Buying Sex (2013) Movie Script
- I started getting into
buying sex on a regular basis
when I was in my late thirties.
There are local papers that
have advertisements in the back
and I decided to go see
a professional dominatrix.
- My first lover
was a Puerto Rican hooker.
I was a sailor.
I didn't know any better.
- So I suppose I've been married
for 25 years.
I didn't wanna have an affair,
so I found her on the Internet,
and it was, I suppose,
a mind-blowing experience.
(distant siren)
(woman): Do we want a society
where men can buy sex? Yes!
There's nothing wrong with it.
Sex is a commodity.
People who think sex
is not a commodity
are delusional.
I've had sex with over
5,300 different m... clients.
Like... I know
what I'm talking about here!
(cheering)
(all): Hey-ho, let's go!
(newscaster):
Ontario sex-trade workers
celebrate a significant
and rare legal victory.
- I don't believe it.
We never get good news
like this.
(applause)
(newscaster): This story began
when lawyer Alan Young
and three sex workers
challenged Canada's
prostitution laws
that make many aspects
of sex work illegal.
- And here's why
it's really sinister:
we know people
have gone missing.
In Vancouver, in Winnipeg,
in Calgary...
There's hundreds of them.
(newscaster):
Justice Susan Himel
agreed with the plaintiffs
and their claim
that the existing laws
put sex workers at risk.
- We won't have to work in fear
and under the gun
and on the run.
And my colleagues
won't show up dead.
It was stunning that...
to me, that we won.
It's completely logical.
However,
logic doesn't usually enter
into any debates
around prostitution.
- There are women
in the sex trade
that are happy with their work.
As counterintuitive
as that sounds
to the prohibitionists,
there are,
and there's many of them.
And all they want
from this case,
and all they wanted from me,
is to create a legal regime
which doesn't make
their job harder.
When I say harder,
I'm not just meaning
more difficult economically,
but harder in terms
of risks to physical security.
- No government, no religion,
no army in history,
has ever been able
to stop sex workers.
For two simple reasons:
sex and money.
If you wanna stop sex workers,
you have to stop sex
and you have to stop money.
You think
you're up for that job?
(woman): For 15 years,
I was a hooker.
And a lot of it was my identity.
(woman): And women,
who do we have
as our role model?
Marilyn Monroe! Betty Boop!
Fuckin'... Jessica Rabbit!
So you have no right
to come here
and call down women who choose
to do what they want to do!
So fuck yourselves!
(man): Yeah, exactly.
I'll pay
for all your plane tickets
to go to Bangkok and maybe
tell your problem there.
This is a strip club, fuck--
- Our problem
isn't with the girls.
- People who work
across the street
go and have a beer there.
- Our problem
isn't with the girls.
- Yeah? Well, this place...
- The oldest profession
is actually farming.
And it's not inevitable.
It's not.
Uh, that same argument was made
about domestic violence.
I mean...
just because we have things
with us all the time,
does that mean
we don't try working against it?
As we stated
in the press release,
we're all deeply troubled
by the decision handed down
by Judge Himel.
We know from our lived truths
that we share
that it was not the laws
that beat
and raped us,
it was men.
It was not the location
that made us unsafe,
it was the men
we were in that location with
that were unsafe.
We have to interfere
with the unchecked male demand
for paid sex.
My big umbrella goal
is to see Canada adopt
the Nordic model of law,
the Swedish model of law.
Sweden criminalized...
the demand for paid sex,
pimping, procuring,
and trafficking.
And they decriminalized
the women.
So they looked at it
from a women's-equality
standpoint
and as
a violence-against-women issue.
- The real question for me
is this:
does prostituting women
make them equal?
And the answer
to that question is no.
Why are there so many women
with fetal alcohol syndrome,
women with addictions,
poor, young, aboriginal,
or racialized women
in prostitution?
The vast majority
of prostituted persons
are women, in fact.
And certainly, you know,
we know that the buyers
are almost exclusively men.
So prostitution is gendered
in that very kind of obvious,
structured way.
And in fact, in most cities,
you're far more likely
to be charged and convicted
as the prostituted woman
than you are as the buyer.
So that is something
that I think...
The abolitionists' position,
the position
of the women's movement,
has always been that this is
not about personal morality,
whatever that might be;
that this is about power,
which is something
quite different.
- Prostitution is a problem
that harms individuals
and it harms communities.
This is why I am pleased
to indicate to the House
that the government will appeal,
and will seek a stay
on that decision.
- They just deny
the existence of my people,
and I don't understand
that these are real people
with real problems
involving the law,
who have made
a freewill-choice
to sell their bodies.
(Valerie): Well, I've always
liked the sex industry.
When I was a little kid,
there'd be an old Western movie
on TV,
and the cowboys' wives...
... they always lived
on the outskirts of town
in some rundown shack,
and the cowboy
bossed them around,
and they were
in these raggy old dresses
with a couple of babies hanging,
squalling off of...
Like... I didn't want that.
But the saloon girl...
I was intrigued.
They were in the centre of town,
they knew what was going on,
there was music,
sometimes they'd get
to own the saloon...
Um... that was more my style.
The first professional dancing
costume I ever had made
was a saloon girl.
I was about 16 or so...
Like, people want to go on
about how it was abuse.
In their minds, maybe,
but not in mine.
And I think
that's the most important thing.
And I do not believe
that all sex workers,
including myself,
are delusional.
- I would've said I chose it.
I would've said... like,
there was a point in my life,
probably
in my really early twenties,
um, when I loved it,
it was great,
it was fun,
it was a party,
and I really...
I would've said I choose it...
in that.... singular moment.
But you can't...
It's not about
a singular moment.
It's about...
It's about all the moments
that got you to that place.
I didn't think it was strange,
I didn't think it was wrong,
till I remember in, like,
Grade 5 or 6 or something,
we had a constable or something
come in
and talk about good touching
and bad touching.
And I was just floored that this
was the bad touching, y'know?
It never occurred to me
until then.
You always knew...
it just didn't seem quite right,
but you never actually
voiced your opinion in my house.
I mean, I was already
sleeping with people
to... get high or drink
by the time I was 12.
And then when I went
to my first group home,
I just got shown, I guess,
the official ropes.
- I never knew what you did,
but I told everyone
you worked in a bar.
- That's what I told you,
that's what I told everyone.
- But I didn't know
what you did there.
And that's all I knew.
(woman): When did you find out?
- Pfft...
I figured it out eventually.
It's not that hard.
Your mom works at a bar,
is coming home at two o'clock
in the morning every day.
(Trisha): I have always done it
on my own financially.
Not a dime in child support.
- My wife, she hasn't been
in my bed for 10 years,
so...
And that's not because
we're not friends.
We're very close.
We travel together,
we talk together,
we work together,
we do a lot of things together.
For whatever reason,
her sex drive is essentially
nonexistent and mine isn't.
- I really don't wanna
get involved
in another relationship.
You know?
Too much work
and too much compromise.
- I just know that I went
from being terrified
to within minutes going,
"This is so right."
You know? Um...
And probably if it had been
with just an average person
who had the same level
of experience,
it might've been
a nervous nightmare.
So time to bring in
the professional.
You know, the artiste.
- I know that our opponents
talk about,
"What kind of men
go see sex workers",
and...
"Look at your husbands.
"Look at your brothers.
"And looks at your sons.
This is who we see."
(Trisha):
It has been argued here
that Canada's laws
are what make
prostitution unsafe.
For them, there's no talk
of the large systemic issues
that force women
into prostitution.
No talk of the societal harm,
emotional harm,
mental harm, spiritual harm.
It is the johns
we must shift our gaze to,
for they have gone unnoticed
for far too long.
Lost in the noisy argument
of women's personal choice.
- Do you know who this is?
That's Brenda Wolfe's daughter.
(Trisha): It was startling
to see just how much Angel
looked like her mom.
Really?!
- I really loved
hearing you speak.
It really, like... I loved it.
- Oh!
(laughter)
It's such an honour
and a pleasure to meet you!
I knew Angel's mom
in the Downtown Eastside,
when there was...
a lot of us
talking about Pickton,
and a lot of us talking
about how we had friends
who were going missing
and who wouldn't be seen again.
And then
we didn't see her again.
... in that apartment,
and your mom used to always come
and hang out there.
(Angel): I was, like,
still in elementary school
when it first came out,
the whole trial.
Everybody knew that, like, "Oh,
her mom was like a prostitute,
"who worked on the street
and, you know,
shot up heroin",
and this and that.
And it was just that stereotype
that I didn't want
to be a part of.
So I wouldn't self-identify
that I was Native.
I wasn't proud
to be my mom's daughter.
I had a huge hatred for her,
'cause I couldn't understand
why she chose that life over us.
(Trisha): Robert Pickton...
took advantage of the vulnerable
and dispossessed,
and took them out to his farm,
and would be charged
with killing 26 of them,
convicted of six.
And there's a lot of suspicion
that he killed many more
than just those 26.
(chanting)
(Angel):
I have to forgive her now.
That wasn't who she was.
It makes me sad, in a way,
that it is the 19th annual walk.
The fact that this has been
happening for so long,
that these women
keep on going missing,
and no one's doing anything...
you know,
really needs to stop.
- Yeah, it's the men
who yield the knife.
The question in the case is:
is the law complicit in this?
And the law is complicit in this
because it takes away strategies
that women can use to protect
themselves from the predators.
The law doesn't cause anything.
The law's an abstraction.
It creates a framework
within which you make decisions
and this framework takes away
the decisions you need
to avoid the Gary Ridgways,
the Joel Rifkins,
the Arthur Shawcrosses,
the Robert Picktons,
the Yorkshire Ripper.
I could go on and on.
They all preyed on street women.
Maybe some of those women
could've opened a door
and avoided it.
- The lessons from Pickton
were not that we ought
to have more brothels.
He was running a sort of brothel
for himself and his friends.
You know, the lessons of Pickton
are that we need
to take male violence
against women seriously,
and that prostitution
is a part of that.
We need to stop the men
from coming in
and scooping up these women,
you know,
to take them back and abuse them
in exchange for money and drugs.
That's the problem here.
It's unacceptable
that we have a population
of disposable women
that can be used in this way.
(Trisha): What happened
to your back, boo?
- Probably got in a fight.
Scrapping...
I've been trying to stay
out of them. I really do.
I'm getting old.
(Trisha): Well,
Angel is a woman I've known
for 17 years.
For years, we worked together.
(indistinct chatter)
Honey,
you need to get that looked at.
- Ah, it's nothing.
- Can you make a fist yet?
- Well, yeah.
- Oh, yeah, you're well
on your way, you're fine.
(Angel):
It was as dangerous then
as it is now.
But this is what I know.
My mom had her...
her own addictions
and did what she thought
she had to do,
and what was taught to her,
and so...
when I was... 11,
my mom...
put me out on the street.
Not on the street.
She would go to the street
and bring people home, right?
And, uh, that's how I...
And that was in the hotels here,
too, so...
(sighing)
I haven't talked about it
in a long time. Ha!
I never, ever once said
I wanted to be a prostitute.
We're made.
This used to be way out
by where we used to work.
Most of us are aboriginal,
down here,
so they're just like me.
(Trisha): It's our old piece
of real estate.
(Angel laughing)
- We owned it.
- Right? This was ours.
Well, here and down there.
- I worked--
- There's no traffic here,
though anymore, eh?
- No. I don't know--
- We used to come here
and it was, like...
constant traffic.
- Yeah.
- No one drove down these roads
except for single men in cars.
(horn honking)
(Angel): I honestly believe
there's nothing wrong
with what I'm doing.
- Would you have come
to that decision...
if you had grown up free
from an abusive household,
and grown up
in a loving household?
- Well, that's an entirely
other situation.
Now you're saying
abolish prostitution,
but also abolish abuse
and abolish, you know...
And we know that would
definitely be good, you know?
Too many kids get hurt.
- I know,
which is why we have to say
to men you can't buy women,
because we shouldn't be allowing
them to exploit abused children.
- These could be guys...
that are out looking for me now,
right?
That would have raped
their daughter,
or their neighbour's daughter,
or their son or whatever.
But instead of doing that,
they go for a drive
and they find one of us.
- I am not willing
to allow an abused child
who grew up
into an abused woman...
- Mm-hmm.
- ... be offered up
as... some sort of... sacrifice
in order to save another child.
- Mm-hmm.
- This is a sex-worker-led plan.
We don't want people
to be coerced
into this business,
and we don't want, um...
any kind of violence
and deception and...
We're trying to bring it out
into the sunlight here.
I think the best model
currently in the world
is New Zealand.
- The world's oldest profession
is now legal in New Zealand,
but the move
to decriminalize prostitution
squeezed in by only one vote.
- The change means
charging for sex,
or living off the proceeds,
is legal, but hiring
an under-18-year-old won't be.
The law allows sex workers
to say no,
a key reason former prostitute
Georgina Byer backed the bill.
- It would've been nice
to have known that instead
of having to deal out
the justice myself afterwards
to that person,
I may have been able
to approach the authorities,
the police in this case,
and say, "I was raped!"
(woman):
Decriminalization means...
we have very limited laws
that discriminate
against sex workers.
We have a model
where sex workers
have a lot of options:
they can work for themselves,
they can work
in managed brothels,
or they can work on the street.
So, you know, they're free,
like any other worker,
in that way.
There are some people
who want to get out,
but there are others who say,
"Look, I'm really happy.
I'm comfortable doing this."
(phone ringing)
- Afternoon. Paradise.
Phiona speaking.
What sort of age group, darling,
are you looking for?
Excellent. Wonderful.
Are you looking for blonde
or brunette?
What sort of size
are you looking for, honey?
It's $160 for half an hour.
At the moment,
we have a Christmas special
of $180 for the hour.
Alright, thank you very much.
Bye.
No. Yeah.
He sounded rough.
Wants someone young,
under the age of...
as young as he can get them.
Which always raises alarm bells
for me.
And the other one
that raises alarm bells,
"New to the industry."
The girl new to the industry,
want to be her first client,
because then
she doesn't know the ropes.
The clients here know
that I teach the girls the rules
before they even go in the room.
So there's no... misbehaving.
I'm a mom to a lot of the girls.
- Yeah, Jazz and I say that
it's the Phiona Baskett home
for wayward girls.
(laughter)
'Cause we all kinda end up here,
in the same sort of situation.
I wouldn't work anywhere else,
'cause everywhere else
it's just a business.
You're just stock;
that's all you are.
They're shifting units.
- You're just another number.
- They don't care about you
as a person.
- I'm very fair.
But it comes down to it,
if I say something,
I expect it to be done.
I don't expect to be backlipped.
I will not cast a blind eye
for drugs.
You do drugs
in my establishment,
yeah, that's when
you really see the wrath.
It is a business
and I am the boss.
I've gotta make sure
the personality and the style
fits in with what we do,
as well.
With you, it was easy.
You were exactly
what I was looking for.
I said to Carmen two days
before, "I need a blonde,
I need someone under 20,
a size 6 to 8."
It was like the recruitment
fairy came along.
So if you guys find anyone
that is a brunette, under 20,
a size 6 to 8,
that's what I need next.
And the marketing is important,
so we've got a marketing plan.
So we know where we're gonna
put our money towards marketing.
And who we're gonna market
and how we're going to market.
Each girl's a little different.
I mean...
Carmen being a...
lovely, exotic, dark girl,
is a little bit different,
but she does a great submissive
with mistress.
A porn-star experience is she
uses all the toys in the room
that you've seen,
and it's a really erotic
experience.
Now a girlfriend experience
is a hand job, a blow job,
and straight sex.
That's how we sell it.
It depends
on what the client is wanting,
and that way
we match up to the girl.
- Because our client base
is probably guys
from about 30,
45-ish is, like,
the main group of people,
and most of them say
that if it was illegal
they wouldn't do it.
They're mostly corporate guys--
- Businessmen.
- Yeah, self-employed, um...
clean-cut, nice people,
um, who are just sort
of sneaking out for lunch
'cause they've had a boring day.
- I have a great marriage.
My wife, I love dearly.
She loves me.
However, she...
is very vanilla
in the way
she likes to make love.
And...
I guess, as a guy,
I sometimes want something
a bit different, or a bit extra.
- I don't rationalize it
by saying,
"Oh, I'm helping her
get through university",
or, "I'm helping a solo mom
support three kids",
or whatever.
I don't need to rationalize it
like that.
(laughing)
I've gone way past that stage.
To me,
it's a business transaction.
- It's usually fairly...
very, very active,
less conversation,
um, very messy,
um, multiple positions,
all the services,
anal, things like that.
- Um, well, with this job,
the most important things
are impeccable grooming
and a really strong stomach.
I was into
some pretty kinky stuff
before I started working, so...
bit of a non-issue.
In terms of people
in this industry,
like, I'm not that young.
Like, hookers age in dog years.
But, I mean, I'm, you know,
well-educated,
I've got my degrees,
got lots of work experience.
I could do lots of other things,
if I wanted to. But I felt more
used and exploited
working a minimum-wage job,
where I get
10-minute lunch breaks,
um, than I do doing this
and doing what I want,
and having the financial
stability to sort of, you know,
own a house in less
than two years, if I want.
So for me,
this is the best option.
- I was starting
a bachelor of nursing.
Did the first year of that.
And I'll probably go back
and do the second year
next year.
Thank you, Mum.
I've been sort of portrayed
as the girl-next-door kind...
because I'm the young one
and I'm the new one.
And that's...
the sort of story that I...
act up to a little bit, but...
It's pretty much just...
whatever the client wants,
really.
I'm now Samantha.
(laughing)
And I'm going to see a man
that is... quite odd.
(laughing)
- Good girl.
I'm proud of you.
Um, we run
a VIP membership program.
Every time they get a booking,
they give me a number,
and they actually get
the 11th booking free of charge.
It's part of the VIP program.
It's just like, you know,
buy 10 coffees, get one free.
This is his 11th free.
- What it makes me understand
is that those women
aren't feeling that they have
other sufficient
economic options.
And that's where I need...
the society,
the culture,
to move to.
Isn't it interesting
that nobody introduces things
like cost-benefit analyses
into these debates?
These are hugely economic
debates,
both at the micro
and macro level,
because we have things like,
from the moment
student loans were introduced,
women students have determined
that one of the fastest ways
to pay off their loans
is as a sex worker,
and they're quite right.
I mean,
the students' associations
of New Zealand
are able to demonstrate
that it takes
New Zealand women graduates
six to seven years longer
than men with the same degree
to pay off their loans,
and these women
are trying to short-circuit it.
- Hands and knees.
Front leg back. Back.
(sensual music playing)
Think sex, think naughty.
Yeah, I'm Steve Crow.
I've been in the adult industry
since '93.
- A little bit close,
a little bit straight,
and then just... slight bend
and then push your ass out.
- Birds out, butts out.
Birds and bums.
I own New Zealand's
largest adult magazine,
and the largest
distribution company
of pornographic DVDs and toys.
Good. Think that's enough,
for the two of you.
A few months ago,
we bought an escort directory.
- Okay, so you wanna change
Nancy's ad?
Just with "Asian Lady" on it
and not with her name.
- The traffic is phenomenal.
I mean,
for a site in New Zealand
to get 35,000 unique visitors
a week...
is huge.
And, um, I'll be just basically
overseeing the sales process
with the girls.
Rachel will be managing
the club side of it,
as in dealing with the clubs.
And this is my partner
and fiance, Rachel Whitwell.
- Thank you.
- You're welcome, love.
I know
you can say your own name.
I'll give you permission.
- Oh, really?
- Yeah.
- Hi, I'm Rachel.
The only sort of dodgy thing
that I've found,
from doing that job,
is the people that possibly
might not be legal
here in New Zealand.
- Yeah.
- I photographed one Asian girl
and she had, like,
so many bruises,
and I just thought,
Mm, that's... I don't like that.
And because
they don't speak English,
and that person's interpreting
for them,
you think, "Oh...
is this a choice thing?"
(Steve): Obviously, the primary
reason to get into it is money.
It's a business.
We're here to make money.
- Steve?
What's the busiest parlour
that you know
that a girl could go
and work for tonight?
- Depends how good-looking
she is. Um...
- How good-looking are you,
do you think?
Y'know, on a scale of 1 to 10.
(Steve): More and more girls
are turning to the sex industry
to earn a living,
because, quite frankly,
they're struggling to survive.
It used to be 10 years ago,
it was quite hard,
in a small country
like New Zealand,
to get girls
to do explicit photo shoots.
Now we turn 'em down.
We're getting them every day,
every week.
Girls who wanna do
nude photo shoots for us.
Girls that never would've
in the past.
If you go to the White House
or any of the clubs,
they'll say they're getting
a higher calibre of girl
coming in to dance.
(man): I built the White House
in, uh, 2000.
We've got Bill on the front door
when you walk in.
The reason for Bill is,
I think he was always
a good guy and a little bit
because he's a naughty guy.
And we're all naughty guys,
and some of us get away with it,
but poor Bill got caught.
Who else is up there?
I've got two businesses.
One is a striptease club,
the other is a massage parlour.
(whistling and applause)
Generally, you might come
from the White House upstairs,
you walk downstairs,
look at it up there,
have it down there:
main course... dessert.
I don't want to call my place
a brothel.
Uh, I can call it Monica's.
Um, to other people,
it might not be a perfect name,
but it suits my... um...
... my White House, basically.
But there was no way
our government
put any thought
into this legalization.
You've got millions of dollars
getting spent right now
trying to adjust things
that are going wrong.
There's still girls
getting murdered,
there's more prostitution
on the street than ever.
Most of our girls that have
left since the legalization
go and open up little places
all over the place.
You've got hundreds of people
going everywhere else but here,
and this is where
the money's being spent.
(sensual music)
- In some ways,
it's the easiest money
you can make, but in other ways,
it's the hardest money
you'll make.
Because the managers will say,
"Oh, it's just great.
It's fine and lovely here.
You'll make $5,000 a night!"
That's bullshit.
Yeah, it's kind of hard
to get your head around
sleeping with 10 guys
in one night,
and not knowing them, and...
it can mess with your head
a wee bit.
Yeah, I couldn't imagine
working on the street.
- I don't wanna work
in a brothel,
I don't wanna
get naked in the bedroom
and have guys molest me.
I wanna keep my clothes on.
I want in and out.
I want... I'm in control.
You know?
So out here, I can handle that.
But if I'm in a brothel,
oh, what am I gonna do?
Lie in a bed and let...?
No, thank you.
Then I don't want some pimp
ruining my life.
I've been there, done that.
Out here, I'm in control,
you know?
(siren wailing)
- I've been a Maori Warden
for about 14 years.
Maori Wardens
have certain authorities,
within the community,
to prevent drunkenness
and disorderly behaviour.
I supported the rights
of the street workers
to do what they do,
if they so choose.
Because they've got
no other way
of surviving adequately.
Just about all of them
prostituting on the streets
are Maori or Pacific Islander.
They wouldn't be able to get by
in a brothel.
The women know it's dangerous.
They know that they could get
beaten up or worse.
So if they didn't have to do it,
why the heck
do you think they do it?
I've seen them here,
time after time,
going round and round
the streets,
looking at all the girls,
and they consistently go
for the younger, fresher ones.
You know,
you can't have prostitutes
if you haven't got clients.
That's the reality.
So maybe they need to look
at that. But if that's the case,
where are these girls
gonna get money to survive?
Thank God I'm not a politician.
- So what was happening here
is the prostitutes
would come up...
... in this beautiful
old homestead...
... and they would conduct
their business...
... right there.
And so when you came out
the next day
to collect your paper,
you had condoms littered.
You know, you're small,
you're exposed, you're open,
and so the prostitutes
were coming here.
I supported it at the beginning
because I thought
this was going
to make prostitutes safer.
And we can actually create
these small,
owner-operated businesses,
that if you don't want
to go into a brothel,
you can in fact
have a prostitute
working in their home,
and that would be alright.
And so...
we were thinking pretty much
we would get them indoors,
we would get them out,
off the street.
(distant siren)
If that's the best we can do
for our young people,
offer them a life on the streets
doing this,
because it's their choice,
what kind of society are we?
Is this what you aim for?
(Marilyn Waring): New Zealand's
given us in the short term,
what's the most logistical
and strategic way
to move on decriminalization,
to move on health risks,
to move on some human rights,
to move around actually taxing
the underground economy.
It's short term,
but I want to hope that...
we will be able to keep building
and making and framing societies
where no man or woman
feels they have to do this,
where no children
are sold into this.
(theme music)
- When an Ontario court
struck down three key laws
on prostitution,
it set off a discussion
that rocketed from one end
of the country to the other.
Here's what was struck down:
the provisions
against communication
for the purpose of prostitution,
living off the avails
of prostitution,
and keeping
a common bawdyhouse.
Now, Ottawa is appealing
the decision,
but if the decision stands,
prostitution,
pimping and brothels
could become completely legal
in Ontario.
We wanna know what you think.
Call us.
(man): No, prostitution
should not be legalized.
If you really want
to help prostitutes,
the best way is to provide them
with detoxification
opportunities.
(man): The judge is a hero.
(woman): This whole thing
is ludicrous.
(woman): It gives men
the go-ahead to purchase women.
Yes, prostitution
has always been with us,
and always will be with us,
but I'm against it,
because it leads to harms
to the social fabric.
(woman): Working indoors is
the safest-possible opportunity,
it gives sex workers the ability
to control the conditions
of their work,
to increase safety.
(Trisha):
That was a long two hours.
Holy crap. My gosh.
But it's good, right?
'Cause you... figure out
what we need to highlight,
the truth that needs to come out
and what people get, right?
It's always good to have
a little dose of both sides.
- I did not realize the damage
that had been done to me
as much as it was until I left.
There's people who come in
and want fetishes,
they want you to act
like their daughters,
they want spankings,
they want
the most disgusting stuff,
but now it's justifiable,
because now it's legal.
"I'm not doing anything wrong.
It's okay to do this."
- 'Cause we know
what we lived through,
we know the repercussions,
today what we went through,
and, you know,
that's what we need
to bring to the table.
We need to bring
our experiences.
- Let's see what we can do.
I'm not gonna spend
a lot of time on it.
- It's in the reports.
- Okay,
let's see what we got here.
I need to recapture control.
It's very important for me,
maybe more psychologically
than, you know, strategically.
I'm gonna start
with occupation at risk.
See, my point is I'm gonna show
what's not in dispute.
And I'm gonna move very quickly,
so I don't wanna be
melodramatic.
But this has to be looked at,
because you have to understand
the gravity of the harm.
It's not just about getting
scratched in a parking lot.
And that everything the Crown
is doing is smoke and mirrors,
because ultimately
when you look at the evidence,
it's solid,
and what they're saying
was disregarded as bullshit.
That's it!
There's nothing.
- It was a fast day.
- Nothing!
Maybe I won't work tonight.
(laughter)
Here's the secret, though,
I'll tell you.
People don't come to me
to do the case. I go to them.
I come up with the issue,
I come up with the argument,
and then I find the right people
for the case.
And so,
that's what happened here.
Initially, it was Terri-Jean.
- Prime Minister Harper,
you've been a very, very,
bad, bad boy!
And I'm not afraid of you,
but you're afraid of me.
Because he's supposed to take
care of all of his citizens,
great and small.
And for him to feel that he has
no need to protect these women,
he's acting like a deadbeat dad.
(Young): She's a very quirky,
nice person,
and her life story
demonstrated my case.
And then,
I remember reading about Val.
- How are you, Ron?
- Because Val was an advocate.
- We're doing well!
- We are!
- We are doing really well
in there.
- I thought she was a very good
spokesperson on this issue.
Like, she really knew
what to say,
the right things to say,
and not histrionic.
And she so much wanted
to be part of it.
- They're giving him
a hard time.
They've read our materials
and they're giving--
- I know they're gonna give Alan
a hard time, too.
- The problem was,
the court would say I don't have
standing to challenge the law,
because the two women,
Scott and Bedford,
were currently not working.
So a court could take the view,
"I'm only gonna make a decision
for someone
that it impacts immediately."
I didn't agree with that,
by the way, but that was fine.
So I said, "Val...
find me someone
currently working."
And that's how Amy came aboard.
They're important people
for the case,
but it was pretty much...
whoever was available
to be able
to stand up for themselves.
- I find the Crown's arguments
convoluted
and not making logical sense.
Because if we change things,
it "might" make things worse?
He says there's no proof;
he is wrong.
We have New Zealand,
that decriminalized in 2003.
So come on,
don't tell me there's no proof.
There's lots of it.
(reporter): It's really neat
getting to talk to you guys.
You're so well-spoken.
- Thank you.
- Some wonderful clips.
- Great. I like to throw out
a few sound bites
when I get the chance.
- Yeah.
- I think they got some good
clips of my coffee mug.
- Today's the day that the
interveners present our case.
They're all the national heads
of women's organizations
that have come together
to take a stand
and get the true picture
of prostitution
read into the courts,
and the version of law
that we all support.
- The Canadian Association
of Elizabeth Fry societies,
Native Women's Association,
Canadian Association
of Sexual Assault Centres,
the Francophone Women's Centres,
and CLES in Montreal.
And, you know,
their mission is really to deal
with the aftermath
of prostitution,
and what men to do women
in prostitution.
And as they try to pick up the
pieces and advocate for change,
we're here to say
that it's simply not acceptable
that the male demand
is completely decriminalized.
Once you decriminalize
that demand,
then it validates the need
to produce a supply.
- It's the most difficult part
of this whole issue,
is to get the focus
shifted off the women
and this kind of dissection
of their motives
and whether they're enjoying it
and all of those kinds of issues
to actually focus on the men
who are profiting
and who are buying.
- You're gonna reduce demand?
This is an instinctive drive.
I'm sorry, you can't do that.
We can't rewrite human nature.
People have an instinctive drive
to sex.
If you don't have a safe,
healthy outlet
within your interpersonal
relationship, many people
are gonna seek it out
in the commercial market.
If she feels
you can eradicate that,
let's make her Prime Minister.
- We are the product
of 100,000 years of evolution,
and, uh, we are hard-wired
to, uh, think a certain way.
And no amount of, uh...
puritanical laws
and... and shaming
is gonna change that.
- Uh... bareback blowjobs,
cum in mouth,
French kissing,
um... let see...
I do like a lot of caressing,
maybe some erotic massage,
you know, things like that.
- They should be really,
really, really, really thanking
these girls that are out there
making a living doing this
for keeping their husbands
from leaving home
and destroying the family
and not supporting the kids
and all that other stuff.
It's worth a couple 100 bucks
once every couple of weeks
for him to go and get
his jollies somewhere else.
Especially if she doesn't wanna
sleep with him anymore.
(soft music)
- This is the Pickton legacy,
is what people are saying is.
This case needs to go ahead
because of the horrific thing
that happened in Vancouver.
- So I worked
with Pickton's victims.
I worked beside them.
My friends were the ones
that were found on his farm.
I covered his trial
as a reporter for a year
and I can honestly say
that what we need to do
in the legacy
of Pickton's victims
is criminalize the male demand.
If there was no male demand,
my friends would not have been
on the streets,
I would not have been
on the streets.
We need to set laws
that create...
a positive environment
for Canada to work towards,
that creates a new Canada
that we can work towards,
and one that errs on the side
of equality...
- Pardon me?
(indistinct chatter)
Yeah, the stay is extended
until ordered otherwise,
which really means
until the judgement comes down.
We didn't come here today
to commercialize prostitution.
That's what the government says.
We've come here
to open up really rudimentary
safety measures.
Hire a bodyguard.
That's not creating
a huge corporate structure
for prostitution.
Hire a bodyguard.
Work in your home,
behind closed doors,
in a safe and secure environment
for yourself.
(reporter): But it's more
than the government
making that argument,
it's ex-workers.
What do you say
about their fears
that this is gonna
increase recruitment?
- I say to these people,
"I'm sorry for what happened
to you,
"but don't extrapolate from your
experience into public policy.
There's a huge gap
between the two things."
- Full name and spelling, sir.
- Alan Young.
A-l-a-n Y-o-u-n-g.
Okay, everybody good?
Okay. Cool.
(indistinct chatter)
(Trisha): If we pass
this Swedish model of law,
tomorrow, the Canadian version,
it's not gonna eliminate
prostitution in a heartbeat.
It's not like every man
is all of a sudden
gonna zip up his pants
and say, "no more",
and every prostitute is gonna
say, "Getting a different job."
But it's about creating legacy.
And this is for my daughter,
this is for my grandchildren.
Let's talk to the police.
Let's see how they enforce,
if it's helped what they do,
and let's talk to men.
- One of the most
frequently asked questions
is that you push prostitution
underground
with this type of legislation.
But even before the law,
most prostitution activities
took place indoors.
If the buyers can find women
in prostitution and buy them,
then the police
should be also able to do that.
You can't say that the buyers
are smarter than the police.
If the police wants to find out
that prostitution takes place,
they can.
- We are two teams
working undercover,
with surveillance, 24/7.
We use our intelligence
to see what groups are active
in Stockholm.
And then we start to...
follow them,
follow the girls on out-calls.
Observe.
Follow the customers.
Identify the customers.
Without them knowing it,
of course.
And use wiretaps...
... cameras.
And through documentation,
we build a case.
- You must know
that there was 30 years
of research,
and the feministic movement
lobbying for criminalizing
the buying of sexual services.
And also
why should we criminalize
only the buyer...?
The main, actually, principle
is that you want women
to leave prostitution,
therefore you should not put
extra burden on them,
also criminalizing them.
Very often,
the woman in prostitution
is socially marginalized
and maybe ethnically, too,
economically.
Why the buyer?
We have a lot of research
regarding the buyers.
And very often middle-aged men,
married, having families, kids,
a steady job, a steady income,
and then you can easily see
who is in power here.
With this law,
we reduce acts of violence
against women,
and we also
can save women's lives.
Of course, it scares them away.
And there have been
a lot of surveys also that shows
if you ask sex buyers
what would make them stop,
the first thing is legislation.
And the other thing
is shame games,
if their names are to be put up,
or they could be identified
as buyers.
- I became interested in buyers
in the late '70s,
here in the city,
where I worked in the streets
as a social worker
among prostitutes.
And some men actually phoned us
and were concerned
that we stole their women,
took them away from them,
and then I became,
obviously, interested in,
you know, what is the need?
In Germany, we're talking
about 45 to 50%;
Thailand,
we're talking about 75%.
So if there was sort of a...
sort of a component
of... sex drive,
if it was like sort of,
biologically,
part of the biological
constitution,
those figures
wouldn't vary so much.
The way
that sexuality expresses itself
is more of a social and cultural
construction than anything else.
Our children,
if they grow up in a context
where it's part
of the rite de passage
to become a man,
to go with your uncle
to a brothel, you know,
the message is that
this is part of your life,
this is necessary
for you to become a man.
As opposed to a society
where people say,
"This is nothing we do here.
"To buy sex is not allowed
in this society.
We do it in another way."
- Of course,
it takes other shapes and forms.
You will see that there are
other means of prostitution,
but I still think
it's a good thing.
I mean, we're sending
a clear signal: it's not okay.
- They have no right to buy.
No one has the right
to buy another person,
I think.
- People get abused and hurt...
through that, so that's...
I... We just disagree with it.
(laughter)
I dunno.
(barking)
Sorry.
(soft music)
- Women and men
should have equal power
to shape the society
and their own lives.
They should earn the same
salaries for performing work,
equal work
or work of equal value.
Men and women should share
the responsibility
for the home
and for the children.
You know,
the European... Commission
said that every day,
millions of women go to work
and will be victims
of sexual harassment.
If men feel
that they can sexually harass
their colleagues at work,
well, the next step is to use
more or less some violence
to have sex with a woman,
and the next step
is to buy a prostitute's body,
and then
have trafficking
in the end of this game.
And there is, of course,
a connection.
That is one reason why we have
criminalized... buying.
- Millions of women,
and some less,
but some men also,
are doing this kind of work,
with no rights at all. Like...
- In Sweden, we try to support
women who are prostitutes.
We are giving them medical
support, social support, etc.
Of course, they are entitled
to all the support they can get.
But that is not the same thing
as saying it's okay
to buy bodies.
- It's the women
who have had to take the blame
for prostitution.
Now we tried to turn the wheels.
Then, of course,
some people look upon this
as a way
of stigmatizing the buyer.
Yes, in a way, of course,
because we are pointing
at the buyers
and saying
that without the buyers,
there would be no prostitution,
so you have to take
your responsibility now.
It's historically just that
you do it right now.
- Without demand,
the supply isn't gonna be there.
Without supply, the demand
can do whatever it wants.
But if there's nobody
willing to do it,
well, what are you gonna do?
- I think the Swedes are right.
There is a whole level
of inequality
that's going on there.
Well, okay,
if you believe that -
and I can see no reason
not to believe it,
it's a totally legitimate
argument -
but to me, that's like saying
I don't believe in abortion,
but I refuse to adopt the kids.
What kind of crap is that?
- I mean,
if we're going to support them,
like they do in Sweden,
I'm gonna end up paying anyway,
because they're gonna
jack the taxes up.
So I'm gonna get screwed
by the... by the government,
and I'm not gonna get screwed
by the girl!
I'd much rather
get screwed by the girl.
(Borgstrom):
People were laughing at Sweden,
saying that men are just going
over to Copenhagen from here,
just driving across the bridge.
You can't, you know...
you can't control that
from the Swedish parliament
or from the Swedish
police office in Malm.
That's part of the complexity
of the phenomenon.
Because this
is a global phenomenon.
What we can do here is to go on
with this debate and discussion
and challenge
the whole... phenomenon
in different ways and discuss it
and, you know, open some minds.
I think that's very important.
- My latest film
is called Like A Pasha.
It was kind of like a...
result of trying
to deconstruct manhood,
in some ways.
So four years ago,
there was the soccer
world championships in Germany
and there was a discussion
on whether or not
Swedish football fans
were gonna go buying sex.
So I followed
a group of supporters
down in Germany
and followed them
to this brothel,
Pasha,
which is the biggest brothel
in Europe.
They said that it was around,
like, 700 or 800 men
coming there every day,
more on the weekends.
(woman moaning)
It was like a parody of, like,
global... oppression,
or, like, global inequality.
It's, like,
here's the African women,
here's the Eastern women,
here's the Asian women.
And you could look
at their prices
to see where they are
in the global-status chain,
you know?
Like, the young German women
are, of course,
the most expensive ones,
and the older African women
are the ones that are cheapest.
(man): How was it?
- Good, quite good.
(laughter)
What's up to you?
Don't you like?
(Tidholm): The film, of course,
was put in the context
of this debate
and the discussion
in Sweden and in Europe.
But I always wanted
to bring it down to the level
where it was about the men
who came there
and why they wanted to buy sex.
(Borgstrom): Men fantasize about
having sex with prostitutes,
and they sometimes say,
"I don't get any sex at home,
you know, and particularly,
"I don't get the sex
that I would like to have.
"All these other guys
get all that kind of sex
and I seem to be the only one
that don't get it."
And of course here
you always have a connection
between pornography
and prostitution,
because the fantasies around
the kind of sex other guys have
are images
that are portraying pornography.
So... they would feel
that they are entitled.
This is a...
They are entitled to this.
- You don't have a girlfriend,
or your girlfriend is not here
and you feel
a very sexual strong feeling,
you want to have some sex.
Just without thinking love
or not love,
go here, find this girl I like,
spend money,
make your sex,
go out and finish.
You think too deep...
about these things.
You think too deep, you know?
- Being a man is being tough
and being hard
and being, uh, ready
to treat other people bad.
You know?
And to do this,
you need to shut off
a lot of emotions.
(baby gurgling)
Because you need to disable
those emotions
that make you stop.
I mean, if you look at armies,
the prison system,
police systems, globally,
it's almost... 100% men.
You know?
And I think it's connected,
that you need
to shut off those emotions
that would make you stop
from hurting other people.
And, uh, what you sacrifice...
is closeness...
to other people.
(soft music)
(Borgstrom): The key law
to understand
the gender-equality debate
has nothing to do
with prostitution.
That's the parental-leave
reform.
That's the most important law
that we have in this country
when it comes to issues
of gender equality.
The issue of prostitution
is a sort of...
it's a hang-around to the major,
interesting, most definite,
groundbreaking,
cutting-edge law:
the parental-leave reform.
(child laughing)
(Tidholm): How could it
not be good for men
to be with their kids at home?
Still, it's women who have been
driving the development, too.
Right? And, um...
I'm... I've been doing
this so much now,
showing my film
and talking about it,
and, to me, it feels like people
really, really like
to talk about this.
The sad part
is that it's usually most women
who want to understand why men
are so obsessed with sex.
- I feel very emotional.
And it can be
really, really hard
to speak with someone
that haven't seen the movie.
But I don't feel
like having sex tonight.
At all.
(chuckling)
- I think what
we should work at...
is an even greater openness
toward sexuality in our society
and open up the possibility
of talking about sex
in a more relaxed... manner
than... than we do.
(soft music)
This is not the gender-equality
paradise, in Sweden.
And backlashes we do have.
But if we have the ambition
to open up for more mutuality,
more trust,
more... experiments
and fantastic meetings
between men and women,
that's the first step.
Prostitution is not the answer.
It's the cul-de-sac,
it's a dead-end street.
(Trisha):
I've truly been humbled
by the men I've met
and how they even envision,
in some ways,
bigger for women
then I could even envision.
(tearfully): I don't wanna
just punish anymore.
Men can be men
in a way that I had
never dreamed possible.
And I mean that
in a totally different way now,
to say I want better for men.
I...
I think, in some ways,
I'm gonna to get flack for this,
but men are just as robbed
of their masculinity
as women are of...
our equality,
in a lot of ways
in North America.
And their being robbed
of their masculinity
robs us of our equality
and you can't...
I don't... I don't think
you can separate them.
- I know it's kind of...
shitty behaviour,
but I don't think
I'm gonna stop.
- I'm widowed,
I'm retired,
and I'm 60,
so I don't have
to give a rat's ass
what people think. Y'know?
(laughing)
- The only way
you're gonna change it
is to castrate them at birth.
That might change it.
Other than that,
you don't have much of chance.
- I'm feeling sick
to my stomach.
(laughing)
I'm really, really hoping
that this turns out the way
that a lot of us are hoping.
(Teresa): Well, we look forward
to hearing the news
when you come out.
- Yes, I'm gonna go in
and see what happens.
Okay. Thank you.
(Young): Here we go.
She's right here.
She is right on time.
(sighing)
- You're shaking.
I've never seen you like this.
- I'm not shaking,
I'm not shaking, I'm fine.
I can't get
to what I want to read!
(Trisha):
I can't deal with the stress.
And we have two minutes to go.
I'm gonna throw up.
(Young):
I wish it was hard copy.
I'd tell you already
what it was.
Oh, fuck!
Okay, okay, okay. Okay.
- I wanna--
- Okay, 2-10, 2-12 are gone!
(woman gasping)
Okay.
(woman): 2-10--
- This is, like, ah...
- Are you alright?
(laughter)
- So 2-10's bawdyhouse,
2-12's living on the avails.
They're not striking out
communicating.
(other woman gasping)
- But the 2-10 and 2-12 are out?
Isn't that wonderful?
(Young): Wow!
- He's blown away.
Look at him go.
- Okay. So... I guess we won,
more or less.
- We won? We won?!
- More or less.
I never wanted to challenge
communication in the first place
so... I never thought
I would be able to knock it out.
- He's the mastermind,
that's why.
- Yeah, that's true.
- Yay!!!
Whoo-hoo!
(indistinct chatter)
You did it, Alan!
- Wait a sec!
- Oh, my God.
Court rules laws...
against pimping and brothels
unconstitutional;
but upholds law against
communicating to sell sex.
Why would they... do that?
- You can run a bawdyhouse now
and not get charged.
- Yeah.
- The only one that stayed was--
- The communicating for
the business of prostitution.
- It was the communicating law
that was the law
that was really being enforced
across Canada
and that was being alleged
to have increased the danger
to women in prostitution.
And what we end up with, uh...
is those women
continuing to be criminalized,
and the applicants
apparently prepared
to live with that result.
- I didn't want to attack
communication on the street,
because I don't think people
want sex workers on the street.
But there are problems
with the communication law,
and I'm supposed to represent
the interests of sex workers,
so I felt I had no choice
but to add the third offense
to the mix.
But when the dust settles,
if everything's upheld
but bawdyhouse?
Then I feel...
this has been
a successful result.
- I'm waiting for you to tell me
what I should say to the press.
- Okay, do you have
anything planned?
- Flick my riding crop
and say a few zingers.
I'm really happy about today
or whatever.
- So, okay... So you're happy.
Why are you happy?
You're happy because...
What do you want to say?
The court did the right thing?
- Uh-huh.
- Maybe say this,
that you would've been...
much better off and much safer
if this decision
had happened 25 years ago
when you were in the trade,
or something.
Does that make sense?
- Yeah.
- Okay.
- Yes.
- Bedford can bring
her riding crop,
but this is what is used
to discipline prostitutes
who don't listen to their pimps.
It is heated up,
it called a pimp stick,
and this is what we're trying
to protect our community from.
(Young):
We have changed the face
of Canada's prostitution laws.
And although
there will be detractors
who don't understand
what's happened,
this is actually a good thing
for Canada,
and will take some time
for the naysayers to realize
that the court
has done the right thing.
Not everybody
will benefit from this decision.
There are people
who work in the sex trade
that are survival sex workers
that don't have the wherewithal
and the ability
to take advantage of it,
but the court's saying
it doesn't matter,
because if we save one life,
we've saved a million lives.
We have not solved the problem
of what goes on in the street,
which is a very complicated
sociopolitical problem...
- I think Alan Young
has just been very clear
that this is for the upper...
upper echelon, right?
So...
everyone gets what they want,
and...
everyone else
is just collateral damage.
Except the collateral damage
is a lot bigger...
... than those who will see
the inside of brothels or...
I mean, there's so many rules
about working in a brothel.
Um, none of my friends
will make it inside.
Aboriginal women
won't make it inside.
Women who have blonde hair
and blue eyes and big boobs
will make it inside.
Or, you know, Asian women or...
There's a very particular type
that works indoors.
But there's far, far more
that will never make it inside
the front door.
(man): Terri-Jean,
are you gonna open up
a... bawdyhouse?
- If anybody wants
to underwrite a business,
I'll...
(laughter)
... be more than happy
to accept your offer.
(woman): Let's talk about that
later, shall we?
- If I open up a bawdyhouse,
I have registered the name,
it is Beaver Meadows
Social Club, to showcase
the fact that we are Canadian
and that we are friendly.
(woman): Let's have a round
of applause for--
(applause and cheering)
- Yes!
- I was 12.
- Okay, well, I was 15
and when my customers abused me,
they weren't pedophiles,
they were just johns
who didn't give a shit.
- They were abusers.
They were not johns.
- Most of them are.
If a man has to go
and live off a woman's body...
I mean come on,
we're selling people
like we're selling burgers!
- We are not selling people.
We are selling services.
- Sex. Sex!
- I've worked with underage
girls in bawdyhouses...
(reporter):
But anti-prostitution groups
crashed the victory
news conference,
including a woman whose mother
was murdered by Robert Pickton,
a serial killer who preyed
on Vancouver prostitutes.
- For now! For now!
- Judges made their decision.
That's the way it's gonna be!
- For now!
But I will be working
with MP Joyce Smith
and make sure
this law gets changed!
'Cause my mom didn't die for you
to create this hecticness!
(man): I'm pleased
to inform this House
that the government of Canada
will seek leave
to appeal this decision
to the Supreme Court of Canada.
(applause)
- You know,
it's been such a long battle.
I feel as if now
I just wanna go home.
- We need to step up our game
and get it more in the forefront
of people's minds
so they understand
that there is a third way.
- So, I mean,
I'm not desensitized,
but I take things
for what they're worth,
and I do know that
there's some horrible stories
in the sex trade
and I'd like to think
that I'm actually
one of the people
trying to make it better,
not worse.
- I see prostitution
as one of the big impediments
to the equality of women.
So of course
we'll continue to fight,
and it's a fight that needs
to take place not only legally,
but also politically.
buying sex on a regular basis
when I was in my late thirties.
There are local papers that
have advertisements in the back
and I decided to go see
a professional dominatrix.
- My first lover
was a Puerto Rican hooker.
I was a sailor.
I didn't know any better.
- So I suppose I've been married
for 25 years.
I didn't wanna have an affair,
so I found her on the Internet,
and it was, I suppose,
a mind-blowing experience.
(distant siren)
(woman): Do we want a society
where men can buy sex? Yes!
There's nothing wrong with it.
Sex is a commodity.
People who think sex
is not a commodity
are delusional.
I've had sex with over
5,300 different m... clients.
Like... I know
what I'm talking about here!
(cheering)
(all): Hey-ho, let's go!
(newscaster):
Ontario sex-trade workers
celebrate a significant
and rare legal victory.
- I don't believe it.
We never get good news
like this.
(applause)
(newscaster): This story began
when lawyer Alan Young
and three sex workers
challenged Canada's
prostitution laws
that make many aspects
of sex work illegal.
- And here's why
it's really sinister:
we know people
have gone missing.
In Vancouver, in Winnipeg,
in Calgary...
There's hundreds of them.
(newscaster):
Justice Susan Himel
agreed with the plaintiffs
and their claim
that the existing laws
put sex workers at risk.
- We won't have to work in fear
and under the gun
and on the run.
And my colleagues
won't show up dead.
It was stunning that...
to me, that we won.
It's completely logical.
However,
logic doesn't usually enter
into any debates
around prostitution.
- There are women
in the sex trade
that are happy with their work.
As counterintuitive
as that sounds
to the prohibitionists,
there are,
and there's many of them.
And all they want
from this case,
and all they wanted from me,
is to create a legal regime
which doesn't make
their job harder.
When I say harder,
I'm not just meaning
more difficult economically,
but harder in terms
of risks to physical security.
- No government, no religion,
no army in history,
has ever been able
to stop sex workers.
For two simple reasons:
sex and money.
If you wanna stop sex workers,
you have to stop sex
and you have to stop money.
You think
you're up for that job?
(woman): For 15 years,
I was a hooker.
And a lot of it was my identity.
(woman): And women,
who do we have
as our role model?
Marilyn Monroe! Betty Boop!
Fuckin'... Jessica Rabbit!
So you have no right
to come here
and call down women who choose
to do what they want to do!
So fuck yourselves!
(man): Yeah, exactly.
I'll pay
for all your plane tickets
to go to Bangkok and maybe
tell your problem there.
This is a strip club, fuck--
- Our problem
isn't with the girls.
- People who work
across the street
go and have a beer there.
- Our problem
isn't with the girls.
- Yeah? Well, this place...
- The oldest profession
is actually farming.
And it's not inevitable.
It's not.
Uh, that same argument was made
about domestic violence.
I mean...
just because we have things
with us all the time,
does that mean
we don't try working against it?
As we stated
in the press release,
we're all deeply troubled
by the decision handed down
by Judge Himel.
We know from our lived truths
that we share
that it was not the laws
that beat
and raped us,
it was men.
It was not the location
that made us unsafe,
it was the men
we were in that location with
that were unsafe.
We have to interfere
with the unchecked male demand
for paid sex.
My big umbrella goal
is to see Canada adopt
the Nordic model of law,
the Swedish model of law.
Sweden criminalized...
the demand for paid sex,
pimping, procuring,
and trafficking.
And they decriminalized
the women.
So they looked at it
from a women's-equality
standpoint
and as
a violence-against-women issue.
- The real question for me
is this:
does prostituting women
make them equal?
And the answer
to that question is no.
Why are there so many women
with fetal alcohol syndrome,
women with addictions,
poor, young, aboriginal,
or racialized women
in prostitution?
The vast majority
of prostituted persons
are women, in fact.
And certainly, you know,
we know that the buyers
are almost exclusively men.
So prostitution is gendered
in that very kind of obvious,
structured way.
And in fact, in most cities,
you're far more likely
to be charged and convicted
as the prostituted woman
than you are as the buyer.
So that is something
that I think...
The abolitionists' position,
the position
of the women's movement,
has always been that this is
not about personal morality,
whatever that might be;
that this is about power,
which is something
quite different.
- Prostitution is a problem
that harms individuals
and it harms communities.
This is why I am pleased
to indicate to the House
that the government will appeal,
and will seek a stay
on that decision.
- They just deny
the existence of my people,
and I don't understand
that these are real people
with real problems
involving the law,
who have made
a freewill-choice
to sell their bodies.
(Valerie): Well, I've always
liked the sex industry.
When I was a little kid,
there'd be an old Western movie
on TV,
and the cowboys' wives...
... they always lived
on the outskirts of town
in some rundown shack,
and the cowboy
bossed them around,
and they were
in these raggy old dresses
with a couple of babies hanging,
squalling off of...
Like... I didn't want that.
But the saloon girl...
I was intrigued.
They were in the centre of town,
they knew what was going on,
there was music,
sometimes they'd get
to own the saloon...
Um... that was more my style.
The first professional dancing
costume I ever had made
was a saloon girl.
I was about 16 or so...
Like, people want to go on
about how it was abuse.
In their minds, maybe,
but not in mine.
And I think
that's the most important thing.
And I do not believe
that all sex workers,
including myself,
are delusional.
- I would've said I chose it.
I would've said... like,
there was a point in my life,
probably
in my really early twenties,
um, when I loved it,
it was great,
it was fun,
it was a party,
and I really...
I would've said I choose it...
in that.... singular moment.
But you can't...
It's not about
a singular moment.
It's about...
It's about all the moments
that got you to that place.
I didn't think it was strange,
I didn't think it was wrong,
till I remember in, like,
Grade 5 or 6 or something,
we had a constable or something
come in
and talk about good touching
and bad touching.
And I was just floored that this
was the bad touching, y'know?
It never occurred to me
until then.
You always knew...
it just didn't seem quite right,
but you never actually
voiced your opinion in my house.
I mean, I was already
sleeping with people
to... get high or drink
by the time I was 12.
And then when I went
to my first group home,
I just got shown, I guess,
the official ropes.
- I never knew what you did,
but I told everyone
you worked in a bar.
- That's what I told you,
that's what I told everyone.
- But I didn't know
what you did there.
And that's all I knew.
(woman): When did you find out?
- Pfft...
I figured it out eventually.
It's not that hard.
Your mom works at a bar,
is coming home at two o'clock
in the morning every day.
(Trisha): I have always done it
on my own financially.
Not a dime in child support.
- My wife, she hasn't been
in my bed for 10 years,
so...
And that's not because
we're not friends.
We're very close.
We travel together,
we talk together,
we work together,
we do a lot of things together.
For whatever reason,
her sex drive is essentially
nonexistent and mine isn't.
- I really don't wanna
get involved
in another relationship.
You know?
Too much work
and too much compromise.
- I just know that I went
from being terrified
to within minutes going,
"This is so right."
You know? Um...
And probably if it had been
with just an average person
who had the same level
of experience,
it might've been
a nervous nightmare.
So time to bring in
the professional.
You know, the artiste.
- I know that our opponents
talk about,
"What kind of men
go see sex workers",
and...
"Look at your husbands.
"Look at your brothers.
"And looks at your sons.
This is who we see."
(Trisha):
It has been argued here
that Canada's laws
are what make
prostitution unsafe.
For them, there's no talk
of the large systemic issues
that force women
into prostitution.
No talk of the societal harm,
emotional harm,
mental harm, spiritual harm.
It is the johns
we must shift our gaze to,
for they have gone unnoticed
for far too long.
Lost in the noisy argument
of women's personal choice.
- Do you know who this is?
That's Brenda Wolfe's daughter.
(Trisha): It was startling
to see just how much Angel
looked like her mom.
Really?!
- I really loved
hearing you speak.
It really, like... I loved it.
- Oh!
(laughter)
It's such an honour
and a pleasure to meet you!
I knew Angel's mom
in the Downtown Eastside,
when there was...
a lot of us
talking about Pickton,
and a lot of us talking
about how we had friends
who were going missing
and who wouldn't be seen again.
And then
we didn't see her again.
... in that apartment,
and your mom used to always come
and hang out there.
(Angel): I was, like,
still in elementary school
when it first came out,
the whole trial.
Everybody knew that, like, "Oh,
her mom was like a prostitute,
"who worked on the street
and, you know,
shot up heroin",
and this and that.
And it was just that stereotype
that I didn't want
to be a part of.
So I wouldn't self-identify
that I was Native.
I wasn't proud
to be my mom's daughter.
I had a huge hatred for her,
'cause I couldn't understand
why she chose that life over us.
(Trisha): Robert Pickton...
took advantage of the vulnerable
and dispossessed,
and took them out to his farm,
and would be charged
with killing 26 of them,
convicted of six.
And there's a lot of suspicion
that he killed many more
than just those 26.
(chanting)
(Angel):
I have to forgive her now.
That wasn't who she was.
It makes me sad, in a way,
that it is the 19th annual walk.
The fact that this has been
happening for so long,
that these women
keep on going missing,
and no one's doing anything...
you know,
really needs to stop.
- Yeah, it's the men
who yield the knife.
The question in the case is:
is the law complicit in this?
And the law is complicit in this
because it takes away strategies
that women can use to protect
themselves from the predators.
The law doesn't cause anything.
The law's an abstraction.
It creates a framework
within which you make decisions
and this framework takes away
the decisions you need
to avoid the Gary Ridgways,
the Joel Rifkins,
the Arthur Shawcrosses,
the Robert Picktons,
the Yorkshire Ripper.
I could go on and on.
They all preyed on street women.
Maybe some of those women
could've opened a door
and avoided it.
- The lessons from Pickton
were not that we ought
to have more brothels.
He was running a sort of brothel
for himself and his friends.
You know, the lessons of Pickton
are that we need
to take male violence
against women seriously,
and that prostitution
is a part of that.
We need to stop the men
from coming in
and scooping up these women,
you know,
to take them back and abuse them
in exchange for money and drugs.
That's the problem here.
It's unacceptable
that we have a population
of disposable women
that can be used in this way.
(Trisha): What happened
to your back, boo?
- Probably got in a fight.
Scrapping...
I've been trying to stay
out of them. I really do.
I'm getting old.
(Trisha): Well,
Angel is a woman I've known
for 17 years.
For years, we worked together.
(indistinct chatter)
Honey,
you need to get that looked at.
- Ah, it's nothing.
- Can you make a fist yet?
- Well, yeah.
- Oh, yeah, you're well
on your way, you're fine.
(Angel):
It was as dangerous then
as it is now.
But this is what I know.
My mom had her...
her own addictions
and did what she thought
she had to do,
and what was taught to her,
and so...
when I was... 11,
my mom...
put me out on the street.
Not on the street.
She would go to the street
and bring people home, right?
And, uh, that's how I...
And that was in the hotels here,
too, so...
(sighing)
I haven't talked about it
in a long time. Ha!
I never, ever once said
I wanted to be a prostitute.
We're made.
This used to be way out
by where we used to work.
Most of us are aboriginal,
down here,
so they're just like me.
(Trisha): It's our old piece
of real estate.
(Angel laughing)
- We owned it.
- Right? This was ours.
Well, here and down there.
- I worked--
- There's no traffic here,
though anymore, eh?
- No. I don't know--
- We used to come here
and it was, like...
constant traffic.
- Yeah.
- No one drove down these roads
except for single men in cars.
(horn honking)
(Angel): I honestly believe
there's nothing wrong
with what I'm doing.
- Would you have come
to that decision...
if you had grown up free
from an abusive household,
and grown up
in a loving household?
- Well, that's an entirely
other situation.
Now you're saying
abolish prostitution,
but also abolish abuse
and abolish, you know...
And we know that would
definitely be good, you know?
Too many kids get hurt.
- I know,
which is why we have to say
to men you can't buy women,
because we shouldn't be allowing
them to exploit abused children.
- These could be guys...
that are out looking for me now,
right?
That would have raped
their daughter,
or their neighbour's daughter,
or their son or whatever.
But instead of doing that,
they go for a drive
and they find one of us.
- I am not willing
to allow an abused child
who grew up
into an abused woman...
- Mm-hmm.
- ... be offered up
as... some sort of... sacrifice
in order to save another child.
- Mm-hmm.
- This is a sex-worker-led plan.
We don't want people
to be coerced
into this business,
and we don't want, um...
any kind of violence
and deception and...
We're trying to bring it out
into the sunlight here.
I think the best model
currently in the world
is New Zealand.
- The world's oldest profession
is now legal in New Zealand,
but the move
to decriminalize prostitution
squeezed in by only one vote.
- The change means
charging for sex,
or living off the proceeds,
is legal, but hiring
an under-18-year-old won't be.
The law allows sex workers
to say no,
a key reason former prostitute
Georgina Byer backed the bill.
- It would've been nice
to have known that instead
of having to deal out
the justice myself afterwards
to that person,
I may have been able
to approach the authorities,
the police in this case,
and say, "I was raped!"
(woman):
Decriminalization means...
we have very limited laws
that discriminate
against sex workers.
We have a model
where sex workers
have a lot of options:
they can work for themselves,
they can work
in managed brothels,
or they can work on the street.
So, you know, they're free,
like any other worker,
in that way.
There are some people
who want to get out,
but there are others who say,
"Look, I'm really happy.
I'm comfortable doing this."
(phone ringing)
- Afternoon. Paradise.
Phiona speaking.
What sort of age group, darling,
are you looking for?
Excellent. Wonderful.
Are you looking for blonde
or brunette?
What sort of size
are you looking for, honey?
It's $160 for half an hour.
At the moment,
we have a Christmas special
of $180 for the hour.
Alright, thank you very much.
Bye.
No. Yeah.
He sounded rough.
Wants someone young,
under the age of...
as young as he can get them.
Which always raises alarm bells
for me.
And the other one
that raises alarm bells,
"New to the industry."
The girl new to the industry,
want to be her first client,
because then
she doesn't know the ropes.
The clients here know
that I teach the girls the rules
before they even go in the room.
So there's no... misbehaving.
I'm a mom to a lot of the girls.
- Yeah, Jazz and I say that
it's the Phiona Baskett home
for wayward girls.
(laughter)
'Cause we all kinda end up here,
in the same sort of situation.
I wouldn't work anywhere else,
'cause everywhere else
it's just a business.
You're just stock;
that's all you are.
They're shifting units.
- You're just another number.
- They don't care about you
as a person.
- I'm very fair.
But it comes down to it,
if I say something,
I expect it to be done.
I don't expect to be backlipped.
I will not cast a blind eye
for drugs.
You do drugs
in my establishment,
yeah, that's when
you really see the wrath.
It is a business
and I am the boss.
I've gotta make sure
the personality and the style
fits in with what we do,
as well.
With you, it was easy.
You were exactly
what I was looking for.
I said to Carmen two days
before, "I need a blonde,
I need someone under 20,
a size 6 to 8."
It was like the recruitment
fairy came along.
So if you guys find anyone
that is a brunette, under 20,
a size 6 to 8,
that's what I need next.
And the marketing is important,
so we've got a marketing plan.
So we know where we're gonna
put our money towards marketing.
And who we're gonna market
and how we're going to market.
Each girl's a little different.
I mean...
Carmen being a...
lovely, exotic, dark girl,
is a little bit different,
but she does a great submissive
with mistress.
A porn-star experience is she
uses all the toys in the room
that you've seen,
and it's a really erotic
experience.
Now a girlfriend experience
is a hand job, a blow job,
and straight sex.
That's how we sell it.
It depends
on what the client is wanting,
and that way
we match up to the girl.
- Because our client base
is probably guys
from about 30,
45-ish is, like,
the main group of people,
and most of them say
that if it was illegal
they wouldn't do it.
They're mostly corporate guys--
- Businessmen.
- Yeah, self-employed, um...
clean-cut, nice people,
um, who are just sort
of sneaking out for lunch
'cause they've had a boring day.
- I have a great marriage.
My wife, I love dearly.
She loves me.
However, she...
is very vanilla
in the way
she likes to make love.
And...
I guess, as a guy,
I sometimes want something
a bit different, or a bit extra.
- I don't rationalize it
by saying,
"Oh, I'm helping her
get through university",
or, "I'm helping a solo mom
support three kids",
or whatever.
I don't need to rationalize it
like that.
(laughing)
I've gone way past that stage.
To me,
it's a business transaction.
- It's usually fairly...
very, very active,
less conversation,
um, very messy,
um, multiple positions,
all the services,
anal, things like that.
- Um, well, with this job,
the most important things
are impeccable grooming
and a really strong stomach.
I was into
some pretty kinky stuff
before I started working, so...
bit of a non-issue.
In terms of people
in this industry,
like, I'm not that young.
Like, hookers age in dog years.
But, I mean, I'm, you know,
well-educated,
I've got my degrees,
got lots of work experience.
I could do lots of other things,
if I wanted to. But I felt more
used and exploited
working a minimum-wage job,
where I get
10-minute lunch breaks,
um, than I do doing this
and doing what I want,
and having the financial
stability to sort of, you know,
own a house in less
than two years, if I want.
So for me,
this is the best option.
- I was starting
a bachelor of nursing.
Did the first year of that.
And I'll probably go back
and do the second year
next year.
Thank you, Mum.
I've been sort of portrayed
as the girl-next-door kind...
because I'm the young one
and I'm the new one.
And that's...
the sort of story that I...
act up to a little bit, but...
It's pretty much just...
whatever the client wants,
really.
I'm now Samantha.
(laughing)
And I'm going to see a man
that is... quite odd.
(laughing)
- Good girl.
I'm proud of you.
Um, we run
a VIP membership program.
Every time they get a booking,
they give me a number,
and they actually get
the 11th booking free of charge.
It's part of the VIP program.
It's just like, you know,
buy 10 coffees, get one free.
This is his 11th free.
- What it makes me understand
is that those women
aren't feeling that they have
other sufficient
economic options.
And that's where I need...
the society,
the culture,
to move to.
Isn't it interesting
that nobody introduces things
like cost-benefit analyses
into these debates?
These are hugely economic
debates,
both at the micro
and macro level,
because we have things like,
from the moment
student loans were introduced,
women students have determined
that one of the fastest ways
to pay off their loans
is as a sex worker,
and they're quite right.
I mean,
the students' associations
of New Zealand
are able to demonstrate
that it takes
New Zealand women graduates
six to seven years longer
than men with the same degree
to pay off their loans,
and these women
are trying to short-circuit it.
- Hands and knees.
Front leg back. Back.
(sensual music playing)
Think sex, think naughty.
Yeah, I'm Steve Crow.
I've been in the adult industry
since '93.
- A little bit close,
a little bit straight,
and then just... slight bend
and then push your ass out.
- Birds out, butts out.
Birds and bums.
I own New Zealand's
largest adult magazine,
and the largest
distribution company
of pornographic DVDs and toys.
Good. Think that's enough,
for the two of you.
A few months ago,
we bought an escort directory.
- Okay, so you wanna change
Nancy's ad?
Just with "Asian Lady" on it
and not with her name.
- The traffic is phenomenal.
I mean,
for a site in New Zealand
to get 35,000 unique visitors
a week...
is huge.
And, um, I'll be just basically
overseeing the sales process
with the girls.
Rachel will be managing
the club side of it,
as in dealing with the clubs.
And this is my partner
and fiance, Rachel Whitwell.
- Thank you.
- You're welcome, love.
I know
you can say your own name.
I'll give you permission.
- Oh, really?
- Yeah.
- Hi, I'm Rachel.
The only sort of dodgy thing
that I've found,
from doing that job,
is the people that possibly
might not be legal
here in New Zealand.
- Yeah.
- I photographed one Asian girl
and she had, like,
so many bruises,
and I just thought,
Mm, that's... I don't like that.
And because
they don't speak English,
and that person's interpreting
for them,
you think, "Oh...
is this a choice thing?"
(Steve): Obviously, the primary
reason to get into it is money.
It's a business.
We're here to make money.
- Steve?
What's the busiest parlour
that you know
that a girl could go
and work for tonight?
- Depends how good-looking
she is. Um...
- How good-looking are you,
do you think?
Y'know, on a scale of 1 to 10.
(Steve): More and more girls
are turning to the sex industry
to earn a living,
because, quite frankly,
they're struggling to survive.
It used to be 10 years ago,
it was quite hard,
in a small country
like New Zealand,
to get girls
to do explicit photo shoots.
Now we turn 'em down.
We're getting them every day,
every week.
Girls who wanna do
nude photo shoots for us.
Girls that never would've
in the past.
If you go to the White House
or any of the clubs,
they'll say they're getting
a higher calibre of girl
coming in to dance.
(man): I built the White House
in, uh, 2000.
We've got Bill on the front door
when you walk in.
The reason for Bill is,
I think he was always
a good guy and a little bit
because he's a naughty guy.
And we're all naughty guys,
and some of us get away with it,
but poor Bill got caught.
Who else is up there?
I've got two businesses.
One is a striptease club,
the other is a massage parlour.
(whistling and applause)
Generally, you might come
from the White House upstairs,
you walk downstairs,
look at it up there,
have it down there:
main course... dessert.
I don't want to call my place
a brothel.
Uh, I can call it Monica's.
Um, to other people,
it might not be a perfect name,
but it suits my... um...
... my White House, basically.
But there was no way
our government
put any thought
into this legalization.
You've got millions of dollars
getting spent right now
trying to adjust things
that are going wrong.
There's still girls
getting murdered,
there's more prostitution
on the street than ever.
Most of our girls that have
left since the legalization
go and open up little places
all over the place.
You've got hundreds of people
going everywhere else but here,
and this is where
the money's being spent.
(sensual music)
- In some ways,
it's the easiest money
you can make, but in other ways,
it's the hardest money
you'll make.
Because the managers will say,
"Oh, it's just great.
It's fine and lovely here.
You'll make $5,000 a night!"
That's bullshit.
Yeah, it's kind of hard
to get your head around
sleeping with 10 guys
in one night,
and not knowing them, and...
it can mess with your head
a wee bit.
Yeah, I couldn't imagine
working on the street.
- I don't wanna work
in a brothel,
I don't wanna
get naked in the bedroom
and have guys molest me.
I wanna keep my clothes on.
I want in and out.
I want... I'm in control.
You know?
So out here, I can handle that.
But if I'm in a brothel,
oh, what am I gonna do?
Lie in a bed and let...?
No, thank you.
Then I don't want some pimp
ruining my life.
I've been there, done that.
Out here, I'm in control,
you know?
(siren wailing)
- I've been a Maori Warden
for about 14 years.
Maori Wardens
have certain authorities,
within the community,
to prevent drunkenness
and disorderly behaviour.
I supported the rights
of the street workers
to do what they do,
if they so choose.
Because they've got
no other way
of surviving adequately.
Just about all of them
prostituting on the streets
are Maori or Pacific Islander.
They wouldn't be able to get by
in a brothel.
The women know it's dangerous.
They know that they could get
beaten up or worse.
So if they didn't have to do it,
why the heck
do you think they do it?
I've seen them here,
time after time,
going round and round
the streets,
looking at all the girls,
and they consistently go
for the younger, fresher ones.
You know,
you can't have prostitutes
if you haven't got clients.
That's the reality.
So maybe they need to look
at that. But if that's the case,
where are these girls
gonna get money to survive?
Thank God I'm not a politician.
- So what was happening here
is the prostitutes
would come up...
... in this beautiful
old homestead...
... and they would conduct
their business...
... right there.
And so when you came out
the next day
to collect your paper,
you had condoms littered.
You know, you're small,
you're exposed, you're open,
and so the prostitutes
were coming here.
I supported it at the beginning
because I thought
this was going
to make prostitutes safer.
And we can actually create
these small,
owner-operated businesses,
that if you don't want
to go into a brothel,
you can in fact
have a prostitute
working in their home,
and that would be alright.
And so...
we were thinking pretty much
we would get them indoors,
we would get them out,
off the street.
(distant siren)
If that's the best we can do
for our young people,
offer them a life on the streets
doing this,
because it's their choice,
what kind of society are we?
Is this what you aim for?
(Marilyn Waring): New Zealand's
given us in the short term,
what's the most logistical
and strategic way
to move on decriminalization,
to move on health risks,
to move on some human rights,
to move around actually taxing
the underground economy.
It's short term,
but I want to hope that...
we will be able to keep building
and making and framing societies
where no man or woman
feels they have to do this,
where no children
are sold into this.
(theme music)
- When an Ontario court
struck down three key laws
on prostitution,
it set off a discussion
that rocketed from one end
of the country to the other.
Here's what was struck down:
the provisions
against communication
for the purpose of prostitution,
living off the avails
of prostitution,
and keeping
a common bawdyhouse.
Now, Ottawa is appealing
the decision,
but if the decision stands,
prostitution,
pimping and brothels
could become completely legal
in Ontario.
We wanna know what you think.
Call us.
(man): No, prostitution
should not be legalized.
If you really want
to help prostitutes,
the best way is to provide them
with detoxification
opportunities.
(man): The judge is a hero.
(woman): This whole thing
is ludicrous.
(woman): It gives men
the go-ahead to purchase women.
Yes, prostitution
has always been with us,
and always will be with us,
but I'm against it,
because it leads to harms
to the social fabric.
(woman): Working indoors is
the safest-possible opportunity,
it gives sex workers the ability
to control the conditions
of their work,
to increase safety.
(Trisha):
That was a long two hours.
Holy crap. My gosh.
But it's good, right?
'Cause you... figure out
what we need to highlight,
the truth that needs to come out
and what people get, right?
It's always good to have
a little dose of both sides.
- I did not realize the damage
that had been done to me
as much as it was until I left.
There's people who come in
and want fetishes,
they want you to act
like their daughters,
they want spankings,
they want
the most disgusting stuff,
but now it's justifiable,
because now it's legal.
"I'm not doing anything wrong.
It's okay to do this."
- 'Cause we know
what we lived through,
we know the repercussions,
today what we went through,
and, you know,
that's what we need
to bring to the table.
We need to bring
our experiences.
- Let's see what we can do.
I'm not gonna spend
a lot of time on it.
- It's in the reports.
- Okay,
let's see what we got here.
I need to recapture control.
It's very important for me,
maybe more psychologically
than, you know, strategically.
I'm gonna start
with occupation at risk.
See, my point is I'm gonna show
what's not in dispute.
And I'm gonna move very quickly,
so I don't wanna be
melodramatic.
But this has to be looked at,
because you have to understand
the gravity of the harm.
It's not just about getting
scratched in a parking lot.
And that everything the Crown
is doing is smoke and mirrors,
because ultimately
when you look at the evidence,
it's solid,
and what they're saying
was disregarded as bullshit.
That's it!
There's nothing.
- It was a fast day.
- Nothing!
Maybe I won't work tonight.
(laughter)
Here's the secret, though,
I'll tell you.
People don't come to me
to do the case. I go to them.
I come up with the issue,
I come up with the argument,
and then I find the right people
for the case.
And so,
that's what happened here.
Initially, it was Terri-Jean.
- Prime Minister Harper,
you've been a very, very,
bad, bad boy!
And I'm not afraid of you,
but you're afraid of me.
Because he's supposed to take
care of all of his citizens,
great and small.
And for him to feel that he has
no need to protect these women,
he's acting like a deadbeat dad.
(Young): She's a very quirky,
nice person,
and her life story
demonstrated my case.
And then,
I remember reading about Val.
- How are you, Ron?
- Because Val was an advocate.
- We're doing well!
- We are!
- We are doing really well
in there.
- I thought she was a very good
spokesperson on this issue.
Like, she really knew
what to say,
the right things to say,
and not histrionic.
And she so much wanted
to be part of it.
- They're giving him
a hard time.
They've read our materials
and they're giving--
- I know they're gonna give Alan
a hard time, too.
- The problem was,
the court would say I don't have
standing to challenge the law,
because the two women,
Scott and Bedford,
were currently not working.
So a court could take the view,
"I'm only gonna make a decision
for someone
that it impacts immediately."
I didn't agree with that,
by the way, but that was fine.
So I said, "Val...
find me someone
currently working."
And that's how Amy came aboard.
They're important people
for the case,
but it was pretty much...
whoever was available
to be able
to stand up for themselves.
- I find the Crown's arguments
convoluted
and not making logical sense.
Because if we change things,
it "might" make things worse?
He says there's no proof;
he is wrong.
We have New Zealand,
that decriminalized in 2003.
So come on,
don't tell me there's no proof.
There's lots of it.
(reporter): It's really neat
getting to talk to you guys.
You're so well-spoken.
- Thank you.
- Some wonderful clips.
- Great. I like to throw out
a few sound bites
when I get the chance.
- Yeah.
- I think they got some good
clips of my coffee mug.
- Today's the day that the
interveners present our case.
They're all the national heads
of women's organizations
that have come together
to take a stand
and get the true picture
of prostitution
read into the courts,
and the version of law
that we all support.
- The Canadian Association
of Elizabeth Fry societies,
Native Women's Association,
Canadian Association
of Sexual Assault Centres,
the Francophone Women's Centres,
and CLES in Montreal.
And, you know,
their mission is really to deal
with the aftermath
of prostitution,
and what men to do women
in prostitution.
And as they try to pick up the
pieces and advocate for change,
we're here to say
that it's simply not acceptable
that the male demand
is completely decriminalized.
Once you decriminalize
that demand,
then it validates the need
to produce a supply.
- It's the most difficult part
of this whole issue,
is to get the focus
shifted off the women
and this kind of dissection
of their motives
and whether they're enjoying it
and all of those kinds of issues
to actually focus on the men
who are profiting
and who are buying.
- You're gonna reduce demand?
This is an instinctive drive.
I'm sorry, you can't do that.
We can't rewrite human nature.
People have an instinctive drive
to sex.
If you don't have a safe,
healthy outlet
within your interpersonal
relationship, many people
are gonna seek it out
in the commercial market.
If she feels
you can eradicate that,
let's make her Prime Minister.
- We are the product
of 100,000 years of evolution,
and, uh, we are hard-wired
to, uh, think a certain way.
And no amount of, uh...
puritanical laws
and... and shaming
is gonna change that.
- Uh... bareback blowjobs,
cum in mouth,
French kissing,
um... let see...
I do like a lot of caressing,
maybe some erotic massage,
you know, things like that.
- They should be really,
really, really, really thanking
these girls that are out there
making a living doing this
for keeping their husbands
from leaving home
and destroying the family
and not supporting the kids
and all that other stuff.
It's worth a couple 100 bucks
once every couple of weeks
for him to go and get
his jollies somewhere else.
Especially if she doesn't wanna
sleep with him anymore.
(soft music)
- This is the Pickton legacy,
is what people are saying is.
This case needs to go ahead
because of the horrific thing
that happened in Vancouver.
- So I worked
with Pickton's victims.
I worked beside them.
My friends were the ones
that were found on his farm.
I covered his trial
as a reporter for a year
and I can honestly say
that what we need to do
in the legacy
of Pickton's victims
is criminalize the male demand.
If there was no male demand,
my friends would not have been
on the streets,
I would not have been
on the streets.
We need to set laws
that create...
a positive environment
for Canada to work towards,
that creates a new Canada
that we can work towards,
and one that errs on the side
of equality...
- Pardon me?
(indistinct chatter)
Yeah, the stay is extended
until ordered otherwise,
which really means
until the judgement comes down.
We didn't come here today
to commercialize prostitution.
That's what the government says.
We've come here
to open up really rudimentary
safety measures.
Hire a bodyguard.
That's not creating
a huge corporate structure
for prostitution.
Hire a bodyguard.
Work in your home,
behind closed doors,
in a safe and secure environment
for yourself.
(reporter): But it's more
than the government
making that argument,
it's ex-workers.
What do you say
about their fears
that this is gonna
increase recruitment?
- I say to these people,
"I'm sorry for what happened
to you,
"but don't extrapolate from your
experience into public policy.
There's a huge gap
between the two things."
- Full name and spelling, sir.
- Alan Young.
A-l-a-n Y-o-u-n-g.
Okay, everybody good?
Okay. Cool.
(indistinct chatter)
(Trisha): If we pass
this Swedish model of law,
tomorrow, the Canadian version,
it's not gonna eliminate
prostitution in a heartbeat.
It's not like every man
is all of a sudden
gonna zip up his pants
and say, "no more",
and every prostitute is gonna
say, "Getting a different job."
But it's about creating legacy.
And this is for my daughter,
this is for my grandchildren.
Let's talk to the police.
Let's see how they enforce,
if it's helped what they do,
and let's talk to men.
- One of the most
frequently asked questions
is that you push prostitution
underground
with this type of legislation.
But even before the law,
most prostitution activities
took place indoors.
If the buyers can find women
in prostitution and buy them,
then the police
should be also able to do that.
You can't say that the buyers
are smarter than the police.
If the police wants to find out
that prostitution takes place,
they can.
- We are two teams
working undercover,
with surveillance, 24/7.
We use our intelligence
to see what groups are active
in Stockholm.
And then we start to...
follow them,
follow the girls on out-calls.
Observe.
Follow the customers.
Identify the customers.
Without them knowing it,
of course.
And use wiretaps...
... cameras.
And through documentation,
we build a case.
- You must know
that there was 30 years
of research,
and the feministic movement
lobbying for criminalizing
the buying of sexual services.
And also
why should we criminalize
only the buyer...?
The main, actually, principle
is that you want women
to leave prostitution,
therefore you should not put
extra burden on them,
also criminalizing them.
Very often,
the woman in prostitution
is socially marginalized
and maybe ethnically, too,
economically.
Why the buyer?
We have a lot of research
regarding the buyers.
And very often middle-aged men,
married, having families, kids,
a steady job, a steady income,
and then you can easily see
who is in power here.
With this law,
we reduce acts of violence
against women,
and we also
can save women's lives.
Of course, it scares them away.
And there have been
a lot of surveys also that shows
if you ask sex buyers
what would make them stop,
the first thing is legislation.
And the other thing
is shame games,
if their names are to be put up,
or they could be identified
as buyers.
- I became interested in buyers
in the late '70s,
here in the city,
where I worked in the streets
as a social worker
among prostitutes.
And some men actually phoned us
and were concerned
that we stole their women,
took them away from them,
and then I became,
obviously, interested in,
you know, what is the need?
In Germany, we're talking
about 45 to 50%;
Thailand,
we're talking about 75%.
So if there was sort of a...
sort of a component
of... sex drive,
if it was like sort of,
biologically,
part of the biological
constitution,
those figures
wouldn't vary so much.
The way
that sexuality expresses itself
is more of a social and cultural
construction than anything else.
Our children,
if they grow up in a context
where it's part
of the rite de passage
to become a man,
to go with your uncle
to a brothel, you know,
the message is that
this is part of your life,
this is necessary
for you to become a man.
As opposed to a society
where people say,
"This is nothing we do here.
"To buy sex is not allowed
in this society.
We do it in another way."
- Of course,
it takes other shapes and forms.
You will see that there are
other means of prostitution,
but I still think
it's a good thing.
I mean, we're sending
a clear signal: it's not okay.
- They have no right to buy.
No one has the right
to buy another person,
I think.
- People get abused and hurt...
through that, so that's...
I... We just disagree with it.
(laughter)
I dunno.
(barking)
Sorry.
(soft music)
- Women and men
should have equal power
to shape the society
and their own lives.
They should earn the same
salaries for performing work,
equal work
or work of equal value.
Men and women should share
the responsibility
for the home
and for the children.
You know,
the European... Commission
said that every day,
millions of women go to work
and will be victims
of sexual harassment.
If men feel
that they can sexually harass
their colleagues at work,
well, the next step is to use
more or less some violence
to have sex with a woman,
and the next step
is to buy a prostitute's body,
and then
have trafficking
in the end of this game.
And there is, of course,
a connection.
That is one reason why we have
criminalized... buying.
- Millions of women,
and some less,
but some men also,
are doing this kind of work,
with no rights at all. Like...
- In Sweden, we try to support
women who are prostitutes.
We are giving them medical
support, social support, etc.
Of course, they are entitled
to all the support they can get.
But that is not the same thing
as saying it's okay
to buy bodies.
- It's the women
who have had to take the blame
for prostitution.
Now we tried to turn the wheels.
Then, of course,
some people look upon this
as a way
of stigmatizing the buyer.
Yes, in a way, of course,
because we are pointing
at the buyers
and saying
that without the buyers,
there would be no prostitution,
so you have to take
your responsibility now.
It's historically just that
you do it right now.
- Without demand,
the supply isn't gonna be there.
Without supply, the demand
can do whatever it wants.
But if there's nobody
willing to do it,
well, what are you gonna do?
- I think the Swedes are right.
There is a whole level
of inequality
that's going on there.
Well, okay,
if you believe that -
and I can see no reason
not to believe it,
it's a totally legitimate
argument -
but to me, that's like saying
I don't believe in abortion,
but I refuse to adopt the kids.
What kind of crap is that?
- I mean,
if we're going to support them,
like they do in Sweden,
I'm gonna end up paying anyway,
because they're gonna
jack the taxes up.
So I'm gonna get screwed
by the... by the government,
and I'm not gonna get screwed
by the girl!
I'd much rather
get screwed by the girl.
(Borgstrom):
People were laughing at Sweden,
saying that men are just going
over to Copenhagen from here,
just driving across the bridge.
You can't, you know...
you can't control that
from the Swedish parliament
or from the Swedish
police office in Malm.
That's part of the complexity
of the phenomenon.
Because this
is a global phenomenon.
What we can do here is to go on
with this debate and discussion
and challenge
the whole... phenomenon
in different ways and discuss it
and, you know, open some minds.
I think that's very important.
- My latest film
is called Like A Pasha.
It was kind of like a...
result of trying
to deconstruct manhood,
in some ways.
So four years ago,
there was the soccer
world championships in Germany
and there was a discussion
on whether or not
Swedish football fans
were gonna go buying sex.
So I followed
a group of supporters
down in Germany
and followed them
to this brothel,
Pasha,
which is the biggest brothel
in Europe.
They said that it was around,
like, 700 or 800 men
coming there every day,
more on the weekends.
(woman moaning)
It was like a parody of, like,
global... oppression,
or, like, global inequality.
It's, like,
here's the African women,
here's the Eastern women,
here's the Asian women.
And you could look
at their prices
to see where they are
in the global-status chain,
you know?
Like, the young German women
are, of course,
the most expensive ones,
and the older African women
are the ones that are cheapest.
(man): How was it?
- Good, quite good.
(laughter)
What's up to you?
Don't you like?
(Tidholm): The film, of course,
was put in the context
of this debate
and the discussion
in Sweden and in Europe.
But I always wanted
to bring it down to the level
where it was about the men
who came there
and why they wanted to buy sex.
(Borgstrom): Men fantasize about
having sex with prostitutes,
and they sometimes say,
"I don't get any sex at home,
you know, and particularly,
"I don't get the sex
that I would like to have.
"All these other guys
get all that kind of sex
and I seem to be the only one
that don't get it."
And of course here
you always have a connection
between pornography
and prostitution,
because the fantasies around
the kind of sex other guys have
are images
that are portraying pornography.
So... they would feel
that they are entitled.
This is a...
They are entitled to this.
- You don't have a girlfriend,
or your girlfriend is not here
and you feel
a very sexual strong feeling,
you want to have some sex.
Just without thinking love
or not love,
go here, find this girl I like,
spend money,
make your sex,
go out and finish.
You think too deep...
about these things.
You think too deep, you know?
- Being a man is being tough
and being hard
and being, uh, ready
to treat other people bad.
You know?
And to do this,
you need to shut off
a lot of emotions.
(baby gurgling)
Because you need to disable
those emotions
that make you stop.
I mean, if you look at armies,
the prison system,
police systems, globally,
it's almost... 100% men.
You know?
And I think it's connected,
that you need
to shut off those emotions
that would make you stop
from hurting other people.
And, uh, what you sacrifice...
is closeness...
to other people.
(soft music)
(Borgstrom): The key law
to understand
the gender-equality debate
has nothing to do
with prostitution.
That's the parental-leave
reform.
That's the most important law
that we have in this country
when it comes to issues
of gender equality.
The issue of prostitution
is a sort of...
it's a hang-around to the major,
interesting, most definite,
groundbreaking,
cutting-edge law:
the parental-leave reform.
(child laughing)
(Tidholm): How could it
not be good for men
to be with their kids at home?
Still, it's women who have been
driving the development, too.
Right? And, um...
I'm... I've been doing
this so much now,
showing my film
and talking about it,
and, to me, it feels like people
really, really like
to talk about this.
The sad part
is that it's usually most women
who want to understand why men
are so obsessed with sex.
- I feel very emotional.
And it can be
really, really hard
to speak with someone
that haven't seen the movie.
But I don't feel
like having sex tonight.
At all.
(chuckling)
- I think what
we should work at...
is an even greater openness
toward sexuality in our society
and open up the possibility
of talking about sex
in a more relaxed... manner
than... than we do.
(soft music)
This is not the gender-equality
paradise, in Sweden.
And backlashes we do have.
But if we have the ambition
to open up for more mutuality,
more trust,
more... experiments
and fantastic meetings
between men and women,
that's the first step.
Prostitution is not the answer.
It's the cul-de-sac,
it's a dead-end street.
(Trisha):
I've truly been humbled
by the men I've met
and how they even envision,
in some ways,
bigger for women
then I could even envision.
(tearfully): I don't wanna
just punish anymore.
Men can be men
in a way that I had
never dreamed possible.
And I mean that
in a totally different way now,
to say I want better for men.
I...
I think, in some ways,
I'm gonna to get flack for this,
but men are just as robbed
of their masculinity
as women are of...
our equality,
in a lot of ways
in North America.
And their being robbed
of their masculinity
robs us of our equality
and you can't...
I don't... I don't think
you can separate them.
- I know it's kind of...
shitty behaviour,
but I don't think
I'm gonna stop.
- I'm widowed,
I'm retired,
and I'm 60,
so I don't have
to give a rat's ass
what people think. Y'know?
(laughing)
- The only way
you're gonna change it
is to castrate them at birth.
That might change it.
Other than that,
you don't have much of chance.
- I'm feeling sick
to my stomach.
(laughing)
I'm really, really hoping
that this turns out the way
that a lot of us are hoping.
(Teresa): Well, we look forward
to hearing the news
when you come out.
- Yes, I'm gonna go in
and see what happens.
Okay. Thank you.
(Young): Here we go.
She's right here.
She is right on time.
(sighing)
- You're shaking.
I've never seen you like this.
- I'm not shaking,
I'm not shaking, I'm fine.
I can't get
to what I want to read!
(Trisha):
I can't deal with the stress.
And we have two minutes to go.
I'm gonna throw up.
(Young):
I wish it was hard copy.
I'd tell you already
what it was.
Oh, fuck!
Okay, okay, okay. Okay.
- I wanna--
- Okay, 2-10, 2-12 are gone!
(woman gasping)
Okay.
(woman): 2-10--
- This is, like, ah...
- Are you alright?
(laughter)
- So 2-10's bawdyhouse,
2-12's living on the avails.
They're not striking out
communicating.
(other woman gasping)
- But the 2-10 and 2-12 are out?
Isn't that wonderful?
(Young): Wow!
- He's blown away.
Look at him go.
- Okay. So... I guess we won,
more or less.
- We won? We won?!
- More or less.
I never wanted to challenge
communication in the first place
so... I never thought
I would be able to knock it out.
- He's the mastermind,
that's why.
- Yeah, that's true.
- Yay!!!
Whoo-hoo!
(indistinct chatter)
You did it, Alan!
- Wait a sec!
- Oh, my God.
Court rules laws...
against pimping and brothels
unconstitutional;
but upholds law against
communicating to sell sex.
Why would they... do that?
- You can run a bawdyhouse now
and not get charged.
- Yeah.
- The only one that stayed was--
- The communicating for
the business of prostitution.
- It was the communicating law
that was the law
that was really being enforced
across Canada
and that was being alleged
to have increased the danger
to women in prostitution.
And what we end up with, uh...
is those women
continuing to be criminalized,
and the applicants
apparently prepared
to live with that result.
- I didn't want to attack
communication on the street,
because I don't think people
want sex workers on the street.
But there are problems
with the communication law,
and I'm supposed to represent
the interests of sex workers,
so I felt I had no choice
but to add the third offense
to the mix.
But when the dust settles,
if everything's upheld
but bawdyhouse?
Then I feel...
this has been
a successful result.
- I'm waiting for you to tell me
what I should say to the press.
- Okay, do you have
anything planned?
- Flick my riding crop
and say a few zingers.
I'm really happy about today
or whatever.
- So, okay... So you're happy.
Why are you happy?
You're happy because...
What do you want to say?
The court did the right thing?
- Uh-huh.
- Maybe say this,
that you would've been...
much better off and much safer
if this decision
had happened 25 years ago
when you were in the trade,
or something.
Does that make sense?
- Yeah.
- Okay.
- Yes.
- Bedford can bring
her riding crop,
but this is what is used
to discipline prostitutes
who don't listen to their pimps.
It is heated up,
it called a pimp stick,
and this is what we're trying
to protect our community from.
(Young):
We have changed the face
of Canada's prostitution laws.
And although
there will be detractors
who don't understand
what's happened,
this is actually a good thing
for Canada,
and will take some time
for the naysayers to realize
that the court
has done the right thing.
Not everybody
will benefit from this decision.
There are people
who work in the sex trade
that are survival sex workers
that don't have the wherewithal
and the ability
to take advantage of it,
but the court's saying
it doesn't matter,
because if we save one life,
we've saved a million lives.
We have not solved the problem
of what goes on in the street,
which is a very complicated
sociopolitical problem...
- I think Alan Young
has just been very clear
that this is for the upper...
upper echelon, right?
So...
everyone gets what they want,
and...
everyone else
is just collateral damage.
Except the collateral damage
is a lot bigger...
... than those who will see
the inside of brothels or...
I mean, there's so many rules
about working in a brothel.
Um, none of my friends
will make it inside.
Aboriginal women
won't make it inside.
Women who have blonde hair
and blue eyes and big boobs
will make it inside.
Or, you know, Asian women or...
There's a very particular type
that works indoors.
But there's far, far more
that will never make it inside
the front door.
(man): Terri-Jean,
are you gonna open up
a... bawdyhouse?
- If anybody wants
to underwrite a business,
I'll...
(laughter)
... be more than happy
to accept your offer.
(woman): Let's talk about that
later, shall we?
- If I open up a bawdyhouse,
I have registered the name,
it is Beaver Meadows
Social Club, to showcase
the fact that we are Canadian
and that we are friendly.
(woman): Let's have a round
of applause for--
(applause and cheering)
- Yes!
- I was 12.
- Okay, well, I was 15
and when my customers abused me,
they weren't pedophiles,
they were just johns
who didn't give a shit.
- They were abusers.
They were not johns.
- Most of them are.
If a man has to go
and live off a woman's body...
I mean come on,
we're selling people
like we're selling burgers!
- We are not selling people.
We are selling services.
- Sex. Sex!
- I've worked with underage
girls in bawdyhouses...
(reporter):
But anti-prostitution groups
crashed the victory
news conference,
including a woman whose mother
was murdered by Robert Pickton,
a serial killer who preyed
on Vancouver prostitutes.
- For now! For now!
- Judges made their decision.
That's the way it's gonna be!
- For now!
But I will be working
with MP Joyce Smith
and make sure
this law gets changed!
'Cause my mom didn't die for you
to create this hecticness!
(man): I'm pleased
to inform this House
that the government of Canada
will seek leave
to appeal this decision
to the Supreme Court of Canada.
(applause)
- You know,
it's been such a long battle.
I feel as if now
I just wanna go home.
- We need to step up our game
and get it more in the forefront
of people's minds
so they understand
that there is a third way.
- So, I mean,
I'm not desensitized,
but I take things
for what they're worth,
and I do know that
there's some horrible stories
in the sex trade
and I'd like to think
that I'm actually
one of the people
trying to make it better,
not worse.
- I see prostitution
as one of the big impediments
to the equality of women.
So of course
we'll continue to fight,
and it's a fight that needs
to take place not only legally,
but also politically.