Condoms-in-Porn Measure Would Cost California ‘Hundreds of Millions,’ Deputize Anti-Porn Zealot as State’s New Porn Czar

CONDOMS Mandated In Porn
Condoms-in-Porn Measure Would Cost California Hundreds of MillionsReposted From

Reposted From Reason.com

Since Los Angeles County passed a 2012 law requiring all male porn performers to wear condoms, some Californians have been trying to extend the requirement throughout the state. Legislation to this effect failed last summer, but activists are now seeking to put the matter before voters in 2016. Their proposed ballot measure would require porn-production companies to be licensed by the state, mandate condom use for all on-camera intercourse, and impose a fine (up to $70,000) for each failure to use condoms.

Obviously, the industry isn’t pleased. The measure—tentatively titled “The California Safer Sex in Adult Film Act”—is “not meant to protect performers, but to destroy the industry,” said Wicked Pictures director Axel Braun.

But at least one person is excited for the possibility of more stringent porn regulation: the man who would be California’s new porn czar. If activist and attorney Michael Weinstein gets his way, he could be subsidized by the state to sit around reviewing porn.

Under the proposed condom measure, which he wrote, “Weinstein would be placed in charge of monitoring any adult film produced in California to determine if condoms were used,” Eros Media reports. “If a condom wasn’t readily apparent in each scene, Weinstein would be deputized by the Attorney General to review the raw footage of the production, and file lawsuits against anyone involved in the production, including but not limited to the producers, distributors, agents, and anyone with a demonstrable ‘financial interest’ in the production.”

The text of the proposed ballot measure states that “The People of the State of California, by enacting this Act, hereby declare that the proponent of this Act”—that would be Weinstein—”has a direct and personal stake in defending this act from constitutional or statutory challenges to the Act’s validity.” Should the Attorney General fail to adequately uphold its provisions, “the Act’s proponent shall be entitled … to act as an agent of the citizens of the State of California.” As such, Weinstein would be compensated by the state for “reasonable expenses and other losses.” To remove Weinstein from this role would require a majority vote from both houses of the state Legislature.

Diane Duke, head of porn-industry trade group the Free Speech Coalition, noted to Eros that “Weinstein has waged a 10-year personal crusade against the adult industry and now wants tax payers [sic] to pay him to control it.” To Duke, this is not just a waste of money but a slip back into old morality-based censorship under the guise of public health.

“For the first time in nearly forty years, we’re looking at the government spending taxpayer dollars to censor adult film,” she said

Under Weinstein’s proposed measure, the state wouldn’t simply be on the lookout for condom scofflaws but tasked with granting adult-filmmaking licenses, which means government officials deciding who is and isn’t allowed to make porn in California and what kinds of films are allowed to be made. In addition to massive fines for failing to use condoms, the state could impose fines between $1,000 and $15,000 for failing to file the proper paperwork for each film’s production. Distributors of porn films that don’t use condoms and talent agents who refer actors to these films could also be arrested.

California’s Legislative Analyst’s Office predicted that should the measure become law, “parts of the adult film industry likely would respond by either relocating outside of California in order to avoid or protest the law’s requirements or continuing to make adult films in California while seeking to evade state and local law enforcement.” As a result, “tens of millions or hundreds of millions of dollars of annual economic activity and hundreds of full- and part-time adult film industry jobs likely would be eliminated from the California economy” or driven underground, it said. Ultimately, the measure would reduce annual state and local tax revenue “by millions or tens of millions of dollars per year” while costing “a few million dollars annually” to enforce.

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