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Stigma is a shadow that follows sex workers everywhere—often more destructive than the law itself. It doesn’t just appear in criminal codes or police reports; it shows up in the waiting room at a doctor’s office, in the judgmental glance of a teacher, in the housing application that never gets approved, and in the courtroom where custody decisions are made. Stigma whispers a dangerous lie: that sex workers are less than, immoral, and unworthy of protection. And when violence happens, stigma makes sure it is excused, minimized, or erased altogether.
By SwopbehindbarsStigma is a shadow that follows sex workers everywhere—often more destructive than the law itself. It doesn’t just appear in criminal codes or police reports; it shows up in the waiting room at a doctor’s office, in the judgmental glance of a teacher, in the housing application that never gets approved, and in the courtroom where custody decisions are made. Stigma whispers a dangerous lie: that sex workers are less than, immoral, and unworthy of protection. And when violence happens, stigma makes sure it is excused, minimized, or erased altogether.