- Fuck, it's so nice.
Like I have had sex in like
much worse locations.
(both laugh)
Oh my God, like I already feel
like I've been romanced! (laughs)
- That's $150.
- No!
- Ten minutes.
- Not on this show's budget.
In an example of gas
lighting at its finest,
the human race has kept
the sex industry thriving
for centuries, while for the most part,
denying its existence.
That was until 2003, when
New Zealand got hungry
for another world first,
and decriminalised sex work,
destroying the very fabric of our society.
Unfortunately,
we were so busy giving
ourselves a huge pat on the back
that we forgot to extend those
fundamental human rights to migrants,
making sex work still a
dangerous activity for some.
So what gives?
Why the caveat?
And can't we all just have sex in peace
and for money, if we want?
- Do you want to experience something
that a client might experience,
without having to take your clothes off?
- I think so. I don't know.
You're not gonna electrocute me,
are you?
- Nope.
- Oh no, is this gonna fucking hurt?
'Cause I actually... I- I'm
a little, little, little...
- Pussy?
- Yeah, I'm a little pussy.
(laughs)
- The good thing is, if it hurts you,
it'll hurt me.
- Okay.
- Oh, fuck.
Ow! Fuck!
(laughs)
I don't want that.
I just wanna come when I have sex.
(laughs)
♪ Ooh ♪
♪ Ahh ♪
♪ She's got bad news ♪
How did you first get into sex work?
- I started working because
I basically needed money
to come to New Zealand.
- And then you came to New Zealand to
study, is that right?
- Yeah.
- And when you're in New Zealand,
can you do sex work here?
- No, unfortunately.
Like I did have a work permit,
but people still can't
work in the sex industry
if they are not
citizen of New Zealand.
- And in your opinion,
is that kind of like a
fair restriction on this?
- Absolutely not.
(both laugh)
- You can't come to New Zealand
with the intention of being a sex worker.
- But also, once you're here, you can't
then become a sex worker, can you?
- You have to be a permanent resident.
- Got it.
- I think it's unfair, based on like
probably two main point.
If someone have a work permit
to work in any other industry,
but not in a sex industry,
I think that is like discriminatory
toward the industry itself.
- Yeah.
- And also, if you say
sex work is decriminalised
here but just not for migrants,
that is discriminatory
to migrants.
- Yeah.
Why then do you think we
still have this kind of
caveat in the law?
- The history of that,
we were really upset at the
time when that was introduced
in the eleventh hour in 2003.
You know, there was a
perception that people would be
trafficked from
Southeast Asian countries
in particular, and somebody,
in their wisdom,
thought it would be
sensible to say, "Well,
no person can come to this country
with the intention of being a sex worker,
and nobody can operate a brothel."
- At the time when the
legislation was passed,
which was a long time
before I became an MP-
- All right, don't shift the blame
so early.
- The view was...
No, the view was, and I
think the view remains,
that actually if you say that sex work is
open to migrant workers,
that actually creates
an incentive to traffic
people to New Zealand.
- So if-
- And, and, and-
And I can say that,
from our point of view,
it is working well to achieve the
outcomes that were intended
with that legislation.
It is focused on harm reduction,
and we have next to no evidence
of trafficking of people
to New Zealand to work
in the sex industry.
- We have women who squirt.
- Is squirting really a real thing?
- It is.
- I've heard it's basically just urine.
- Yeah, there is, you know,
two schools of thought on it.
But I have seen squirters,
and I have helped squirters clean up
after a squirting booking, and it's clear.
It's a clear fluid.
They do have to hydrate
if they're going to...
If it's what I call a "Tsunami Squirter",
which is an enormous amount of liquid.
But also, a woman-
- God, I'm sorry!
I feel like I'm so chill
and not giggly about sex,
but "Tsunami Squirter"! (laughs)
- We're challenging you.
- "Tsunami Squirter" is not
something I've ever heard.
- Oh well, yep, I mean I kind of...
I think I coined the phrase years ago.
(Alice laughs)
I call it a "Warm Puddle Squirter",
which is women who just, a little bit.
- Okay.
- And then the Tsunami,
there's literally a tsunami. And I've seen
- Like a (whooshing)
- like a literal tsunami
of someone sitting on someone, having sex,
and then going, "Now you've
done it. Now you've done it!"
And pushing herself up like this,
and this flow of liquid went
(whooshing)
up on this guy's face,
and he was not expecting it.
Yeah. He got it in his mouth,
in his eyes. (Alice laughs)
- Do we have an issue with
people being trafficked
in New Zealand, then?
- Into sex work, we haven't-
- All right.
...got an issue there.
And other, you know,
sex worker organisations
around the world
say that the biggest
issue is the misperception
around trafficking.
You know, people say, "Oh
my gosh, if you liberalise,
if you decriminalise,
you're going to facilitate
conditions where people are
more easily trafficked."
It doesn't make any logical sense.
And sex workers, particularly
in countries like
South Africa, you know,
there were big stories about
I think it was the Rugby World Cup and
there were going to be
thousands of sex workers
who'd be trafficked to it, and
they didn't find situations
like that at all.
And same if you talk to sex workers in
Southeast Asian countries.
They get really peeved with
this whole trafficking discourse
'cause they say it undermines their-
- Autonomy?
- Autonomy and, you know,
they've been victims of raids.
- I guess people might say
that the reason we don't
have an issue, they could be like,
well cause of that bloody good
legislation we put in action.
What would you say to that?
- I'd say, "Well, why
is a sex worker in a motel
travelling through this country,
who's put up with a
robbery and an assault,
afraid to come forward?"
- So it is something you're
seeing, like it's genuinely
affecting people, isn't it?
- Oh yeah, absolutely.
You know, we've had women
who have been assaulted,
have been targeted because
it's known that they're
migrants and they know that
they're unlikely to report.
- I was fortunate enough
not need to work illegally
in New Zealand, but some people do.
And it just puts people in
vulnerable places if you
need to work underground.
If I get in trouble with clients, brothel,
I probably can't go to police.
'Cause if I need help...
But then if I'm working illegally,
I could get charged.
So a lot of people tend
to not to speak about
what they go through if they need help.
- Yeah.
- And also, if your clients
know that you're working
illegally, they will
try take advantage of it.
- We're very big on trying
to fight to make it legal
for migrant sex workers to
work in the sex industry-
- [Alice] Yeah.
- ...in New Zealand.
The reality is, it's unfair.
But also, it gives people
who are not as nice as myself
the ability to be able to
coerce them into doing things.
Like clients who might say,
"I know you're illegal,
if you make me use a condom,
I'll dob you into immigration.
(Alice sighs)
Or I'm going to pay you for
half an hour, and you're
going to give me three hours."
- Oh, God.
- Or an operator who is
a little bit unscrupulous
might say the same sort of thing.
Like, "I'm short-staffed
and I don't care if
your vagina's sore, you
have to keep having sex
for money because
(Alice sighs)
you're illegal and what
are you gonna do about it?"
- I will be frank.
Migrant exploitation is
a problem in New Zealand.
- Yes.
- And we do need to tackle it
across the board.
But there's lots of work
out there for people,
they don't have to work
in the sex industry.
- It strikes me perhaps as like a little
patronising though, to say to somebody
who has a proclivity for this work,
"Well, I'm sorry it's
just not available to you.
Not based on a wants or needs thing,
but because we don't want you to do that."
- Well, everybody who comes
here on a temporary work visa
is very tightly dictated to
what kind of work they can do.
- What about if there became
a booming market for sex work?
(Lee laughs)
- Again,
there is an approach taken
through that legislation
which is focused primarily
on harm reduction.
- I mean, I hate to...
But I also love to keep
pushing you on this, when
we say that the focus is
harm reduction, the Prostitutes'
Collective would say,
"Well, we're working
with migrant sex workers
who are facing problems
because of this legislation."
- And I appreciate their point of view.
(Alice laughs)
But as I say-
But as I say-
No, no, but as I say if
people are in New Zealand
on a visa, then they've
got lots of other options.
- I feel like it's ignoring
the reality of people's lives,
and that that was like
an argument that was used against
the decriminalisation
of sex work back in 2003
where we passed this law.
So I guess when I hear that rationale,
I go, "Didn't we deal
with this 15 years ago?"
- I don't see a problem
that needs to be fixed
at this stage.
- [Madam Mary] So you've
been a very, very bad
young woman, haven't you?
(both laugh)
And it's nothing
(tapping)
to laugh about.
(Alice laughs)
- I can't take it.
I actually can't take it.
It's too much for me.
- I'm going to have a look and see
what's in your desk?
- No!
Crayons?
- That's what I was looking for.
(Alice laughs)
What's that for?
Stand up, bend over.
- Oh my God!
(sighing)
(cane tapping on desk)
Put your hands on the desk.
- Fuckin' hell, I can't-
- Bend over.
(hands slam on desk)
Are you sorry for what you've done?
- No- Yes.
(Alice laughs)
- Did you use condoms or did
you leave them in the desk?
- I left them in the-
- When you were having sex
with that young man?
(cane tapping on desk)
- I left them in the desk.
- So you had sex without a condom?
- Yes. Fine.
Don't fucking hurt me. I'm not- (laughs)
(cane taps quietly)
Uh, ow!
Nah, that was actually fine.
(cane taps loudly)
- Ow, fuck me!
(ruler slaps table)
Ow!
Shit!
(Alice laughs)
- That's what you get
for being a filthy, dirty young woman
who doesn't use condoms.
- What is it about sex
work that we don't really
still conceptualise of it as work?
- It's really interesting.
I think it's that hangup on monogamy.
- Right.
- Isn't it?
You know, cheating.
(Alice laughs)
- It's like with the shift in law in 2003,
sex work is recognised -
it's not morally endorsed.
- Okay. Is that a legislative distinction?
- Absolutely.
- Holy shit, I did not know that.
- It's funny, isn't it?
And I guess it was a phrase that brokered
some of the wavering
politicians at the time.
So while-
- That's in the legislation?
That's fascinating.
- And why that is
interesting, for example,
Work and Income New
Zealand can't advertise,
so there's-
- Sex work?
Yeah, they can't advertise sex work.
- Because they would be-
- [Both] Morally endorsing.
- Are there any other professions
that have these sorts of
caveats, I guess?
- Not to my knowledge.
Sex work stands alone.
- That, to me, is just...
- It's amazing, isn't it?
- It's astounding.
- Yeah.
- Do you have a thought
about the idea that
the discussion around
the morality of sex work
may have impacted this law that
we currently have in place?
- Morality finds its way
into politics all the time.
- Are you at all concerned
that maybe the stigma
around sex work has
perhaps blinded us to a
better way of managing these situations?
- I think we can tackle some
of the issues that we're seeing
through other means that
probably present less risk
than changing the legislation might.
- What is the risk?
- The risk is that we
might open up trafficking,
and encourage trafficking of people
to work in the sex industry.
It's hard to point-
- Have you seen-
- It's hard to point to the-
- Have you seen that, though?
- We have very little evidence
of trafficking of people
to New Zealand for work
in the sex industry.
- And less than before when
the bill was put in place?
- Uh, I think no more or less than before.
- Right.
You'd think that would be the
biggest indicator, though,
that if it had effect, that that would be
one of the things that changed.
- Well-
- Like, if I was a lawyer,
and I was once but I don't
want to get into that.
But if I was arguing this in court, right,
you would have to prove causation.
- If you were arguing-
- Can you
show me the causation?
Can you show me the direct line from this
to the result of no trafficking?
Because if I were a
person making decisions
and here were people who worked
directly with the industry
telling me this isn't working,
there was no necessary hard
evidence that could point toward
direct connection, a causative connection,
between the legislation and the result,
I would go, "Well, fuck.
You know better than I do."
- Well, so you've got one opinion
from the Prostitutes' Collective,
you've got a different opinion
from the immigration officers
and I think that...
that overall, the law is working well.
(Alice sighs)
♪ Ooh ♪
♪ Ahh ♪
♪ She's got bad news ♪
- What would you say to somebody who said,
"Well, just get another job,"?
- Um.
I don't know, like
"That's probably not your business."
- Yeah.
(both laugh)
