CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, MARCH 25, 2016, OR THEREAFTER
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, MARCH 25, 2016, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“CONDOMS IN PORN: VOTERS CAN REVERSE STATE BOARD”
It strains credulity to contemplate a
key vote taken the other day in an Oakland meeting by the Standards Board of
the state’s Division of Occupational Safety and Health. That’s the state agency
whose purpose is to assure the safety of workers, no matter what their job.
Fortunately, voters will have a chance
to reverse this perverse decision next November, making statewide a rule now
enforced only in Los Angeles County.
We are talking pornography here, with
the accompanying risks of AIDS and other sexually transmitted diseases.
Before the Standards Board was the
question of whether to force the use of condoms during explicit sexual scenes
in pornographic films. Los Angeles County voters adopted this rule four years
ago by a wide 57-43 percent margin, despite hearing much the same arguments
against it that swayed state board members. The same rule is the essence
of an initiative set for a vote this fall.
One result of the Los Angeles law has
been that immense quantities of porn filming moved out of the industry’s
onetime heartland in the San Fernando Valley portion of Los Angeles. Some moved
to other California locations, most notably neighboring Ventura County. A lot
of filming also shifted to Las Vegas.
That move may about to end. A single
AIDS infection on a gay-sex film shoot in Las Vegas in late 2014 caused
authorities there to begin the process of imposing many of the same rules on
sexually explicit filming in Nevada that already are enforced in the many
counties there with legal prostitution.
Sex workers in legal brothels – and
they are legal everywhere in Nevada
except Clark County, home to Las Vegas and suburbs – get regular blood
tests and health exams, with male customers required to use condoms for
interpersonal contacts.
This threat has already caused some
companies that moved filming to Las Vegas to shift back – and now they are
fighting regulation in California, set to mount a big money campaign against
the condoms-in-porn proposition.
The industry’s arguments have already
affected the Standards Board, which normally has seven members and requires
four votes to pass any new rule. The vote this time was 3-2 for condom use, not
enough to pass it, with one board member absent and another seat vacant.
The arguments that swayed two board
members to side with pornography producers came mostly from their employees,
including actors.
Porn performer Maxine Holloway
implored the board to vote against condoms, saying “I ask you not to approve
this policy that will endanger me and my colleagues.” She meant that her
sometimes high-paying job might be jeopardized.
The problem for the performers and
their producer bosses is that, as several speakers testified, much of their
audience loses interest when actors wear condoms. That could mean huge
financial losses for an industry that makes about 11,000 sex videos yearly,
shown on more than 100,000 sexually explicit websites and accounting for about
one-fourth of all video rentals.
The industry’s speakers also warned
that a condom rule could push even more adult filming underground than today,
with performers “bareback” and companies not even putting cast members through
the bi-weekly blood tests now administered by above-board parts of the industry
to check for a variety of sexually transmitted diseases.
“The big lie the industry has been
saying all these years is that (these tests mean) there are no on-set
transmissions (of disease),” said Michael Weinstein, president of the Los
Angeles-based AIDS Healthcare Foundation, sponsor of both the current
initiative and the Los Angeles measure. “That has been proven untrue.”
He and another foundation spokesman
said they would not be deterred by the Standards Board vote. “This will only
energize us in preparing for November,” they said.
Based on how Los Angeles County voters
responded to the adult industry’s arguments in 2012, it’s doubtful anything it
said to the board would sway many voters this fall, especially since much of
the state is far less tolerant of sexually-open lifestyles than L.A.
-30-
Email
Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough,
The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch
It," is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias
columns, visit www.californiafocus.net
No comments:
Post a Comment