AIDS CORRECTNESS
AIDS activists
misguided in goal to legitimize 'sex work'
James P. Pinkerton
August 15, 2006
TORONTO
To attend an international
AIDS conference is to enter a world in which traditional morality is conquered
by political correctness. But only temporarily, of course - because the larger
world, politically incorrect as it is, always prevails.
Consider the issue of prostitution. Or as almost every one of the 25,000 global
AIDS-tivists gathered here prefer to call it, "sex work."
Public-health experts are correct when they note the sex trade is a major vector
for AIDS. In the past, venereal disease epidemics were often dealt with by such
tough measures as shutting down brothels and quarantining prostitutes. But those
solutions are not under consideration here.
In fact, in this AIDS-conference world, prostitution - oops, sex work - is part
of normal life. Nestled comfortably within the exposition area are many booths
devoted to the sex trade, "The Star Whore Show," for example.
One prominent group, Stella (chezstella.org), which bills itself as "by sex
workers, for sex workers," has issued a manifesto, "Sex Workers, Human
Rights, and the Fight Against HIV." In other words, Stella seeks to
establish the right to be a "sex worker" as a human right, alongside,
say, free speech.
Most populations of the world are uncomfortable, to put it mildly, with this
formulation of sexual-political rights - but of course, such queasiness didn't
stop the Canadian government from funding Stella; the sex group also
acknowledges funding from George Soros' Open Society Institute.
The effort to "mainstream" prostitution is not at all a fringe issue
here. It is being waged by those at the pinnacle of the AIDS establishment - for
example, Melinda Gates, who delivered the keynote speech here on Sunday,
alongside her husband, Bill Gates.
"The simple fact," Melinda Gates declared, "is that HIV is
transmitted through activities that society finds difficult to discuss,
activities that are infused with stigma, and that stigma has made AIDS much
harder to fight." She is, no doubt, correct. All venereal diseases, across
human history, have carried a stigma.
But now Gates, making her bid to be the next Princess Diana - a glam do-gooding
jet-setter - wants to change all that historical precedent. "When Bill and
I visit other countries," she said, "we are enthusiastically
accompanied by government officials on all our stops - until we go meet with sex
workers. At that point it can become too politically difficult to stay with us,
and our official hosts often leave."
The audience winced with collective appreciation for Gates' pain as she
recollected those difficult moments. And then everyone smiled and nodded when
she said of her being abandoned, "That is senseless."
But in the real world, we might observe that even if the stigmatizing of
prostitution is senseless, it is also a matter of consensus. Even in those
countries where prostitution is legal, it still is a subject of shame, and
political leaders naturally shy away from such disrepute.
And so we see the problem confronted by AIDS-tivists: They wish to see AIDS not
just as a scientific-medical issue, but rather as a social issue - a chance to
turn tragedy into an opportunity to re-engineer societies around the world,
starting with the "sex worker-ization" of prostitution. The weight of
world opinion is against them, to be sure, but here in Toronto they keep trying.
The most interesting refutation of Gates' activist ideology came, interestingly
enough, from Bill Gates. In a separate appearance yesterday, he allowed that the
whole topic of "sex workers," as well as "men having sex with
men," is "controversial." He added, wistfully, that if there were
a country that attached no stigma to sex, "I would like to go to that
country."
The audience cheered loudly, because such a sexual Shangri-la is exactly where
they all want to live. But the happy throng seems to have missed his point:
There is no such non-stigmatizing country, and there never will be.
James P. Pinkerton's e-mail address is pinkerto@ix.netcom
.com.
Copyright 2006 Newsday Inc.