Reblogged from Vox Political:
We seem to be returning to the days when our so-called betters
dictated to us that the mere sight of a lady’s ankle was enough to inflame the
blood and led to lewd, lecherous and scandalous behaviour – before the
hypocritical old nobs headed off to the “gentlemen’s” club for an appointment
with ‘Lady Lola’ or some similarly-named professional whose main talent was
wrapping her own ankles around her ears.
We know that David
Cameron wants to inflict a so-called ‘Pervert Database’ on us, in which
anyone wishing to view indecent/pornographic images has to register that
intention publicly.
We also know that this attitude is hypocritical, if only because he
won’t apply the same censorious mentality to, say, Page 3 of The
Sun in case it upsets Rupert Murdoch – and Cameron knows he can’t win a
general election if Murdoch isn’t on-side.
Now we can see that, even while the government cracks down on internet
pornography, it is actively promoting live sex work (in the flesh, as it were)
by advertising
jobs in the sex industry on its Universal Jobmatch website. Jobseekers can
be sanctioned if they fail to use this site, so it seems likely there is a high
chance they will be exposed to this sort of thing.
So it seems the government wants to force porn addicts away from indulging
their obsession in the comfort of their own home and into “very professional and
discreet” clubs. Could there possibly be a money incentive in
this?
To make these clubs enticing, the government’s jobsearch site is advertising
for female “table top” dancers who need a “good sense of rhythm”.
According to Iain Duncan Smith, Universal
Jobmatch is used for five million jobsearches every day (caveat: it’s a
LieDS statistic and you can’t even trust him to tell you where he got his
education).
Cameron’s stated aim is to protect children but there is nothing to stop
people under 18 from applying for the jobs. It is even possible that Job Centre
Plus staff may try to force teenagers into them, with the threat of benefit
sanctions if they do not acquiesce.
Cameron’s claim is that internet porn features “vile images that pollute
minds and cause crime”. It’s most likely a fair comment (this writer can’t claim
to have been polluted in that way).
But suppose he’s right; statistically speaking, it’s undoubtedly possible
that some of the people who look at online porn may go on to commit crimes –
possibly sex crimes.
Suppose these people, unable to look at their filth online, instead attend
one of the clubs advertising for “very well groomed” table top dancers. They’re
likely to have a frustrating night, with real, naked bodies only inches away
from them for as long as they can stand it, and no (legal) outlet for the urges
this may create in them.
The club closes; they get turned out onto the street, possibly on their own,
possibly with friends. What are these potentially-criminal porn addicts likely
to do if they see a lone woman, possibly a dancer from the club, with nobody
nearby to help her if she gets into trouble?
I don’t know.