-work trade by allowing customers to connect directly with escorts to arrange "paid dates."

The app is called "Ohlala," and it has been dubbed the "Uber for escorts" by TechCrunch. Recently, app creator Pia Poppenreiter spoke to TechCrunch about her service where one person pays another person to meet up.

“Whatever those two people want to do — may it be to give company at a dinner or end up in bed together — is a private matter and should be agreed upon in the chat before meeting,” Poppenreiter told TechCrunch. “It’s simple: We match people for paid dates immediately. It actually solves problems in this marketplace that dating sites and most escort sites don’t solve: We match expectations, on-demand.”

TechCrunch explains that a person looking for a paid date must put out a request for what they are looking to do and include an hourly rate, time period, location, and preferences. The request is received by all nearby escorts on the app who can then chat with the customer and work out an agreement.

Ohlala uber for escorts prostitutionThe Ohlala website explains that all escort profiles are vetted via a phone call to make sure the appropriate people are using the app. Customers can sign up for free and their profiles are only seen by escorts considering their request. Escort profiles remain private until an explicit agreement is reached.

Ohlala touts that it puts power back into the hands of the escort by allowing them to pick their clients, set their price, and work around their schedule. Wired reports that Ohlala will not take a fee for facilitating the transaction until it starts to build up its user-base.

According to TechCrunch, Ohlala closed a small seed round in June to finance their August launch, but will fundraise again in the near future. Ohalala will only be available in Berlin at first (prostitution is legal in Germany), but there will be an English-language rollout soon.

Wired says Ohlala is only available as a mobile-web app currently, but will become a native app in the next few weeks, assuming any of the app stores accept it.

SEE ALSO: Sex worker explains the difference between legalizing and decriminalizing prostitution

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A new proposal to solve prostitution would do more harm than good

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Amnesty International adopted a resolution last week urging the worldwide decriminalization of prostitution, and D.C. Council member David Grosso (I-At Large) was among many to applaud the vote: He announced that he is considering introducing matching legislation this fall. Amnesty International and Mr. Grosso are well intentioned but wrong: The policy would do more to hurt victims of sex trafficking than it would to help them.

Amnesty International’s vote authorizes its international board to adopt an official policy asking countries to decriminalize what it refers to as “sex work” — the exchange of sex for money. The human rights organization makes its recommendation on the grounds that it would allow women to report abuse, gain access to health care and leave the business if they want without fear of legal consequences. Those are noble ends. Yet these means won’t achieve them.

Supporters of the resolution assume that sex work can be a profession like any other and that sex transactions can be consensual. This is probably true for some prostitutes. It is not true for the vast majority, who resort to selling their bodies because they feel they have no other option.

Decriminalizing prostitution entirely might give some of these women a way out. More often, it would allow pimps to operate with impunity, using the money and status that comes with their newfound legitimacy to scale up trafficking operations that hurt the most vulnerable — the young, the very poor and especially the undocumented. The evidence seems to bear that out in Germany and the Netherlands, where trafficking has increased dramatically since the decriminalization of the sex industry in the early 2000s.

ProstitutionThough no policy on prostitution is perfect, some have yielded better results. The so-called “Nordic model” — a set of laws first passed in Sweden — decriminalizes the sale of sex but keeps the purchase illegal. It has its flaws, too. Clients increasingly afraid of punishment may arrange for transactions in underground and unsafe locations, and police might manipulate prostitutes seeking protection into helping track down their pimps, instead of looking first to their safety.

But overall, the Nordic model appears to lead to fewer women being in danger. In Sweden, for example, street prostitution has gone down by half. Men report soliciting sex less, and some traffickers who find the country inhospitable to business have moved away.

Prostitution and human trafficking will never be stamped out, and no legal approach to reducing the harm they cause will be perfect. But wholesale decriminalization is surely wrong. The way to solve a problem is not to protect the very people who cause it — not in the District and not anywhere else in the world.

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NOW WATCH: The oil boom in North Dakota now has a serious sex-trafficking problem

Sex workers want this major sex trafficker set free

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Amber Batts, a 41-year-old former sex worker and operator of a prostitution network in Alaska, was locked up for five and a half years on Monday, convicted of sex trafficking and violating probation. Batts ran a statewide prostitution network, and the women who she handled, represented and protected now want her set free. Batts’ supporters say she was not a trafficker, but rather a local businesswoman who helped create a safe, fair work environment for consenting adults.

On Twitter, the protest manifested as the hashtag #whoresUnited907, used to post updates from Batts’ trials in Anchorage, Alaska. More than 25,000 people have signed an online petition condeming the 2014 law under which Batts was charged with trafficking.

That piece of legislation categorizes most sex workers as traffickers or trafficking victims. It defines second degree sex-trafficking as advertising or promoting “travel that includes commercial sexual conduct” and managing or supervising any “prostitution enterprise” other than a brothel. Activists claim these broad definitions target women who work together, and sometimes even leads individual sex workers to be charged with trafficking themselves.

Supporters across the United States are outraged by the absence of sex workers’ voices from media coverage of Batts’ case, so several have published their own interviews and reports on escort community blogs.

One of the major sources of tension in the case stems from the seemingly hypocritical relationship between law enforcement and sex workers in Alaska. According to former sex worker Tara Burns, out of 40 sex workers she interviewed in Alaska, over half of those who had been sexually assaulted said the perpetrator was a law enforcement officer. Over 74 percent of all respondents said they had witnessed a crime but hadn’t contacted police for fear the report would lead to arrest and abuse rather than protection.

“Local sex workers are devastated by the Batts’ trial, because she was sentenced to over five years for screening,” Burns said. “Most of the allegations discussed were about her screening practices. She would share screening information, even with girls who didn’t work with her, to help sex workers stay safe.”

Burns said that members of the Special Crimes Investigative Unit have had sexual contact with several local sex workers, and threatened them, so that the women are now afraid to turn to police for help. On nationalblacklist.com, an anonymous forum typically used by escorts to warn colleagues about pimps and abusers, in 2015 Alaskan users have filed an unusually high number of complaints about coercive law enforcement officers. The visible entries, stretching back to 2012, are peppered with reports of law enforcement officers of different types blacklisted for their contact with prostitutes.

Statistics show that Alaska has one of the highest densities of sex offenders per head of population in the United States—which gives those working in the sex industry good reason to seek to protect themselves, and each other.

 

 

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The CEO of the world's largest male escort site was just arrested for prostitution

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The CEO of the male escort service rentboy.com was arrested Tuesday morning along with six employees for promoting prostitution in the U.S. and internationally, federal officials said.

The website, which was founded in 1997 and run by CEO Jeffrey Hurant, bills itself as the "world's largest male escort site," but insists it is only a place for escorts to post ads for their services and nothing more. 

But rentboy.com's service violated the Travel Act by promoting prostitution, federal officials said.

The site charged for its services, officials said. Subscribers paid $59.95 a month while advertisers can pay hundreds of dollars for a posting.

The site earned more than $10 million between 2010 and 2015, federal officials said.

"Rentboy.com attempted to present a veneer of legality, when in fact this Internet brothel made millions of dollars from the promotion of illegal prostitution," said Kelly Currie, the Acting United States Attorney for the Eastern District of New York.

The site was based in New York but its reach extended to major cities around the country and around the world as well.

"The facilitation and promotion of prostitution offenses across state lines and international borders is a federal crime made even more egregious when it's blatantly advertised by a global criminal enterprise," said Glenn Sorge with Homeland Security Investigations.

The website was down as of 1:42 p.m. Tuesday, but its social media accounts were still live.

The other employees who were arrested included Michael Sean Belman, Clint Calero, Edward Lorenz Estanol, Shane Lukas, Diana Milagros Mattos and Marco Soto Decker, officials said.

Their roles in the company were not immediately clear.

If they are found guilty, they face up to five years in prison and a fine of up to $250,000, federal officials said.

The site also tried to empower sex workers, promoting a positive outlook of the career with the hashtag #LoveWhatIDo and it even started a scholarship for men in the field

SEE ALSO: This new app is being described as the 'Uber for escorts'

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CEO and 6 employees arrested in raid of alleged male prostitution 'internet brothel'

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NEW YORK (Reuters) - U.S. authorities on Tuesday announced the arrest of the chief executive officer and six employees of Rentboy.com, which prosecutors described as the largest online male escort service.

Rentboy.com CEO Jeffrey Hurant and the employees were charged in a criminal complaint filed in federal court in Brooklyn, New York, with conspiring to violate the Travel Act by promoting prostitution.

The defendants, all New York residents, were arrested early Tuesday and were expected to appear in court later in the day. Their lawyers could not be immediately identified.

Self-described as the "the world's destination to meet the perfect male escort or masseur," RentBoy.com said on its website that it had been operating since 1996 and had a database of more than 10,500 men in 2,100 cities worldwide.

Prosecutors said that while Rentboy.com had disclaimers saying its thousands of paid advertisements for escorts were for companionship and not sexual services, the website was intended primarily to advertise illegal prostitution.

The website charged subscribers at least $59.95 per month and up to several hundred dollars to advertise their services, enabling Rentboy.com to generate more than $10 million from 2010 to 2015, prosecutors said.

"As alleged, Rentboy.com attempted to present a veneer of legality, when in fact this internet brothel made millions of dollars from the promotion of illegal prostitution," Acting Brooklyn U.S. Attorney Kelly Currie said in a statement.

The six employees charged were Michael Belman, Clint Calero, Edward Estanol, Shane Lukas, Diana Mattos and Marco Decker.

U.S. authorities also served warrants authorizing the seizure of more than $1.4 million from six bank accounts and took steps to restrain the domain name www.rentboy.com. The website was still online on Tuesday afternoon.

(Reporting by Nate Raymond in New York; Editing by Lisa Von Ahn)

SEE ALSO: Inside The Las Vegas Brothel That's A Favorite For People Attending CES

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The owner of America's most famous brothel explains how he promotes a business that's illegal to advertise

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Prostitution is legal in Nevada, but advertising the brothels that purvey prostitution is trickier.

It's a catch-22 that Dennis Hof, the outspoken owner of the Moonlite BunnyRanch, has had to negotiate since he bought the business in 1992.

"I didn't realize I was buying a business that couldn't advertise … It's part of the laws in Nevada. I had a business that I couldn't tell anyone about," Hof told Business Insider in a recent interview.

In Nevada, the legality of prostitution is determined on a county-by-county basis. Prostitution is illegal in Clark and Washoe counties, which include Reno and Las Vegas.

The ban on advertising stems from two 1979 laws that prohibit advertising brothels except in the counties in which they are legal, as the Associated Press reported. The ban effectively rules out ads on statewide newspapers, radio stations, and television.

In addition, brothels are not allowed to advertise in theaters, on public streets, or on highways.

Despite the ban, Hof hasn’t had any trouble attracting customers.

In the 30-plus years since Hof bought the Ranch, he has expanded from a small house with six rooms to seven facilities with 170 rooms, 540 prostitutes, and 150 additional employees, including bar and restaurant staff, as well as those who work on the hospitality and transportation side of things.

Most brothels in Nevada still run as small, single facilities, but the BunnyRanch has managed to grow despite the ban by using "crazy antics," according to Hof.

After buying the BunnyRanch in 1992, Hof decided to employ some of the unorthodox tactics of his friend, performance-artist Andy Kaufman, who was notorious for elaborate publicity stunts.

"We did just about any crazy stunt that we could do to get in the news," Hof said.

Among Hof's varied stunts:

  • Hiring John Bobbitt, who wasmomentarily famous in 1993 because his wife cut off his penis. Bobbitt worked as a bartender and handyman for Hof, until his celebrity became too much of a liability.
  • After former Minnesota Gov. Jesse Ventura admitted to frequenting the ranch, Hof put a billboard in front advertising his patronage.
  • In 2003, Hof offered the first 50 veterans returning from Iraq a free sex session and a 50% discount on services for the following 50 days.
  • Announcing his support of Ron Paul's presidential campaign in 2008 and offering Paul supporters a "two-for-one special."
  • In 2008, the federal government gave out tax rebates as part of an economic stimulus plan to jump-start the economy. Hof announced that the first 100 customers to bring those checks to the ranch would receive double their value in services.

The stunts frequently resulted in interviews on radio and television and helped establish Hof as a go-to media figure for the brothel industry in Nevada.

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"We're always looking for something to get us on 'Saturday Night Live' or on the late-night shows. I'm good at that," Hof said.

Hof has made a habit of co-opting current events for publicity. When Secret Service agents were caught soliciting prostitutes in Colombia in 2012, Hof publicly denounced the scandal on the grounds the agents didn't "buy American." Earlier this year, after Hillary Clinton announced her candidacy for US president, Hof announced a "Hookers for Hillary" campaign. Each of the prostitutes at the BunnyRanch filmed YouTube spots explaining why they supported Hillary.

Hof relentlessly plugs the Moonlite BunnyRanch, its sister facilities, and the prostitution industry at large. According to Hof, he now does upward of 150 segments on radio shows every month, appears on five or six television shows, and is quoted and featured in tons of articles in print and on the web.

"Anytime a politician gets in trouble with sex … I'm the go-to guy. I'm always looking for an angle," Hof said.

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In addition, Hof and the prostitutes at the Ranch work social media constantly, posting videos to YouTube, tweeting photos, and publishing salacious content on the brothel's website, BunnyRanch.com.

Perhaps Hof's biggest publicity coup was the development of "Cathouse," an HBO documentary centered around the workings of the Moonlite BunnyRanch. "Cathouse" was later expanded into a documentary series.

"The show has been good for business," Hof said. "When the recession happened in 2008, the brothel industry was off 50% to 75%. Our business didn't suffer a dime."

And Hof isn't done yet. Earlier this year, he released his memoir, "The Art of the Pimp," which goes into detail about his personal life, and includes a scathing evaluation from a psychiatrist and an essay on Hof from an ex-girlfriend.

He doesn't call himself the "P.T. Barnum" of the brothel industry for nothing.

SEE ALSO: 19 striking photos show what Nevada brothels are really like

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A photographer traveled to every brothel in Nevada — here's what they are really like

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Before traveling to Nevada, photographer Marc McAndrews had never been to a brothel.

Now he’s been to every single one in the state. 

Over the course of five years, McAndrews made regular trips to Nevada’s legal brothels, staying anywhere from a week to a month each time. He stayed in bedrooms in the houses, shared a bathroom with the working girls, and saw the world that no one — except those who work at the brothels — see. 

“It’s a different experience when you wake up in the morning and have to pass the cereal and the milk to your subject. It changes the relationship,” explains McAndrews. “People’s guards go down and they become more at ease. They start to let you see their world.”

McAndrews shared some photos from his trips inside the brothels with us. (You can see more photos and amazing stories in his book, "Nevada Rose.")

When McAndrews began shooting Nevada's brothels, he expected to find a seedy place, filled with drugs. What he found, at places like the Wild Horse Ranch (shown here from afar), was something completely different.



He started by going to Moonlite Bunny Ranch, which was made famous by HBO's "Cathouse" series. When he first asked about photographing, the women didn't believe him, thinking that he was just a nervous customer. He was eventually turned down.



After being turned down by several other brothels in the Carson City area, one of the prostitutes recommended that he try a smaller town like Elko or Ely, where proprietors might be more friendly.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

Truckers are playing a key role in combatting sex trafficking

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Truck driver Kevin Kimmel just finished making his overnight deliveries when he noticed something odd at the Virginia truckstop where he stopped to sleep.

A man knocked on the door of a battered recreational vehicle, went inside and the whole vehicle started rocking.

A few minutes later, what seemed to be the face of a distraught girl appeared at the vehicle's window but was quickly jerked away, leaving him weighing what to do.

"The movement and that girl's face, I thought 'I don't think it's a family vacation'," said the Florida-based trucker.

His call to the local sheriff last January proved his suspicions true. Inside the RV was a young woman held captive for 18 days by a couple making her perform sex acts for money.

Kimmel's story testifies to the power and reach of Truckers Against Trafficking, a nationwide U.S. organization that has trained some 170,000 drivers and truck stop workers to look out for possible instances of sex trafficking.

"When you think about all of the strategic places that these guys are in, it's not just truck stops, it's rest areas, it's hotels and motels, it's gas stations, it's busy city streets, loading docks," said Kendis Paris, executive director and co-founder of the group known as TAT.

"They're trained to be vigilant and observant in the course of their everyday jobs. When you factor all that in, it really is a smart audience to educate and work with."

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TAT training highlights how to recognize potential red flags, whether it's an unaccompanied minor looking fearful or certain buzzwords on Citizens Band radio chatter, and how to contact the National Human Trafficking Resource Center. 

"Lots of eyes"

Truckers have made hundreds of calls to the Resource Center, according to Polaris, which operates the center, leading to more than 350 likely cases and identifying about 650 victims.

Paris, a speaker on Wednesday at the Trust Women conference on women's rights and trafficking run by the Thomson Reuters Foundation in London, set up the non-profit group in 2011.

It grew from a bid by her family's ministry to find a way to fight human exploitation and the focus on trucking was her mother's idea, Paris said. Her family had no link to trucking.

The Colorado-based group reaches drivers through national and state trucking associations, driving schools, industry shows and large companies that wield their own private fleets.

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Next year Ohio is poised to become the first U.S. state to mandate that drivers getting commercial driving licenses undergo TAT training to spot potential trafficking victims, she said.

"When you realize that the average age is 13, that kind of sickens you," said Captain Mike Crispen of the Ohio State Highway Patrol who is helping implement the training.

"And that's an average. It's not the bottom number. When people start finding out about that, they get more involved."

Globally, an estimated 21 million people are victims of human trafficking, according to the United Nation's International Labour Organization. Some 1.5 million victims are in North America, according to the Trafficking Resource Center.

The case uncovered by Kimmel led to the prosecution of a Aldair Hodza, 36, and Laura Sorensen, 31, who, according to court documents, tortured their victim by burning her, hammering nails into her feet and pouring bleach into her wounds.

Human Trafficking India

The pair pleaded guilty to federal sex trafficking charges and were each sentenced in August to at least 40 years in prison by a judge who noted the case's "rare level of depravity."

Kimmel, 58, admits the case of the woman he rescued hit him hard and he now helps spread the word about TAT whenever he can.

"It's all about educating people and especially people in that industry, being that there's a little more than 3 million of us on the road every day," he said. "It's a great opportunity with a lot of eyes."

SEE ALSO: Mexico is becoming one of the world’s most dangerous places for journalists

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Colombia's police chief is being investigated for possibly creating a male prostitution ring that served lawmakers

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Colombia's General Rodolfo Palomino, the head of the national police, speaks during an interview with Reuters in Bogota, Colombia, November 10, 2015. REUTERS/ John Vizcaino

BOGOTA (Reuters) - Colombia's Investigator General Alejandro Ordonez on Tuesday said he will probe whether the head of the national police force was involved in the creation of a male prostitution ring that allegedly served lawmakers and was aided by police officials.

General Rodolfo Palomino is also being investigated for alleged illicit enrichment and illegally wire tapping journalists' telephones, a statement from the investigator's office said. Palomino has previously been accused by police officers of propositioning them for sex.

The testimony and video would not only be "evidence of the alleged network of male prostitution journalistically referred to as the 'Fellowship of the Ring,' but will also show involvement of certain members of congress in complicity with some officers of the National Police force," the statement said.

Local media reported that the alleged prostitution ring included serving officers, though the statement did not specify.

Palomino denied any involvement on Tuesday.

"I appreciate that the relevant investigations are going ahead, as I requested, and I'm sure they will lead to the truth of false accusations that have been made against me in a reckless and sustained manner," Palomino said.

The investigator general's statement said testimony by police Captain Anyelo Palacios and a video was key to the inquiry.

Local media released a video that shows a discussion in 2008 between former Senator Carlos Ferro and Palacios talking about gay sex. Neither the prostitution ring, nor Palomino were mentioned in the explicit conversation.

The video seemed to have been filmed by Palacios without Ferro's knowledge.

Ferro on Tuesday resigned from his post as vice interior minister, though he did not provide a reason for the move.

(Reporting by Helen Murphy and Julia Symmes Cobb; Editing by Alan Crosby)

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A Colombian police officer who was kidnapped after exposing a male prostitution ring has been found alive

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Ányelo Palacios colombia

A Colombian police officer who blew the lid off a male prostitution scandal within the institution was found alive on Sunday night, the day after he was abducted.

Captain Ányelo Palacios is a key witness in the scandal that continues to embarrass both the police and politicians, and has already led to some important resignations.

On Monday morning, national police chief General Jorge Hernando Nieto told reporters that the Palacios' family received a call in the early hours of the day saying that he had escaped his captors, and that he was in good health aside from the hypothermia.

"We are investigating in order to find out the motive behind the facts," Nieto said. "We are not ruling anything out."

Palacio was kidnapped on Saturday evening in the northeastern province of Santander while he was driving with his stepfather, Arcilio Ortíz Valero. Ortiz told reporters that four armed men on two motorcycles overtook their car, before doubling back to abduct the whistleblower. He said that the gunmen instructed him to get out of the vehicle, and that his stepson would be returned within an hour. When that did not happen, he called the authorities.

Palacios shot to the center of an investigation into an alleged male prostitution network within the police last month when a Colombian radio station and website called La F.M. published a video he had secretly filmed in 2008 of a conversation he had with then-Senator Carlos Ferro in which they discuss plans to have sex. Though Palacios cannot be seen in the video, the voices appear to match. There is no mention of coercion or prostitution.

Palacios told prosecutors that he had been recruited into a group within Colombia's police created to satisfy the sexual desires of the top brass, as well as those of elected officials. He gave the names of a number of senior officers in his testimony.

vicky davilaHe claims that he was drugged and raped when he was a cadet at Colombia's largest police academy by Colonel Jerson Jair Castellanos, who was chief of security for Congress at the time. He also alleges that Castellanos promised promotions and career favors in order to get the cadets to comply.

Palacios, and at at least five other witnesses, claim that over 300 cadets were coerced into the prostitution network, which is being referred to as "The Fellowship of the Ring" by the Colombian media.

The publication of Palacios' video last month triggered a slew of high-profile resignations.

Carlos Ferro, at the time serving as Interior Deputy Minister, walked, as did General Rodolfo Palomino, the Director of National Police. Palomino himself had long been battling sexual harassment allegations, but maintained his innocence.

One of Colombia's most famous journalists, Vicky Dávila, who broke the story, also resigned following pressure from her bosses, sparking a fierce debate about press freedom in the country and whether the police are off-limits to journalists.

ColombiaBefore the scandal broke, Dávila and a number of other journalists claim to have been wiretapped by police officers looking to smother the story. Some, however, argue that the video contains no proof of anything illegal, and its publication is consequently not in the public interest.

After his kidnapping and apparent release Palacios' mother spoke to the media, saying that her son "was in a bad state," and had been beaten.

Razia Palacios, the sister of the whistleblower, told local media that her brother had received threats leading up to his abduction. "They called him and said: 'choose a color: black, white or brown," she said, explaining that the callers were referring to the color of his tombstone.

On the other side of the divide, at least one leading local newspaper, El Tiempo, speculated that the police captain may have kidnapped himself.

The scandal is likely to rumble on for some time still, with investigators only beginning to look closely at Palacios' allegations.

 

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A United Airlines pilot was charged with running 6 brothels in Texas

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united airlines pilot brothelsIt is alleged a pilot who flew international flights with United Airlines led a double life and allegedly ran several Houston brothels. He and another woman face pimping-related charges.

After an investigation that ended with a series of raids of alleged Houston brothels, Bruce Wayne Wallis, 51, and Tracie Rebekah Tanner, 37, were arrested on Wednesday and charged with prostitution-related offences.

It is alleged Wallis controlled six brothels in the the Texas city and controlled several women.

WUSA reports Wallis faces one count of aggravated promotion of prostitution and one count of engaging in organized criminal activity.

Tanner faces one charge of aggravated promotion of prostitution. Although the exact relationship between Wallis and Tanner has not been revealed, it is believed Tanner's role was to manage the brothels.

Twenty women, who advertised their services online, were also arrested and charged with prostitution offences.

According to Houston police, there were six brothels located in various apartment and office buildings throughout Houston. WUSA reported George W. and Laura Bush lived in one of the apartment buildings during the 1970s. It is alleged the prostitutes were controlled by Wallis and he received $400 a week from each woman who worked for him.

The Houston Chronicle quotes Assistant Harris County District Attorney Lester Blizzard as saying, "It's one of the largest operations I've ever worked on" and the prostitution ring was described as "massive."

united airlinesCourt records reveal authorities have a lot of surveillance on Wallis as well as seized records including texts between the pilot and the women who worked for him. It is alleged Wallis, who was known as "Bruno" on the streets, carried a gun, drove a black Hummer, and intimidated women and other pimps.

After Wallis's arrest, United Airlines issued a statement saying, "United holds its employees to the highest standard" and added the airline is cooperating with law enforcement. Wallis is flying the friendly skies no more.

According to the authorities, a lot of the women allegedly working for Wallis are Russian and police are looking into whether these women were recruited by the pilot while he travelled internationally for United.

Wallis was released on $5,000 bail Thursday and is due back in court next week.

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Here's the case for decriminalizing prostitution

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sex worker rights dayEditor’s note: This article is part of our collaboration with Point Taken, a new program from WGBH which next airs on Tuesday, May 31 on PBS and online at pbs.org. The show features fact-based debate on major issues of the day, without the shouting.

It seems that almost everyone has an opinion about prostitution and sex work.

But with Amnesty International’s recent unflinching policy recommendation to decriminalize all adult consensual sex work – including their take-down of the Nordic model which claims to punish only clients – it is becoming increasingly difficult for naysayers to ignore the well-documented ways that sex workers are harmed by criminalization.

Amnesty’s position is based on many years of empirical research by leading health and human rights researchers, as well as calls by sex workers and advocates.

While much of the debate on sex work focuses on what is best for “women,” an enormous diversity of individuals trade sex at some point in their lives.

This includes not just cisgender women from a range of age, racial, religious, dis/ability and sexual identities, but also transgender women, cisgender men and GLBTQ youth.

Yet even when taking into account the diversity of individuals involved and the many settings in which sex is traded and policed, Amnesty studied the accumulating body of evidence and concluded:

to protect the rights of sex workers, it is necessary not only to repeal laws which criminalize the sale of sex, but also to repeal those which make the buying of sex from consenting adults or the organization of sex work (such as prohibitions on renting premises for sex work) a criminal offense.

As Amnesty explains:

Such laws force sex workers to operate covertly in ways that compromise their safety, prohibit actions that sex workers take to maximize their safety, and serve to deny sex workers support or protection from government officials. They therefore undermine a range of sex workers’ human rights, including their rights to security of person, housing and health.

Will Amnesty’s recommendation lead to a change in U.S. policies?

Beliefs versus empirical evidence

sex worker rights

The answer to how U.S. lawmakers respond to Amnesty’s call will depend in part on their level of courage to fight other institutional and cultural pressures to maintain and even increase criminal penalties for clients and other individuals connected to the sex industry. But their reactions will also depend on their own personal beliefs.

As someone who has researched and taught about sex work and human trafficking for more than two decades, I know that for some individuals, no amount of evidence or logic will change their opinion that sex work is intrinsically wrong.

For them, decriminalizing any form of sex work – including adult consensual encounters – would send the unacceptable message that sex work is a legitimate form of income generation. And it is in this emotional territory where the decision to decriminalize or not rests.

Because of the difficulty in evaluating evidence on emotional topics, my first assignment for students in my Sex Work, Human Trafficking, and Social Justice class is to document their current reactions to the issue of sex work.

I ask students to honestly reflect on how their life experiences might shape the way they approach the issue of exchanging sexual services for pay.

At the end of the course I ask students to revisit their feelings. I have found that when given the opportunity to make space for their feelings and to evaluate the best empirical evidence (such as Alexandra Lutnick’s “Domestic Minor Sex Trafficking: Beyond Victims and Villains”), most students conclude that adult consensual sex work should be decriminalized. They come to this conclusion even if they still personally do not “believe” in it.

Furthermore, students report that they understand how decriminalization can be one arm of a larger set of strategies to assist victims of structural and individual harms. These harms may include poverty, neglect, police violence, sexual assault and human trafficking.

I wish that I could also give this assignment to all policymakers and anti-sex trade activists.

This includes organizations such as the Coalition Against Trafficking in Women (CATW), which described Amnesty’s move toward decriminalization a “willful and callous rejection of women’s rights and equality,“ and Hollywood celebrities such as Meryl Streep and Kate Winslet who have joined CATW in their opposition to decriminalization.

While I have previously written that “it is no longer acceptable to prioritize the opinions of celebrities over those of sex workers and the scientists who advocate for them” – the belief systems underlying these opinions are still important to address.

Prostitution as a trope

sex worker rights day

As Barb Brents and I point out in our introduction to a special section of Sociological Perspectives on sex work and human trafficking, there has long been a serious decoupling between reliable empirical evidence and sex work policies in the U.S. While there are complex historical and institutional reasons for this disconnect, the answer in part is because sex workers have long served as a trope – a symbol for other people’s agendas.

Of course, sex workers have long been used as punchlines for misogynist jokes. But the symbol of the sex worker is also used by anti-prostitution activists who purportedly want to “help” them. For example, in a recent article discussing sex workers rights in The New York Times Magazine, Yasmeen Hassan, global executive director for Equality Now, expresses the following opinion about sex workers:

They’re sexual objects. What does that mean for how professional women are seen? And if women are sex toys you can buy, think about the relationships between men and women, in marriage or otherwise.

In Hassan’s statement and others like it coming from prohibitionists, a central “problem” of sex work is not what the best empirical evidence says, but what they believe sex workers symbolize. And when one is focused on one’s own symbolic interpretation, it is difficult to listen to conflicting evidence.

Listen to sex workers

Sex workers have long argued that criminalization and policing practices cause and/or exacerbate the worst harms to their well-being. Scientific evidence, as found in Amnesty’s reports, confirms this.

But changing the laws requires policymakers (and to some extent, the larger public) to respect and humanize people who are currently both stigmatized and criminalized.

Sex workers have made some progress in bringing attention to the harms of criminalizing sex work policies. One example is the practice of police using the carrying of condoms as evidence of prostitution. 

With growing global momentum behind the sex workers' rights movement, I expect many more successes to come. Yet now is also a critical time for everyday citizens both to check in with their own feelings about the issue and to read and evaluate for themselves the best available empirical evidence.

U.S. history is full of examples of public beliefs and norms lagging behind progressive institutional change. Examples include civil rights for African-Americans, voting rights for women and marriage rights for same-sex couples. Most individuals in the U.S. now believe that upholding the civil rights for those groups was the right thing to do.

Decriminalizing sex work will not on its own fix misogyny, racism and other forms of systemic oppression. But decriminalization of consensual sex work is one key step toward social and sexual justice.

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