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	<title>Melissa Gira Grant &#187; Community</title>
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		<title>Doing It Professionally</title>
		<link>http://www.melissagira.com/2009/10/19/doing-it-professionally/</link>
		<comments>http://www.melissagira.com/2009/10/19/doing-it-professionally/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 19 Oct 2009 18:33:14 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Melissa Gira Grant</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Advocacy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Community]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Feminism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Web]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.melissagira.com/?p=414</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[
(on one of my last cafe days, East Village, 2009)
(I meant this to be a much longer and thoughtful sort of retrospective, sum-it-all-up, make-it-all-make-sense sort of blog post. But in the interest of moving my life along rather than documenting the back story perfectly, here it is:)
On Wednesday I&#8217;ll be joining the staff of the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://www.melissagira.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2009/10/Photo-287.jpg"><img src="http://www.melissagira.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2009/10/Photo-287.jpg" alt="melissa gira grant" title="melissa gira grant" width="500" height="374" class="alignnone size-full wp-image-415" border="0"/></a><br />
<em>(on one of my last cafe days, East Village, 2009)</em></p>
<p>(I meant this to be a much longer and thoughtful sort of retrospective, sum-it-all-up, make-it-all-make-sense sort of blog post. But in the interest of moving my life along rather than documenting the back story perfectly, here it is:)</p>
<p>On Wednesday I&#8217;ll be joining the staff of the <a href="http://thirdwavefoundation.org">Third Wave Foundation</a>, a feminist, activist foundation that works in the United States to support young women and transgender youth. As External Relations Officer, I&#8217;ll be finding ways to amplify the stories of our partners&#8217; work: advocates intimately engaged in supporting reproductive justice &#038; sexual health and rights. A good deal of that will involve using new media, and a good deal will be done the beautifully old-fashioned way: through relationships, trust, storytelling. It&#8217;s a crossroads move for me: from San Francisco to New York, from working out of cafes and bedrooms to a Midtown office with other people in it, from staying up until 3 am writing to <em>oh who am I kidding!</em></p>
<p>True and appropriately embarrassing story: I first came to Third Wave as a loud-mouthed but shy-faced sex worker activist, invited to speak on a panel on sex work and feminism. I dug up the bio I submitted for that gig on Valentine&#8217;s Day in 2003, and oh god I am not it sharing here but! It is young and precious and earnest and also, not that off-the-mark. Now six years later, I just had to pull the same kind of thing together, but this time, for my new staff bio. And this is what I wrote:</p>
<blockquote><p><em>Melissa Gira Grant is a writer, artist, and activist working at the intersection of sexuality, new media, feminism, and human rights. She is the incoming External Relations Officer at Third Wave Foundation, and the former Development Coordinator and Social Media Coordinator at <a href="http://www.stjamesinfirmary.org">St. James Infirmary</a>, a peer-based clinic for sex workers in San Francisco. Working in collaboration with grassroots community-based organizations and non-governmental organizations, including the Open Society Institute’s <a href="http://www.soros.org/initiatives/health/focus/sharp">Sexual Health and Rights’ Project</a>, the <a href="http://tacticaltech.org">Tactical Tech Collective</a>, the <a href="http://www.desireealliance.org">Desiree Alliance</a>, <a href="http://whereisyourline.org">THE LINE</a> Campaign, and the <a href="http://www.isis-inc.org">Internet Sex Information Service</a> (ISIS-Inc), Melissa develops editorial content, education and advocacy campaigns, and offers technical assistance and peer-led workshops in using new media for social justice. She is the co-founder of the sex worker policy watch and media advocacy blog, <a href="http://boundnotgagged.com">Bound, not Gagged</a>, a columnist for <em>$pread</em> magazine, and a contributor to Slate, The Huffington Post, and RH Reality Check. She lives in Brooklyn, and her website is melissagira.com.</em></p></blockquote>
<p>Aside from the fact that not a lick of that existed in 2003, again: I don&#8217;t feel I&#8217;ve changed all that much, honestly, in who I am and what I do &#8212; even if I rarely spell it all out in one neat paragraph (and how I have tried). What does feel like a shift is that now that I have a title on my head, some people are going to look at me as a sort of professional feminist. With all the attendant and marvelous baggage that brings. </p>
<p>Like more pencil skirts and smart blouses and heels! Of all of the things I&#8217;ve done for money, I&#8217;ve never got to wear office drag in a legitimate office environment quite so often as I&#8217;ve donned it for the purposes of slipping in and out of hotel lobbies and airports to look as little &#8220;like a prostitute&#8221; as possible. And because of the beautifully curved way my life has come around itself, I do not even have to offer this story as a grand coming-out gesture to any of my new colleagues. For once, that outing moment is actually among the least incendiary things I could say about myself. They know. They&#8217;ve funded the sex worker run clinic I once called home, St. James Infirmary, based on a proposal I co-authored. They&#8217;ve already seen me blushing and awkward and ready to take on whatever long before I was ready for everything I&#8217;d set myself up to take on.</p>
<p>There are no closet doors here.</p>
<p>But of course there always are.</p>
<p>Just give me at least a few weeks to obsess on the one that&#8217;s directly across from my own bed before I start talking about how it feels to emerge from the rest. </p>
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		<title>Under the umbrella of sex: or, Foucault&#8217;s wet dream</title>
		<link>http://www.melissagira.com/2009/10/07/under-the-umbrella-of-sex/</link>
		<comments>http://www.melissagira.com/2009/10/07/under-the-umbrella-of-sex/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 07 Oct 2009 21:20:36 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Melissa Gira Grant</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Advocacy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Blogging]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Community]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Events]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Queerdom]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Sex Work]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Web]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.melissagira.com/?p=368</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[
Two weeks ago, my new New York pal Kat Bridgeman (who has given me permission to call her fella) invited me to an unconference that she&#8217;d helped to organize, and at breakneck speed. SocialChangeCamp was for internet people and non-profit people to get together and figure out the answer to everything, or at least as [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://www.melissagira.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2009/10/sexuality-umbrella.jpg" alt="sexuality-umbrella" title="sexuality-umbrella" width="500" height="667" class="alignnone size-full wp-image-367" /></p>
<p>Two weeks ago, my new New York pal <a href="http://kadehenry.wordpress.com/">Kat Bridgeman</a> (who has given me permission to call her <em>fella</em>) invited me to an unconference that she&#8217;d helped to organize, and at breakneck speed. <a href="http://ny.socialchangecamp.com/">SocialChangeCamp</a> was for internet people and non-profit people to get together and figure out the answer to everything, or at least as much we could before the open bar. Out of my commitment to the BarCamp model of valuing one&#8217;s ability to show up and talk cogently about whatever, and one half of one cup of coffee, I proposed a session to round-up the people who worked in sexuality and related issues, and the people who wanted to absorb us talking shop.  </p>
<p>Which produced (ha ha, that&#8217;s the first Foucault callback) this thing! This <em>thing!</em> I am in love with this ad hoc infographic. At the very top of the session, one participant commented that his organization (a pretty progressive political party) &#8220;doesn&#8217;t work with these issues&#8221; because sex was so &#8220;private&#8221; and &#8220;personal,&#8221; and I couldn&#8217;t hide my shock-dismay-educable-moment-face and called out, &#8220;I&#8217;m shocked.&#8221; And then asked someone to fetch me a marker and started drawing this: first writing <em>Sex</em>, then <em>/uality</em>, then a nice little protective bit of nylon umbrella (it&#8217;s red in my head, of course), a pretty curvaceous handle, and then these two divided spheres: <em>the bedroom</em> and <em>the public square</em>.</p>
<p>And from there, the rest, until it was clear that sex contained (yes) a lot more than fucking.</p>
<p>There are tensions here, all over this thing: my head broke a little when I had to figure out where to place GLBTQ on the infographic, and so I deemed the umbrella broken &#8212; until we had to figure out where to put race, gender, and class, too, and so mended the spine with all four of them. </p>
<p>Also awkwardly positioned in the middle: that would be the internet.</p>
<p>While the conversation swung and wheeled around sexuality as a cluster of concerns &#8212; how the physical act of sex is re-constituted across issues like health care, citizenship, rights to mobility, and education &#8212; we stayed grounded in this idea that it was wrong to confine sex to the realm of illness, or danger and risk, or even the erotic. To people who work in policy, or development, or health, or human rights, this isn&#8217;t abstract. We can say from experience, <a href="http://www.feministe.us/blog/archives/2009/08/04/taking-the-erotic-out-of-sexual-culture/">we are not usually turned on when gathered around those tables together</a>. Even at <a href="http://www.stjamesinfirmary.org">St. James Infirmary</a>, which is a pretty sexy place to work, the exam rooms adorned with marabou feathers and signed posters from all the major gay porn studios, we hold firm boundaries between our individual sex lives and the ways we talk about sex with our community members (which was St. James-ese for the people formerly known as the patients). Maybe it&#8217;s because so many of us have done sex work that we have that ethic, that we value it so: we know from experience how to set the tone around sexual talk, and we know how to keep different parts of our lives and experiences separate yet still whole.</p>
<p>It turns out (and here&#8217;s where Michel and I may diverge) the more we think and talk about sex, the more control we develop &#8212; and the more forms of social control we participate in. For good and certainly for ill, sexuality isn&#8217;t an unruly, messy, overly personal force: it&#8217;s one of the most regulating forces in the human social order. Sometimes I&#8217;m sure that nothing could be less private, less personal, less individual than sex.</p>
<p>Just like in the hot mess of a picture at the top of the blog, there&#8217;s a big middle space between <strong>who and how we fuck</strong>, and <strong>our power and mobility in the world</strong>. That tension across the middle is where sexuality lives: just like fucking, it&#8217;s always taking place between people.</p>
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		<title>On the occasion of being used: speaking back to feminist men</title>
		<link>http://www.melissagira.com/2009/08/22/on-the-occasion-of-being-used-speaking-back-to-feminist-men/</link>
		<comments>http://www.melissagira.com/2009/08/22/on-the-occasion-of-being-used-speaking-back-to-feminist-men/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 22 Aug 2009 17:59:01 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Melissa Gira Grant</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Advocacy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Community]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Sex Work]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Feminism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[men]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[sexism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Trafficking]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.melissagira.com/?p=246</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[This is the preamble where I wave my cred around for a second. It&#8217;s over quick. Because I can&#8217;t even recall my feminist &#8220;awakening.&#8221; It may have been standing up to a kid in my eighth grade class who dropped an Adam-and-Steve joke in response to a teacher&#8217;s discussion around Magic Johnson coming out as [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>This is the preamble where I wave my cred around for a second. It&#8217;s over quick. Because I can&#8217;t even recall my feminist &#8220;awakening.&#8221; It may have been standing up to a kid in my eighth grade class who dropped an Adam-and-Steve joke in response to a teacher&#8217;s discussion around Magic Johnson coming out as HIV positive. (And I was still innocently shocked that the teacher didn&#8217;t call him out!) Maybe it was asking my mother why she never explained to me what an orgasm was, or, still pressing her after she replied, that yes, women could have one before marriage. My paste-up riot grrrl inflected underground newspaper in high school may have been the first time hundreds of people around me hung on my every political (ranted) word. I&#8217;ve got a huge mouth. I like to use it. Hanging in feminist political and social circles was the first time I was ever encouraged to just get louder until we got what we wanted.</p>
<p>(That isn&#8217;t to say I always feel welcome in those circles.)</p>
<p>And I&#8217;ve always had feminist men and feminist boys in my life. There was Darryl, who was a human rights activist at 14, and the first straight kid to step up and loudly support the Gay/Straight Alliance in my high school. Andy is the guy who took the Gay/Straight Alliance over from me, and he turned me on to Patti Smith, Sonic Youth, and Huggy Bear the summer before I moved away from all those kids (and he also was totally patient when I figured out that I only wanted to play bass in his band because of my girl bassist idols, not any real talent). The dude at the Minuteman copy shop in my home town, he could have been a feminist: that he didn&#8217;t refuse outright to photocopy my zine when it had stories about sex in it written by me, a fifteen year old, was pretty, if not accidentally, political. It&#8217;s also no accident that the feminist men in my life are really immersed in other stuff besides &#8220;the men&#8217;s movement&#8221; &#8212; if that&#8217;s of interest to them at all, which I don&#8217;t think it is. They make music and media with women without lording their expertise. They go to rallies with women and make connections between what goes on out there and in our own bedrooms without wanting a big gold star for it. They are sexy. Sometimes, they&#8217;re queer, they&#8217;ve been around, they&#8217;ve been the one to take the 3am phone call coming home from the party gone wrong or the tears after sex when something really old and really painful came back, and they don&#8217;t expect approval for that giving or loving. The good ones, anyway. The ones I still add back on Facebook even if we haven&#8217;t seen each other in a decade and would gladly curl up with and run around with after diving through those dark nights and hard conversations.</p>
<p>So. The other night. I turned out for <a href="http://www.paradigmshiftnyc.com/feminism/2009/07/feminist-men-increasing-visibility-2/">a panel of feminist men</a>, organized by <a href="http://www.paradigmshiftnyc.com/">Paradigm Shift NYC</a>, &#8220;New York City&#8217;s feminist community.&#8221; I knew what I was getting into. One of the panelists, Bob Brannon, is the co-founder of the <a href="http://www.nomas.org/">National Organization for Men Against Sexism</a>, is the leader of their <a href="http://www.nomas.org/taskgroups/pornog/">Task Group on Pornography and Prostitution</a>. He&#8217;s also the co-chair of the National Organization for Women (New York state chapter) Task Force on Trafficking, Pornography and Prostitution. People who combine advocacy around porn, prostitution, and trafficking tend not to ally themselves with people who advocate for sex workers&#8217; rights. This is a huge mess for sex workers and for feminists right now, as recently as this summer&#8217;s <a href="http://www.projo.com/blcS.sc?search=prostitution&#038;cat=all">fight in Rhode Island over re-criminalizing indoor prostitution</a>, where people calling themselves feminists in a fight against violence against women (they usually leave out the men and transgender folks in the sex industry) are saying some pretty ruthlessly stupid stuff, and just flat out lying, about sex workers actual lives. My life. My life was the one I put on the table, and didn&#8217;t really want to.</p>
<p>To say I have a <em>complicated</em> relationship to the sex industry is really just to sum up my professional life. (That, and a lack of health insurance.) Thanks to the insufficient privacy of San Francisco blog &#038; activist life, it was rare that I met anyone socially or politically who didn&#8217;t know that I&#8217;ve done sex work. Now that I&#8217;ve settled in New York, I&#8217;ve forgotten what it is to come out. So when I prepared my question for Brannon, after he&#8217;d taken his fifteen minutes to talk about what an amazing victory for feminists that intensified anti-trafficking laws are, laws that hand even more power and control over to the police when it comes to ensuring the safety and rights of people who sell sex &#8212; which the police don&#8217;t historically and actually do such a great job at &#8212; I was not going to couch my question in terms of my sex work experience. It&#8217;s just not relevant. It was also likely to frame me up in a convenient box in which he could dismiss me. I mean, these so-called &#8220;anti-trafficking&#8221; people actually believe there is a well-funded pro-sex work political lobby, backed by the industry (as if the big players in the sex business, the strip club owners and porn production companies, could get that big a PR act together), that <a href="http://happyendingsdoc.wordpress.com/2009/06/24/the-clown-at-the-center-of-the-circus/">any sex worker who speaks back to them is a part of</a>. </p>
<p>And the truth is, for at least the last two years, I&#8217;ve spent more time reporting on the sex industry than being part of it. My life has shifted to a different disreputable course. </p>
<p>Whatever happened when I asked Brannon my question, I knew I didn&#8217;t want to have the first question. But the Q&#038;A got off to a jolt when a lawyer who defends sex workers &#8212; and that was his term, sex workers &#8212; asked Brannon about the implications of the trafficking law for his law practice. Was it true that sex workers who were arrested could be treated as victims, rather than criminals, by claiming they had been forced into sex work? What possibilities for a new sort of defense did this leave open? (And in fact, <a href="http://sexworkersproject.org/downloads/2009/20090616-swp-vacating-convictions-release.pdf">a law passed in New York in June does allow victims of human trafficking to have any prostitution convictions removed from their records</a>.)</p>
<p>Brannon dodged the questions almost entirely, saying he&#8217;d be glad to discuss it later, that this wasn&#8217;t really his area of concern, and that also, he wanted to &#8220;draw [the lawyer's] attention&#8221; to his &#8220;language.&#8221; Brannon continued, taking up more airspace with this semantic argument than he did with the question at hand, that &#8220;some people&#8221; are trying to use the terminology &#8220;sex work&#8221; but that he and his movement believed this was incorrect and obscured the &#8220;real issues.&#8221; When the lawyer asked what the preferred nomenclature was, Brannon replied that the proper term should be &#8220;women who have been used in prostitution.&#8221;</p>
<p>This is where I was so glad I was sitting next to <a href="http://audaciaray.com">Audacia Ray</a>, longtime activist friend and blogger-in-arms, former sex worker, and all around rock who could see the &#8220;oh no HE DIDN&#8217;T&#8221; on my face and echo it back without even moving a muscle.</p>
<p>I raised my hand to make sure I had the next spot, and I changed my question.</p>
<p>And I got it.</p>
<p>I stole a play from the book of the Latin American sex worker activists, who open every critical statement with a bit of gratitude before launching into their take. (And this mostly works, even for long meetings, conducted with simultaneous English/Spanish translation, in headsets. It was like the sex worker UN up in there some days at the AIDS Conference in Mexico City last summer. It was fantastic.) I said to Brannon that I was sure I was the beneficiary of some of his good work, the year I joined a community advocacy program against violence against women in college, we just integrated men into the group. That it was so valuable to work together with men. But that I had real concerns for how his group addresses trafficking without including the people most impacted by their advocacy around trafficking: people in the sex industry. Had they spoken to people who had been raped and assaulted by the police when they were arrested for prostitution? Because to hear him just speak, I didn&#8217;t feel that he had. And to hear him just speak, it made asking this question of him that much more challenging, as I, a sex worker, actually did prefer to be called a sex worker, and that for anyone else in the room curious about how to refer to someone who sells sex, they should defer to what people call themselves and want to be called by others. Did they understand (I continued, I mean, I really continued and graciously, no one cut me off) that relying on police to arrest people who sell sex was therefore problematic, and that the <a href="http://sexworkersproject.org/publications/KickingDownTheDoor.html">raids and &#8220;rescue&#8221; missions themselves are traumatic and re-victimizing</a>? What was his group doing to ensure that sex workers had access to housing, health care, and education? Rather than focus on what they believed was the inherent abuse in selling sex, how were they working to end the rape and abuse of sex workers at the hands of the people that his group believe can &#8220;protect&#8221; them &#8212; the police? Had they listened to sex workers at all? </p>
<p>Brannon again claimed that this wasn&#8217;t really his issue, or his concern, and that though his people had worked with people who had left the sex industry and were trying to &#8220;make a fresh start&#8221; (or some similar metaphor, which I forget, at this point, not having had a notebook out to record anything so much as I was just trying to hold my ground and his eyes) but that he &#8220;didn&#8217;t believe that sex workers [were] the experts&#8221; on these issues or deserved a place at the policy table.</p>
<p>So here we are again. None of this is surprising. I have friends in the community of sex worker advocates who do this all the time: try to get on some common ground with the &#8220;anti-trafficking&#8221; people in the feminist movement, go to their events, ask questions. It may seem like sanctimonious barnstorming, to show up where they show up, but some of these &#8220;anti-trafficking&#8221; activists are not people who respond to kind emails or invitations to debate or discuss. They use <a href="http://happyendingsdoc.wordpress.com/2009/08/17/the-sex-radicals-respond-to-donna-hughes-lies/">scare tactics and smear campaigns</a>, and frankly, I don&#8217;t feel all that safe in one-on-one discussions with them. I preferred the open forum of this panel as a way to ask for some accountability, and I knew full well I probably wouldn&#8217;t get a response that even shimmied near anything resembling ethical consideration.</p>
<p>So how does one even respond to someone that a feminist organization has pitched up on a pedestal for a moment as &#8220;the good guy&#8221; telling you, for your own good, that you have been <em>used</em> and to just be quiet and let him get back to work?</p>
<p>It certainly <em>would</em> be sanctimonious of me to imply, <em>oh god well what sort of man does that sound like!</em>, because for me the answer is, countless crap bosses I had as a teenager, and a handful of jurassic-era teachers, and my still-living-at-home fifty-something uncle and my own abusive, rapist father. </p>
<p>But you know. Having men tell me how powerless I am is why I turned to a life of contracting with them the specific terms under which I could give them attention, and also under which I would ask them to treat me.</p>
<p>Even after that lovely assessment of my and hundreds of thousands of other women&#8217;s morals and political abilities, I did stay to the end. I made an effort to &#8220;network&#8221; &#8212; which meant taking questions from the men who now, after my speaking up, considered me the safe person to talk about sex with in the room. I thanked Dacia and Nancy Schwartzman (who I&#8217;ve been working with on a sex-positive advocacy campaign for her film, <a href="http://www.thelinemovie.org">The Line</a>), who gave me a sincere shout-out to the panel as someone who was her ally in anti-violence work, thank you very much, no matter how &#8220;used&#8221; one of them just told everyone I was. I imagined how I might write this up and knew that I&#8217;d have to, <a href="http://twitter.com/melissagira/status/3417708789">after having told Twitter</a> about the night up to that point. </p>
<p><em>So here&#8217;s the pull-quote: </em></p>
<p>If men like Brannon want to do right by women, if they want what they tell women they want, they need to do what men are socialized (sorry, guys!) to be really lousy at: <em>ask</em> before doing something that takes such control of our bodies and our lives, ask and <em>listen</em> and not in some awful &#8220;active listening&#8221; way that really just reminds us of yet another guy wanting to get down our pants, ask and listen and <em>don&#8217;t you dare</em> tell another woman she has nothing worth listening to because she has been &#8220;used&#8221; by the system or by men or whoever, when what you really mean is, &#8220;let me use you for myself, for my own career and my own political ends.&#8221; How wonderful, a voiceless mass of women to invoke as your beneficiaries. How awful, when any of us do show up.</p>
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		<title>Turning Information Into Action: ask me anything</title>
		<link>http://www.melissagira.com/2009/07/07/turning-information-into-action-ask-me-anything/</link>
		<comments>http://www.melissagira.com/2009/07/07/turning-information-into-action-ask-me-anything/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 07 Jul 2009 14:31:02 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Melissa Gira Grant</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Advocacy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Community]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.melissagira.com/?p=235</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[
I&#8217;ve been so (happily) immersed in an info-activism project with the Tactical Tech Collective for the last two months that I neglected to blog that I had moved to New York. I know. When your desk is Skype and your office is Twitter, where you lay your head starts to matter a whole lot less. [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/petitpor/3320091594/"><img src="http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3627/3320091594_e6436b4d1a.jpg"></a></p>
<p>I&#8217;ve been so (happily) immersed in an <a href="http://ww.informationactivism.org">info-activism</a> project with the <a href="http://www.tacticaltech.org">Tactical Tech Collective</a> for the last two months that I neglected to blog that I had moved to New York. I know. When your desk is Skype and your office is <a href="http://twitter.com/melissagira">Twitter</a>, where you lay your head starts to matter a whole lot less. Or seems like it does. Hi, from Brooklyn!</p>
<p>This next week is giving me a pretty much perfect opportunity to explain a little bit about what I&#8217;m working on: <a href="http://www.newtactics.org">New Tactics in Human Rights</a> and Tactical Tech are hosting a week-long online dialogue, &#8220;<a href="http://www.newtactics.org/en/blog/new-tactics/information-activism-turning-information-action">Turning Information Into Action</a>,&#8221; from July 8 &#8211; 14th. It&#8217;s a mini-reunion from <a href="http://www.melissagira.com/2009/03/24/from-lady-lovelace-to-tactical-tech/">our camp in Bangalore</a> this past February, and a chance for you to get a preview of the work we&#8217;ve done since on a multimedia guide for info-activists (otherwise known as, <em>that project I try my best to articulate when I bump into you at a party</em>). The guide has been my life for the last two months, and will blend both viral video and recipe-style cards to break down tools and techniques for using information/communication tech for human rights and social justice.</p>
<p>Documenting one&#8217;s life and work is one of my most enduring obsessions, as that&#8217;s been the crux of this project: speaking with advocates around the world about how they do what they do, their successes and their words of wisdom for those inspired to take up their lead. And for all the <a href="http://melissa.tumblr.com">documentation of my own life</a> I feel like such a natural at, documenting my advocacy work isn&#8217;t one of them. As a writer, I can just link you to a new piece &#8212; the back-and-forth of how it got there is just candy. (Though I do want to break down how my Slate story happened, because it&#8217;s still a story I keep telling.) It&#8217;s why I asked a friend to come <a href="http://deepthroated.wordpress.com/2008/12/18/san-francisco-day-to-end-violence-live-videos/">livestream our vigil for the International Day to End Violence Against Sex Workers</a>: at least that would be live faster than I could type. But still, why we chose to do a day of action as a tactic, and who our audience was, and what targets we&#8217;d chosen for our intentions, and what we&#8217;d needed for support and resources &#8212; all that&#8217;s invisible. It doesn&#8217;t need to be. It&#8217;s not magic. But unless our campaign draws an audience of media pundits calling it a &#8220;revolution,&#8221; that sort of discussion rarely makes it online &#8212; and even then, they so often miss the point, and we so rarely have have the time to step back from the campaign to unpack the hype and respond.</p>
<p>So <a href="http://www.newtactics.org/en/blog/new-tactics/information-activism-turning-information-action">come ask me anything</a>. <a href="http://www.informationactivism.org/blog#pagetop">Check these videos</a> to get oriented to the kinds of campaigns we&#8217;ve been following. You don&#8217;t have to limit your questions for me to sex work advocacy &#8212; you can start with <a href="http://www.informationactivism.org/node/134">what&#8217;s up with the pink panties</a>.<br />
<em><br />
(Photo: <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/petitpor/">por petite</a>)</em></p>
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		<title>From Lady Lovelace to Tactical Tech</title>
		<link>http://www.melissagira.com/2009/03/24/from-lady-lovelace-to-tactical-tech/</link>
		<comments>http://www.melissagira.com/2009/03/24/from-lady-lovelace-to-tactical-tech/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 25 Mar 2009 01:46:48 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Melissa Gira Grant</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Advocacy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Community]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Influence]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.melissagira.com/?p=196</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[To celebrate Ada Lovelace Day, over 1000 bloggers have pledged to write about a woman in tech they admire. Lovelace was one of the first computer programmers. You can read about other outstanding women in technology at Finding Ada.
I first met Stephanie Hankey like nearly every amazing woman I&#8217;ve met in the last ten years [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>To celebrate <a href="http://findingada.com/">Ada Lovelace Day</a>, over 1000 bloggers have pledged to write about a woman in tech they admire. Lovelace was <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ada_lovelace">one of the first computer programmers</a>. You can read about other outstanding women in technology at <a href="http://ada.pint.org.uk/list.php">Finding Ada</a>.</em></p>
<p><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/dirkslater/3316382052/"><img src="http://www.melissagira.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2009/03/3316382052_8bae43a035_m.jpg" style="margin: 10px;" align="left"/></a>I first met Stephanie Hankey like nearly every amazing woman I&#8217;ve met in the last ten years &#8212; over the Internet. The NGO that Stephanie co-founded, <a href="http://tacticaltech.org/">Tactical Tech Collective</a>, was beginning a project for sex workers who use technology for advocacy, and I had been brought on to work with her and Tactical Tech&#8217;s Movement Building lead, Dirk Slater (who took this lovely photo). Tactical Tech is at the absolute forefront of keeping technology relevant, accessible, and powerful, for advocates and the communities we are part of and serve. I&#8217;ve never had so much asked of me and been so thankful for it.</p>
<p>When I try to explain Tactical Tech and Stephanie (its Executive Director) to people who have never been to one of their trainings &#8212; like the <a href="http://www.informationactivism.org">Info-Activism Camp</a> in Bangalore this February &#8212; what I try to capture is her conviction and her resilience. Working through all kinds of barriers &#8212; whether that&#8217;s language and geography, or finding the funding, or getting a workshop going in spite of intermittent electricity &#8212; Stephanie guides us all in holding space for truly diverse groups of people to learn together, from each other. </p>
<p>Tactical Tech&#8217;s ethos is that nobody knows everything, and everybody knows something. It&#8217;s a beautiful philosophy, but it plays out pragmatically, as well. How else do you get <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/fn-goa/3314785458/in/set-72157614420422667/">so many people to huddle around laptops</a> showing each other around a new CMS (especially with <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/fn-goa/3314063985/">a very inviting pool</a> outside)? The crazy thing is, we keep asking for more. I met people at the Bangalore camp who come back to Tactical Tech&#8217;s events to re-orient themselves as much as to pick up new skills. An international, mobile, multi-issue community has formed through Tactical Tech. It&#8217;s not just Tactical Tech or Stephanie&#8217;s network &#8212; it&#8217;s all of ours now who make it, to lean on one another, to collaborate and co-conspire, to take inspiration from and take solace in &#8212; because this work can still be as exhausting as it is energizing.</p>
<p>For the hundreds, and likely thousands, of people who, through Tactical Tech, have taken their power, claimed their rights, and carried that work on to countless others, thank you, Stephanie, for your vision, and your willingness and your perseverance. There&#8217;s still something radical in doing it ourselves, but something even more powerful in doing it ourselves together.</p>
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		<title>Some serious geek love, reading at Femina Potens, this Friday</title>
		<link>http://www.melissagira.com/2009/02/08/some-serious-geek-love-reading-at-femina-potens-this-friday/</link>
		<comments>http://www.melissagira.com/2009/02/08/some-serious-geek-love-reading-at-femina-potens-this-friday/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 09 Feb 2009 02:47:37 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Melissa Gira Grant</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Community]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Events]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Writers]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.melissagira.com/?p=176</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[
It&#8217;s been almost four years since I&#8217;ve done a reading at Femina Potens, I know &#8212; and since then, Madison Young&#8217;s labor of porno-fueled love (sincerely, her feminist art space is built &#8220;one anal scene at a time,&#8221; she says) has jumped across town from the outskirts of the Mission into a space that was [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/feminapotens/3263009952/"><img src="http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3447/3263009952_a30d83990b.jpg?v=0" border="0"></a></p>
<p>It&#8217;s been almost four years since I&#8217;ve done a reading at <a href="http://www.feminapotens.org">Femina Potens</a>, I know &#8212; and since then, Madison Young&#8217;s labor of porno-fueled love (sincerely, her feminist art space is built &#8220;one anal scene at a time,&#8221; she says) has jumped across town from the outskirts of the Mission into a space that was once home to another queer San Francisco institution, Image Leather. </p>
<p>So <a href="http://feminapotens.org/index.php?option=com_jcalpro&#038;Itemid=1&#038;extmode=view&#038;extid=151">come out and celebrate geek love with us</a> in time for (oh I know) Valentine&#8217;s Day.  I&#8217;ll be reading something from the collection of stories that I&#8217;ve been working on for a few years about my sexual history with the internet &#8212; which are also a sexual history of the internet because I am precocious and lucky.</p>
<p><em>Details, details:</em></p>
<blockquote><p>Femina Potens proudly presents SIZZLE, the monthly Bay Area award winning literary erotica series. SIZZLE heats up the Castro every month, merging internationally acclaimed queer and erotic authors with the Bay Area&#8217;s top emerging local writers, spoken word artists and performers. SIZZLES’s open mic performances regularly reveal the bravest, hottest, most eclectic performers that the Bay Area has to offer.</p>
<p>This February, Femina Potens is celebrating geeky, Sci Fi love and lickable literary adventures of the nerdsome variety. Come parade your highest Pong score with the queer literary legends, titillating transformers and sexy scientists of Femina Potens. SIZZLE is proud to present Chica Boom (voted Miss Gay Latina) with a seductive Sci Fi burlesque act. Francesca Ochoa, writer and activist for the ground breaking Art XX magazine, will entice us with her electrifying writing on eels. Jeff Stroker will intermix the periodic elements of S&#038;M and Atari into a collision of come-hither coitus, performance and writing. Melissa Gira Grant, sex blogger and sex worker activist, will obsessively orate the hottest of Internet love legends.</p>
<p>Femina Potens will host a Q&#038;A panel with authors and performers after the reading, and dares all to cultivate dialog and tap into the creative process of the wordsmiths and sexy geniuses in our communities.</p>
<p>Deeply touch your own inner geek this Friday Feb 13th, 2009 at 8pm at Femina Poten&#8217;s Sizzle.</p>
<p>Sizzle hosted by:</p>
<p>Femina Potens curator, international award winning Bondage Model and Feminist Porn Star – Madison Young.</p>
<p>Feb 13th 2009 @ 8:00 pm<br />
Doors/Open Mic Sign-up @ 7:30 pm<br />
$10–15 sliding scale admission ($5/open mic performers) for an evening of hot words, buttery pop corn and cheap beer.</p>
<p>Femina Potens has limited seating availability so advanced online ticket purchase is highly recommended through <a href="http://www.brownpapertickets.com/event/54315 ">Brown Paper Ticketing</a>, or visit <a href="http://www.feminapotens.org">Femina Potens</a> for guaranteed seating information and advance ticket sales.
</p></blockquote>
<p><em>(photo via <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/feminapotens/">Femina Potens</a>)</em></p>
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		<title>Sex workers organize to save public health in San Francisco</title>
		<link>http://www.melissagira.com/2009/01/25/sex-workers-organize-to-save-public-health-in-san-francisco/</link>
		<comments>http://www.melissagira.com/2009/01/25/sex-workers-organize-to-save-public-health-in-san-francisco/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 26 Jan 2009 06:19:13 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Melissa Gira Grant</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Advocacy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Community]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Sex Work]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.melissagira.com/?p=161</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[
This just in from some fabulous activists at St. James Infirmary &#8212; the nation&#8217;s only for &#038; by sex worker health clinic, and one of my second homes: the Coalition to Save Public Health in San Francisco needs people to come speak out against Mayor Gavin Newsom&#8217;s mid-term budget cuts that would mean the end [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://gs100.photobucket.com/groups/m25/D4R6XOEB3X/?action=view&#038;current=P1010951.jpg" target="_blank"><img src="http://gi100.photobucket.com/groups/m25/D4R6XOEB3X/P1010951.jpg" border="0" alt="Sex Workers For Obama" width="540" height="415"></a></p>
<p>This just in from some fabulous activists at <a href="http://www.stjamesinfirmary.org">St. James Infirmary</a> &#8212; the nation&#8217;s only for &#038; by sex worker health clinic, and one of my second homes: the <a href="http://savepublichealth.wordpress.com/">Coalition to Save Public Health in San Francisco</a> needs people to come speak out against Mayor Gavin Newsom&#8217;s mid-term budget cuts that would mean the end of crucial services to sex workers, GLBT adults &#038; teens, homeless youth, and harm reduction services to folks of all kinds struggling just to get by.  </p>
<p>They&#8217;re calling for a vote to reduce the damage of the cuts now, and for a special election to put these cuts before San Francisco voters, and need a big turnout <a href="http://savepublichealth.wordpress.com/2009/01/26/action-alert-january-27-board-hearing/">in support at this week&#8217;s Board of Supervisors meeting on January 27th</a>.  The whole organizing effort is collaborative, between all kinds of community people working in HIV prevention, harm reduction, sexual health services, and mental health services, and sex workers have been at the forefront of this fight.  </p>
<p>Can&#8217;t make it?  You can follow along at the hearing on Tuesday with the <a href="http://twitter.com/savehealthsf">@SaveHealthSF</a> Twitter account, and also on <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/savepublichealth/">Flickr</a> and the <a href="http://savepublichealth.wordpress.com/">Save Public Health blog</a>.</p>
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		<title>In which it&#8217;s okay that we need to take care of ourselves.</title>
		<link>http://www.melissagira.com/2008/12/19/in-which-its-okay-that-we-need-to-take-care-of-ourselves/</link>
		<comments>http://www.melissagira.com/2008/12/19/in-which-its-okay-that-we-need-to-take-care-of-ourselves/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 19 Dec 2008 19:25:11 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Melissa Gira Grant</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Community]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Love]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Sex Work]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.melissagira.com/?p=111</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[(Photos: Steve Rhodes)
This Wednesday, December 17th was the 6th Annual Day to End Violence Against Sex Workers &#8212; with over 20 documented observances around the world, vigils and marches &#038; memorials &#038; protests. I took on bringing together the San Francisco vigil. A huge part of our local sex worker community had gone to Washington, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://flickr.com/photos/ari/3118061978/in/set-72157611315077697/"><img src="http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3291/3118061978_931bb2710f.jpg"></a><br /><em><small>(Photos: <a href="http://flickr.com/photos/ari/">Steve Rhodes</a>)</small></em></p>
<p>This Wednesday, December 17th was the <a href="http://www.swopusa.org/dec17/">6th Annual Day to End Violence Against Sex Workers</a> &#8212; with over 20 documented observances around the world, vigils and marches &#038; memorials &#038; protests. I took on bringing together the <a href="http://deepthroated.wordpress.com/2008/12/18/san-francisco-day-to-end-violence-live-videos/">San Francisco vigil</a>. A huge part of our local sex worker community had gone to <a href="http://www.swopusa.org/SW_NationalMarch08/">Washington, DC to march on the Department of Justice</a>, <a href="http://www.swopusa.org/dec17/victims/">read the names of sex workers</a> that we&#8217;ve lost to violence, issue some very <a href="http://www.swopusa.org/SW_NationalMarch08/endorse.html#Letter">cogent and community-driven demands to the incoming Obama administration</a>. Bringing the San Francisco vigil together was my way of recommitting to the local: after two years of focusing on international activism, and a year of trying my best to be both a journalist and an activist but coming up stretched thin the whole way, it was a risk I wanted to take. Maybe no one would come. We all think this before every party.</p>
<p>On Wednesday afternoon, just as the sun started to slip behind Twin Peaks, just as I was headed out of my place and over to the Hall of Justice, which is what San Francisco City &#038; County government call their jail and court and where we decided to convene our vigil, I saw that <a href="http://wakingvixen.com">Dacia</a> had twittered that her <a href="http://www.wakingvixen.com/blog/2008/12/17/day-to-end-violence-against-sex-workers-my-speech-from-the-nyc-vigil/">speech</a> for the New York City vigil was posted online. In typical Max Fischer &#8220;<a href="http://www.moviewavs.com/php/sounds/?id=gog&#038;media=MP3S&#038;type=Movies&#038;movie=Rushmore&#038;quote=rushmore11.txt&#038;file=rushmore11.mp3">It was totally improvised</a>!&#8221; fashion, I hadn&#8217;t even written my own speech yet &#8212; Dacia&#8217;s words were all I had going in to the San Francisco vigil, even as <a href="http://kirkread.com">Kirk Read</a>, who met us on the steps, walked into the Hall of Justice with me and stood with me as I told the sheriff&#8217;s office staff at the door that we&#8217;d be holding a vigil out front shortly. &#8220;Some people don&#8217;t believe in telling them first,&#8221; said Kirk. So we told, not asked.</p>
<p><a href="http://flickr.com/photos/ari/3117311131/in/set-72157611315077697"><img src="http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3154/3117311131_255e131ca3.jpg"></a> </p>
<p>Kirk &#038; <a href="http://sadielune.com/">Sadie</a> performed two powerful pieces, and Shelly &#038; Acire from Sex Workers&#8217; Outreach Project spoke about the value of coming together in opposition to police harassment &#038; violence done against our people, and <a href="http://towtruckpanties.com/">Naomi</a> led a moment of silence and then marched us down Bryant Street, up Sixth Street, and over to Mission Street &#8212; past <a href="http://www.stjamesinfirmary.org">St. James Infirmary</a>, and to the <a href="http://www.sexandculture.org">Center for Sex &#038; Culture</a>. And with our march delivered there to the memorial, I passed my Mary Magdalene candle to Annie Sprinkle, and kissed <a href="http://queershoulder.blogspot.com">Gina</a> on the forehead, and slipped away with Nick and had soup and dim sum and a little guilt over needing to slip away.</p>
<p>Dacia&#8217;s words were about needing to take care of ourselves. &#8220;Even when it seems like there&#8217;s nothing but struggle in front of us,&#8221; I said, on the steps of the jail and courthouse, we need to take care of ourselves. Why did I guilt myself for needing to eat, be held, and be comforted after that night? Why are so many of us used to pushing ourselves to the breaking point? There is too much risk already in this work, in moving in the world as those who carry so much of people&#8217;s sexual shame and fear and pain. I don&#8217;t want to care for my community from that place, of near martyrdom. So why do I hold myself to that impossible standard, of going and going and going until I can&#8217;t?</p>
<p>There is always more to do. There is always further to go. But even in a world that reviles us most of the time, will click and page-turn hungrily to read about our trauma all of the time, we took charge of the mic ourselves for a night, all over the world, and said, <em>Here we are, we are still surviving, we are still here.</em> And the more of us there are, the more we can share this work, the harder &#038; smarter we can fight, and a million other platitudes I&#8217;m sure I&#8217;ve been handed for years about activism, which right now, in this moment, mean we all have the permission to step back and be held and fed dumplings, that holding our own alone is not what makes you &#8220;good&#8221; for a cause, that the cause <em>is</em> us. </p>
<p>May no one utter our names on these steps and in these streets in memory of a life ripped short. If we don&#8217;t take time to hold each other, our voices may start to break from all our needed sounding out:</p>
<p><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/melissagira/3115571334/in/photostream"><img src="http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3271/3115571334_6d3e5c2d65.jpg"></a></p>
<p><strong>Never again, Ruby and countless nameless other transgender women, picked up off one street and left for dead on another, their murders ignored, their killers at large. </p>
<p>Never again, Deborah Jeane Palfrey &#038; Brandy Britton, literally shamed to death, innocent women. </p>
<p>And never again, Eliot Spitzer &#038; Randall Tobias &#038; Harlan &#8220;Shock And Awe&#8221; Ullman, politicians glad to fuck us over for their cause, and also glad to fuck us for a fee, and then go free themselves, while we hang.  </strong></p>
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