LA Times’ Half Assed Endorsement

NL- In case you haven’t read this yet, it is the editorial printed last week by the LA Times that has those on both sides unhappy. It is the story that is causing controversy because of careless statements attributed to the adult industry with no specific names mentioned. "Dating" outside the industry being one major topic for concern.

 http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/editorials/la-ed-end-measure-b-20121018,0,1623510.story

Endorsement
No on Measure B
Though it is well intentioned, requiring the use of condoms in adult movies is likely to stymie L.A. County government and bring little benefit to performers.

October 18, 2012

Performers in adult films risk their health and their very lives to do their controversial work. Despite advances in the treatment of HIV, there is not yet a cure for the virus, which causes AIDS. New, more virulent and in some cases reportedly untreatable strains of once manageable sexually transmitted diseases continue to appear: syphilis, gonorrhea, chlamydia. So it stands to reason that government would consider common-sense regulations to protect performers in the workplace. Just as regulations require helmets on construction sites to protect against debilitating head injuries, government could mandate that performers whose work requires sexual contact wear condoms.

The Times supported just such an ordinance in the city of Los Angeles last year in the name of protecting adult film performers. Now the AIDS Healthcare Foundation is back with a similar proposal that would apply countywide. If adopted by voters, the Safer Sex in the Adult Film Industry Act would require producers of adult films to obtain health permits and would require the use of condoms in acts of vaginal or anal intercourse in such productions.

It is on the ballot as Measure B, and in preparing to make a recommendation, The Times’ editorial page studied the city’s experiment and interviewed public health and legal experts and performers, producers and others in adult entertainment. Two conclusions became inescapable: Performers should protect themselves and others by wearing condoms, and should have the full support of producers and others in their business; and laws are unlikely to force them to do it. Given the nature of adult films, viewers will continue to demand, and producers will continue to present, films depicting explicit unprotected sex.

ENDORSEMENTS: The Times’ recommendations for Nov. 6

Measure B is well intentioned, but it is likely to stymie county government and bring little benefit to performers. The Times recommends a no vote.

It’s a close call. Not every argument put forward by either the AIDS Healthcare Foundation or the pornography industry can be accepted at face value. Producers and performers argue, for example, that the ordinance is unnecessary because they have mastered the problem of sexually transmitted disease in the industry with a rigorous program of testing. They say that the stable of adult performers is not much bigger than a typical high school graduating class, that they all know one another and are accountable to one another and that few, if any, "date" outside their industry.

Yes, major producers test, and top performers simply won’t shoot scenes with untested partners. Testing helps. But there is lag time between the time of the test and the next film, and performers could easily be infected during that period. Besides, not every pornographic film is produced by a major company, and not every performer is a much-sought-after top performer. There are more marginal companies that won’t behave responsibly, and there are vulnerable young performers just trying to get by who might not be able to say no when pressed to have on-screen sex with an untested partner.

But even if those performers would benefit from further protection, they’re unlikely to get it from Measure B. Some larger, more established companies would probably obey the new rules, but others would undoubtedly ignore them. Off-the-books shoots would continue, with producers naming their companies, hiring crew and performers, erecting sets, concluding filming and reorganizing for the next shoot under a new name long before county health officials learn of a production that needs a permit or a set that needs inspection. If government already can’t keep track of these productions, it is hard to imagine how it would enforce a permit and condom requirement. Under-the-radar productions would remain under the radar instead of being incorporated into the testing regimen of more established production companies, while those bigger companies — if their executives are to be believed — would be more likely to flee to unregulated counties, states and nations.

And if they flee — should we care? Porn is, after all, porn, and even though it has become more accepted in mainstream culture in recent decades and is occasionally considered hip where it was once widely dismissed as smut, it will never be universally embraced. No icons for pornography will ever be incorporated into the county seal alongside the Hollywood Bowl and the Spanish galleon.

Yet we should care, not necessarily because porn should be embraced but rather because it is an integral part of the entertainment industry that represents many jobs and a large part of the Southern California economy. Even if there are only a few hundred on-camera performers, porn is estimated to be a $1-billion to $2-billion industry, employing thousands of sound, lighting, stage, technical and other crew members and post-production workers in between gigs in more-mainstream film and television productions.

Even so, the economic argument alone would be insufficient to counterbalance the health threat to performers. Just as it may be cheaper for construction companies to let employees do their work without helmets, the potential loss of money or jobs cannot by itself outweigh the value of the lives of performers, their loved ones and others who could become victims of infection spread in adult productions.

But in a balancing test in which voters consider the effectiveness of testing (spotty but better than nothing), the costs and challenges of enforcement, and the continuing danger to performers who will either continue to work unprotected in unreported L.A. productions or follow the big companies to less regulated counties and states, the economic loss is a relevant factor.

If Los Angeles County could demonstrate that it was ready, willing and able to enforce a permit and condom requirement or that producers would not simply evade the requirement by leaving the county (and if audiences would choose to watch explicit sex scenes depicting condoms), Measure B could merit support. Instead, it’s impossible to predict the results of passage. Measure B then falls into the category of "Let’s pass it and see what happens." That’s a bad way to make law because it puts government, or voters, on a track toward regulating all kinds of conduct without any hope of enforcing the requirements fairly and equally, and that in turn undermines the power of government.

Performers should use condoms. Producers should encourage them to do so. But the power of law to make them do it is limited. So is the desirability of always turning to government and lawmaking to address all dangers.

12 thoughts on “LA Times’ Half Assed Endorsement

  1. Michael Whiteacre says:

    “Causing controversy” — among whom?

    Both sides unhappy ? — the adult industry is overjoyed at this endorsement.

    Half-assed? The LA Times endorsement is not strong in its discussion of the alleged “public health” concerns (in either direction), but it nails the personal liberties / rights, government overreach, market reality and economic impact arguments.

    It states that Measure B “is likely to stymie county government and bring little benefit to performers.”

    It continues, finding that porn “is an integral part of the entertainment industry that represents many jobs and a large part of the Southern California economy. Even if there are only a few hundred on-camera performers, porn is estimated to be a $1-billion to $2-billion industry, employing thousands of sound, lighting, stage, technical and other crew members and post-production workers in between gigs in more-mainstream film and television productions.”

    “… it’s impossible to predict the results of passage. Measure B then falls into the category of ‘Let’s pass it and see what happens.’ That’s a bad way to make law because it puts government, or voters, on a track toward regulating all kinds of conduct without any hope of enforcing the requirements fairly and equally, and that in turn undermines the power of government.”

    “Producers should encourage [performers] to [wear condoms]. But the power of law to make them do it is limited. So is the desirability of always turning to government and lawmaking to address all dangers.”

  2. jeremysteele11 says:

    Well put, Michael. The bottom line is The L.A. Times says No. It also brings up the issue of viewers likely lack of interest in endorsing condom only porn. It would’ve been nice if they addressed how there’s never been any AIDS epidemic in porn or the shoddiness of HIV testing or controversy of the HIV= AIDS dogma itself, but that would’ve been way too much of the L.A. Times!

  3. jeremysteele11 says:

    Asking way too much, that is.

  4. I have not read the editorial until now. This is damn good.

    The adult Industry has a shameful attitude towards STD prevention. Nevertheless, Measure B is not the way to go…

  5. Michael Whiteacre says:

    LA County Dept of Public Health has a shameful attitude towards STI prevention: doing a piss-poor job of educating, and encouraging testing among, the poor (particularly minority MSM) and then finger-pointing at the single most tested population on the planet.

    STIs do not stem from the adult industry; adult performers pick them up the way everyone does in LA County, just the way they pick up the flu. You treat problems at their source. Anything else is an expedient band-aid or a political (non-)solution.

  6. jeremysteele11 says:

    Condoms ARE like bandaids… they fall off, infections can be exposed through or around it and can and do exist outside the bandaged area… and they are not preventative of disease, akin to clean needle programs for heroin addicts, which only help proliferate substance abuse, which cause immune deficiency and thus diseases from opportunistic infections which otherwise would’ve never festered in a healthy human host.

  7. jeremysteele11 says:

    Hey Michael, have you seen those fucking latest AHF urban billboards advertising Free ONE MINUTE HIV Tests? As Liam Scheff said in the House Of Numbers documentary on HIV/AIDS, everyone knows faster and cheaper means better, right? (sarcasm)… These pieces of shit are trying to get more bogus diagnoses to appease the Drug and Medical Mafia and catch more suckers into their net, to keep the bullshit and highly lucrative (and murderous) AID$ war going.

  8. Michael Whiteacre says:

    Yes, I always think of that quote when the subject of rapid ELISA tests comes up.

  9. jeremysteele11 says:

    You’d think if AIDS was a sexually caused epidemic killing people that tests wouldn’t be necessary to ascertain infection. Lots of people have been dying in Africa, which they presumptively diagnosis as AIDS, but that’s nothing new in that 3rd world country denied clean water, food and healthcare… but where’s the “sexually” caused epidemic in America, outside of fast track popper sniffing, antibotic and club drug downing gays and habitual IV drug users? Even mainstream sources says it’s still mainly locked in these two groups (referred to, simply, as gays and IV drug users). Weinstein is trying to play the role of Superman for profit but the only ones to “save” are inside the blank screen of his fictitious, financially motivated, fantasy world. Everyone else in the real world is a victim of bogus diagnoses and murderous therapy. AZT, first administered to AIDS patients, had a skull and crossbones on it’s label and was originally deemed “Too toxic for human consumption”, and taken off the shelves, yet due to pressure from idiotic groups of people destroying themselves with reckless party behavior, it was “compassionately” given to those with fucked immune systems to finish what they started. Toxic solutions for toxic problems. Destroy the Village People to save them. Uh-huh. It’s not just the scarecrow in need of a brain.

  10. jeremysteele11 says:

    Comment from October 27th, 2012 at 11:11 p (p should read a for a.m. but, in case you haven’t noticed, there is never any morning in LIB-land) is awaiting moderation… this shit always miffs me… what word was it this time?

  11. jeremysteele11 says:

    3rd world continent, whoops. 😐

  12. commonsense says:

    http://www.legalzoom.com/
    The above link is for all talent to use to incorporate, trademark their name, etc. No need to pay an attorney.
    save your money as this industry maybe at best has another 6-9 months of profitability for performers.

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