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Former Porn Star Sunny Leone |
You Will OBEY Your Masters
LOS ANGELES -- Adult film actress Riley Reyes was preparing for a "particularly physical" scene last week when she received word of a proposed state measure that would impose strict new rules on her industry.
"I was completely shocked," said Reyes, who is among "hundreds of thousands" of performers the bill initially sought to have fingerprinted, background-checked and mandated into education programs under a new licensing scheme. "It was weird to have to go to work and act sexy and normal after finding out."
Reyes shoots hardcore sex scenes on the storied sets of the San Fernando Valley, long dubbed the "porn capital of the world." She also heads the Adult Performer Advocacy Committee, one of a small number of organized labor and workers' rights groups that meet regularly with lawmakers on industry issues.
None of them knew about Assembly Bill 2389 until after it was introduced. The snub has renewed a bitter fight over who speaks for adult performers in a state where legislators have long sought to assert some control over the industry.
After a decade of proposed porn czars and failed condom codes, strippers, adult film actors and webcam performers say Sacramento is looking for novel ways to police them.
One industry lawyer called it a "scarlet letter statute."
"It is my goal that the training required by AB 2389 will result in a certification process similar to that of other industries," Assemblywoman Cristina Garcia, a Democrat, wrote in a statement on Feb. 20, two days after she introduced the bill. "For example, the food service industry requires a food handlers training course, in which workers complete a training course and at the end take a quiz. Upon passing the quiz, they are then certified food handlers in this state."
On Thursday, Garcia introduced amendments to scrap fingerprinting requirements and scale back the business license mandate in favor of a certificate program.
But experts said such a scheme "misunderstands how the industry works."
"The industry simply isn't comparable to other jobs which require permitting," Heather Berg, assistant professor of women, gender and sexuality studies at Washington University, wrote in an email. "There is also a long history of sex workers resisting mandated registration with the state."
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Thought Crime
Every single day the growing Big Brother Police State looks for new ways to control the people, photos, video images and news that free Americans want to view.
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Former porn star Sunny Leone expresses the opinion of The People's Republic Blog |