Adele Nieves on Blog Talk Radio this weekend

March 25, 2008

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Join us for Come Together: The official live discussion of the Women’s History Month blog carnival

 

Join Heart of Women’s Space and What Tami Said as we conclude our Women’s History Month blog carnival with an hour-long live discussion on Blog Talk Radio, 6 p.m. EDT, Saturday, March 29. We will review our favorite submissions to the blog carnival; discuss issues raised by the carnival, including race and feminism and their roles in the 2008 presidential election; discuss the state of feminism today; and talk about the most effective ways for women to work together towards equality.
We will be joined by panelists including:

Adele Nieves, a writer, journalist, and speaker, focusing on politics, women’s issues and race.

Shecodes, an entrepreneur and activist dedicated to the uplift of black women. Shecodes runs the blog Black Women Vote, described in its inaugural post as “a war cry to all Black women who are fed up, pissed off, and mad as heck about the present conditions of Black womanhood in America, and are ready to do something about it. Make no mistake… we’re about to change some stuff up in this piece! We have the social, economic, political tools to compel America to become more hospitable for ourselves, and for our daughters.”

We also want to hear from YOU. Tune in and call in! Listen live by clicking this link and let your voice be heard by calling (347) 205-9125 during the show.

Watch Women’s Space and What Tami Said for programming updates, including panelist additions.

 Read more at Blog Talk Radio.


NY Times article on Prostitution

March 13, 2008

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The Myth of the Victimless Crime by Melissa Farley and Victor Malarek

WHAT do we know about the woman Gov. Eliot Spitzer allegedly hired as a prostitute? She was the one person he ignored in his apology. What is she going through now? Is she in danger from organized crime because of what she knows? Is anyone offering her legal counsel or alternatives to prostitution?…


Sex Trafficking Children - WHY?????

February 20, 2008

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The Wrong Target by Bob Herbert (NY Times)

Across the country, young girls by the thousands - children - are being drawn into the hellishly dangerous world of prostitution. They are raped, beaten and exploited in every way imaginable. Full Story


Women Can’t Have Authority Over Males (Crooks and Liars)

February 20, 2008
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By: Logan Murphy on Monday, February 18, 2008

Sex Trafficking Conference: Help us get there

February 10, 2008

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piggybank.jpg Please help Detroit Feminists Andrea Lavigne and Adele Nieves make the trip to McAllen, TX for the Sex Trafficking Conference in early April.

Click on our PayPal account to help sponsor our travel. Every little bit helps, and in the future, you can call on us to do the same.

Con amor (with love),

Detroit Feminists

No one has ever become poor by giving. ~Anne Frank


Consider yourself warned: Walmart

December 18, 2007

I just received this as a chain letter, and if it’s true, we should be scared, very scared! If not, once it’s in cyberspace it’s only a matter of time.

COMING SOON TO A WALMART NEAR YOU!

What you see below are not see-thru skirts. They are actually prints on the skirts to make it look as if the panties are visible.  These are the current rage in Japan. If recent trends are any indication (pole dancing kits for 12-year olds), they’ll be the rage in the US before we know it.

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Play explores race, power, love and fear

November 21, 2007

Neil LaBute, writer of The Shape of Things and In the Company of Men is considered one of the most powerful and prolific playwrights and screenwriters working today!

In his play This is how it goes, Neil Labute explores race, power, love and fear through an interracial love triangle that becomes more complex and revealing as this story of three fascinating characters unfolds.

For additional information, please visit them on the web.


My own stuff!

September 18, 2007

taintedmirror_cover.jpg Check out the compelling, anonymous interview, conducted by Adele Nieves, with a woman who has been in and out of the prison system since she was 14 years old. Available in the Tainted Mirror Anthology.

Details:

Title: If You Find an Open Door, Walk Through it

Preorders are being accepted: ($9.95, plus $3.00s/h) at Pen of the Writer.

AND 

My “spotlight” interview, at Detroit Women in Film and Television.


City as Predator (Las Vegas)

September 5, 2007

Since some of you may not have an online subscription to the New York Times, I’m pasting the whole story for all to read.

September 4, 2007, Op-Ed Columnist

City as Predator

Las Vegas

There is probably no city in America where women are treated worse than in Las Vegas.

The tone of systematic, institutionalized degradation is set by the mayor, Oscar Goodman, who told me in an interview that the city would reap “tremendous” benefits if a series of “magnificent brothels” could be established to cater to johns from across the country and around the world.

“I’ve said there should be the beginning of a discussion of that,” said Mr. Goodman, a former defense lawyer for mobsters who unabashedly describes his city as an adult playground where “anything goes — as long as you don’t go over the line.”

Most of the lines in Vegas have long since been erased. It is without a doubt, as the psychologist and researcher Melissa Farley, says, “the epicenter of North American prostitution and sex trafficking.”

Vegas is a place where women and girls by the tens of thousands are chewed up by the vast and astonishingly open sex trade. You can be sitting at a traffic light and a huge mobile billboard will drive past, promising, “Hot Babes — Direct to Your Room.”

I was drawn to this story by an advance copy of Ms. Farley’s book-length report, “Prostitution and Trafficking in Nevada: Making the Connections.” It’s being published online today.

The report explores what Oscar Goodman doesn’t appear to understand: the horrendous toll that prostitution, legal or illegal, takes on the women and girls involved. If you peel back the thin, supposedly sexy veneer of the commercial sex trade, you’ll quickly see the rotten inside, where females are bought, sold, raped, beaten, shamed and in many, many cases, physically and emotionally wrecked.

Start with the fact that so many of those who are pulled into the trade are so young — early-20s, late-teens and younger. Child prostitutes by the hundreds pass through the Family Division courtroom of Judge William Voy, who views the hapless, vulnerable girls as victims and tries to help them. The girls he sees are as young as 12, with the average age being 14.

He told me about a 14-year-old who was seven months pregnant by her pimp. She was suffering from a sexually transmitted disease, had a drug problem, was undernourished and still craved a relationship with the pimp. “These cases will tear your heart out,” the judge said.

Ms. Farley was asked to study the Nevada sex trade and its consequences 2 ½ years ago by John Miller, who at the time headed the U.S. State Department’s effort to fight human trafficking around the world. Prostitution is legal in some parts of Nevada but not in Vegas, where 90 percent of the state’s prostitution occurs. Vegas is a world-class embarrassment to any U.S. official attempting to reduce prostitution and trafficking in foreign countries.

“We did surveys of people on the street,” said Ms. Farley, “and nearly half thought prostitution was legal in Las Vegas. Guess why that is? Massive advertising.”

There are more than 150 pages of ads in the Las Vegas yellow pages for “college teens,” “mature women,” “mothers and daughters,” “petite Japanese women,” “Chinese teens in short skirts” and every other variation imaginable. I asked Mayor Goodman about that, and he said: “We’ve changed that a little bit. They used to have pictures.”

Sex clubs with teenage girls dancing nude and offering lap dances to johns are legal, ubiquitous and widely advertised. Many of those girls are either prostitutes or one short step away.

What is not widely understood is how coercive all aspects of the sex trade are. The average age of entry into prostitution is extremely young. The prostitutes are ruthlessly controlled by pimps, club owners and traffickers. In the case of legal prostitution, they are controlled by their own pimps and the brothel owners — pimps who have been legalized by the state.

The women are exploited in every way. Most of the money they receive from johns goes to the pimps, the brothel owners, the escort service managers and so forth. Strippers and lap dancers have to pay for the right to dance in the clubs, and the money they get in tips has to be shared with the club owners, bartenders, bouncers, etc.

Huge numbers of foreign women are trafficked into Vegas. The legions of Asian women in the massage parlors and escort services did not come flocking to Vegas from suburban U.S.A.

Mayor Goodman said that he is no fan of illegal prostitution, but is convinced the legal variety could be a boon. He is proud of his city’s tourist slogan: “What happens here, stays here.”

Back in the ’90s, Las Vegas tried hard to promote a family-friendly image.

“That ended when I became mayor,” said Mr. Goodman.

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