Email Alerts

Subscribe to Email Alerts:
Asia Sentinel Alerts


Receive HTML?

 


A Pox on All Their Houses Print E-mail
Tag it:
Delicious
Furl it!
Mister.Wong
NewsVine
Reddit
YahooMyWeb
Technorati
Digg
Asia Sentinel Staff   
14 March 2008
Asia looks on with wonderment at the fall of a US politician caught in a sex scandal



soc-spitzerSo it is shocking news that the governor of New York had been buying the services of high-class hookers? Probably the real news is the fuss that the whole of the US is making about this incident. Politician Visits Prostitute should be about as newsworthy as Dog Bites Man. Pope Visits Prostitute might just be worthy of the front page. One of the first lessons any cub reporter learns covering politics anywhere on the globe is that politicians want to be loved. They want to be loved in general, as one old political reporter once said, and they want to be loved in particular. That’s why they become politicians.


Of course, the US is not alone in its hypocrisy. Hong Kong police for example are forever raiding one-woman vice establishments, usually claiming to be in search of illegal migrants. Every now and again a sauna/massage parlor where sex is also on tap is closed, with the offending women marched to paddy wagons with bags over their heads for photographers employed by the local papers. Yet others continue to operate openly. Try Wan Chai on almost any night for the legions of “tourists” in from Colombia or Russia or Nairobi, offering their wares.


Escort services, obviously no more than prostitution fronts, advertise freely in the Yellow Pages and elsewhere and there are numerous buildings in Wan Chai, Mongkok, Tsim Sha Tsui and elsewhere where whole floors are occupied by one-woman apartments which are advertised in newspapers or on the internet offering “full service” sex for as little as HK$300. At the other end of the income scale, the city’s tycoons are notorious for their sexual appetites. Indeed, sex is usually their only interest other than money-making.


Malaysians flock to southern Thailand for sex but that’s because it’s cheap rather than because it is not readily available at least in the major cities and despite the occasional busts of Malay women by the religious authorities. The elite however, don’t have much to fear from such intrusions into the rooms always on hand for them to entertain their guests at luxury hotels — unless, of course, there is a political motive. Ask Chua Soi Lek, one of Malaysia’s top Chinese politicians, who resigned in January after a sexually explicit videotape — made by political rivals from four different hidden camera angles — was circulated showing him getting into bed with an unnamed woman. Like Spitzer, Chua decided it would be wiser to just quit.


In China it seems there is scarcely any middle ranking party or state official or who doesn’t have ready access to sexual services whether in return for cash or favors. As for the Philippines, Thailand and Indonesia there can only be wonderment that the supposedly liberal, anything-goes US can make such a fuss about a politician spending money on sex. The mistress of Fidel Ramos was practically a member of the Filipino cabinet, so influential was she.


But the whole US media is so eager to titillate its readers with stories of extra-marital sex that Spitzer has wiped the Obama-Clinton fight off the front page. Not content with its glee over the story of the fall of Spitzer, the media is now obsessing about the life story of the young lady who was supplementing her income with an entirely voluntary act. This is mostly the same media which is apt to accuse Rupert “Dirty Digger” Murdoch of using salacious stories to sell newspapers.


Indeed, a world already disenchanted with the US because of issues ranging from Iraq and Guantanamo to foreign debt and the sub-prime fiasco looks with astonishment as the nation which makes heroes of drug-addicted singers and serial-dating starlets crucifies a leading politician for buying plain vanilla heterosexual sex from an adult.


Of course, Spitzer’s history of moralizing, including entrapment of others in just what he himself was found to be doing, set him up for a sudden fall. But disdain for Spitzer should have turned to pity in finding that the cheerleaders at his downfall were the crooks and sleazebags of Wall Street, the investment bankers and fund managers whom Spitzer had chased for the scams which enriched them at the expense of the small savers and investors. Those cheering loudest were the very Wall Street titans whose drug- and alcohol-fuelled office parties have featured everything from dwarf-tossing to on-tap prostitutes catering to every sexual taste and preference.


There is no reason that prostitution should be illegal in a free society where women have free choice of what they do with their bodies and how they earn a living. It is hard to think of any society where prostitution is not big business and where a significant proportion of females earn a living, full or part-time, from it. China under Mao, yes, the Soviet Union under Stalin maybe. Saudi Arabia today — perhaps except for the rulers themselves and rich who keep women in Beirut or Nice.


But these are rare exceptions to the rule that women often exchange sexual favors for advantages, be they cash or a job or new dress. That’s human nature just as it is human for many men to want sex as often as possible and with as many partners as chance or wealth allows. It flourishes even in places such as the Islamic Republic of Iran where theoretically the punishment is severe.


Unable in free societies to make prostitution itself illegal — although it is mostly illegal in the publicly puritan United States — the self-styled moralists instead go after the intermediaries, the agencies who act as go-betweens, the pimps and the owners of the apartments. While there are doubtless cases where these intermediaries trap and intimidate the women — most often if they are illegal migrants — this is the exception, not the norm so promoted by the media (whose own members are among the most frequent users of sexual services). In this as in any other service business, intermediaries of one sort or another are necessary. Yet application of laws is almost invariably unfair.


In the Spitzer case, vast amounts of time have been spent by FBI and other sleuths to bring a case under an obscure law about crossing state lines for immoral purposes. That makes as much sense as taxing bread being carried from New York to Washington. It is particularly absurd in a US where in the state of Nevada brothels are perfectly legal, and regulated — as they are in Australia.


Comments (9)add feed
hipocrats : real estate : http://www.sunnybulgarianproperties.com
us = hypocrats
June 28, 2008
strange story indeed
May 11, 2008
This story appears strange : David : http://www.kanxiqi.com
nothing special.
April 7, 2008
The lesser of two evils. : Frank Rizzo
Take the example of China for instance, a country where there approximatly 30 million more men than there are women. Thats 30 million!.., roughly the entire population of a country such as Canada or Australia and New Zealand combined, who by no act of god will ever find a wife or monogemous sex partner. Add to that number the amount of sex workers in the country, who will also not wed, some say 20 million,and you have about 50 million men who cannot not get married.
I'm sorry but that spells out a big problem. What are these men to do, remain chaste? Were it not for prostitution, you would see the systematic dessimation of society; increased rape, murder, destruction of families and pedophelia, just off the top of my head.
Speaking of the worlds oldest profession, laws and sweet moral nothins will do very little to quell, the most basic of human insticts and needs.
However, formally embracing such a trade as a nation takes one up a very slippery slope, thus governments are resigned to turn a blind eye and make the ocassional raid, and publicize some high profile exploits in the name of "morality". Ironically the most immoral thing to do would be to wipe out prostitution completely.
I speak of a unique case in mainland China, different other countries with a fairer gender balance who can take the moral highground when berrating "Johns" in the media, but I can see no better solution here than to let these women and men do the do, and not feel ashamed about it. Can you?
March 17, 2008
Sexual adventures og Asia Sentinel's staff : metarzan
After all the mumblings & gibberings & babblings & blatherings, what's the moral of the story then? That you enjoy the services of Hookers, is that it?

Well, have a super-duper time then in HK. Just make sure you don't catch the Cupid's disease then, or her indoor will sure cut it off for dinner feast!
March 16, 2008
Sigh : Arthur Borges : http://arthur.translatorscafe.com
I think it was French ex-president Edgar Faure who once said "When I was minister, there were still some women who refused my advances, but when I became president, not one turned me down."

It's a different world up there.
March 16, 2008
... : alanmorison
Yes. If all this prostitution is harmless and not worth the fuss, why so shy?
March 16, 2008
... : Mike
Yes, absolutely. The story here is the fuss that the US media is making over an entirely unremarkable incident.
March 15, 2008
asia sentinel sinks to lowest yet levels : disappointed with asia sentine
all this blatant and unbalanced editorialising simply by 'our correspondent' or 'asia sentinel staff'. At least put a name to your useless rants. I suppose the only upside is that you don't even attempt to masquerade as quality research or journalism.
March 15, 2008
Write comment
Name
Email
Website
Title
Comment
Write the displayed characters


 

Archive Search

WEB
www.AsiaSentinel.com
video Image photos   alerts RSS mobile

Donate to Asia Sentinel

Enter Amount:

Interactive Content

China's Sea Turtles

25 August 2008 | Alice Poon

article thumbnaiI came across this interesting article entitled...
Full Story

Sentinel Interactive...

Recent Stories

Nepal: Girls First, Goddesses Later

29 August 2008 | Sudeshna Sarkar

article thumbnail The tradition of choosing young girls as ‘divine’ is under assault on rights grounds
Full Story

Other Articles

Opinion

Georgia’s Lessons for Asia
Russia’s latest conflict has troubling echoes for other multi-ethnic regions
 

AsiaSentinel.com

Sections:
Business/Economics   Culture   Politics   Opinion
Countries: Afghanistan   Bangladesh   Bhutan   Brunei   Burma   Cambodia   China   East Timor  Hong Kong   India   Indonesia   Japan   Laos   Malaysia   North Korea   Pakistan   Philippines   Singapore   South Korea   Sri Lanka   Taiwan   Thailand   Vietnam

School Joomla Templates and Joomla Tutorials