Opinion

Strip joints protected, too

On the quiet intersection of County N and County V in North Bristol, a seemingly innocuous building sits across the street from a local bar. But ever since this past summer, the discreet looking Club Bristol has taken on a radically different internal persona as Dane County’s newest strip club. And now residents are making nearly as much noise as a bunch of drunks cheering on a pole dancer, pushing the county toward limiting the future development of such clubs to M-1 Industrial areas, where local citizens won’t have to worry about inebriated midnight ruckuses pouring outside.

But while the fight to regulate the ugly side effects of adult entertainment is nothing new to the area, county lawmakers should be careful not to pass an overly general or assumptive ordinance that would work to potentially stifle legitimate businesses willing to take necessary precautions.

Madison residents are no strangers to the adult entertainment business, as the Visions burlesque sits on the east side of town, not far from the Red Letter News adult bookstore, while Bennett’s Smut-N-Eggs — a diner known for serving up adult films with breakfast — sits in the vicinity of downtown student housing and Adult Arcade lies within a short stroll of the Capitol. Arguably most notable of the city’s adult attractions, Red Letter News has garnered negative ink over the past couple of years for allegations of sexual activity taking place within the store’s video booths, while neighborhood residents have complained of drug dealers and prostitutes finding business in the store’s vicinity during the night.

But with the management of adult entertainment parlors rarely implicated in such illegal activities, the criminal problems seem largely rectifiable through the sorts of surveillance Red Letter News has employed of late and perimeter patrols that would work to deter johns and drug buyers alike. Such measures, if taken effectively and financed by the business in question, leave only a question of moral turpitude to concern residents, and such queries appear to be answered by the First Amendment.

Should Dane County require such security measures for adult entertainment businesses opening in residential areas, the increased cost of operation might well drive porn peddlers to M-1 Industrial areas anyway. But to not at least provide legal businesses with a viable option for development in strategically targeted areas — rather than limiting them to the approximately 15 M-1 Industrial areas throughout the county — would be to excessively regulate an otherwise legitimate industry.

Indeed, the only true ill voluntarily perpetrated by the ownership and management of such establishes is one of morality. While it may seem ludicrous to have Red Letter News operating in the near vicinity of multiple churches and a school, the reality is that so long as adult parlors — like Club Bristol — can successfully mimic the Las Vegas motto of making sure that what happen inside stays inside, the long arm of the Bill of Rights appears to cover such forms of “speech.”

The objections to this theory of operation were well noted in the 1980s as Andrea Dworkin and Catherine MacKinnon paraded through Minneapolis, Indianapolis and other cities, attempting to stifle the adult industry through an elaborate critique premised on an inherent notion of gender discrimination. But with each failure of the feminist legal duo, the protections afforded such parlors became increasingly clear. And while the parallel certainly isn’t exact here — the urban versus rural dichotomy seems to be fueling the objections in North Bristol — the definition ultimately granted to free speech in the 1980s appears to be sufficient to cover this scenario, again provided that such clubs are able and willing to successfully police their own patrons within a reasonable vicinity.

The true problem in North Bristol is not what is going on inside the strip club, but rather what is happening in its neighborhood. This was the same issue manifested with Red Letter News not too long ago. And, as the East Washington establishments have begun to show, this is a problem that can be cleaned up. To limit an entire industry based on such anecdotal ills with seemingly apparent solutions would be simply unjust.

Mac VerStandig ([email protected]) is a junior majoring in rhetoric.

Have a thought? We welcome your input, but please be polite and stay on topic wherever possible. Your comment may be deleted if it is inappropriately off topic or promotional or if it is unnecessarily rude or contains personal attacks. We may delete comments for other reasons as well. Just keep it simple and focus on your points as respectfully as possible.

We allow and encourage comments employing satire, wit and irony to make points. Do not flag comments just because you disagree. Flagged comments will be immunized from further flagging unless they stray far from the guidelines and do not add to the discussion. Before flagging a comment you think is offensive, consider your time might be better spent rebutting it than censoring it.

blog comments powered by Disqus

14 older comments

user-pic

Look at how cool I am puffing on my cigar.

user-pic

Too bad it’s not a blunt.

user-pic

i love boobs… especially fake ones. God bless strip clubs

user-pic

Seriously should get a new photo. Looks like a fat little Rush Limbaugh junior wanna-be (and really, does anybody wanna-be Rush?).

user-pic

Strip clubs are going to be a big part of this dude’s future.

user-pic

Sure, A male would love to keep these industries going - how sad to have such a sex drive that your intelligence means little to you (men)

On the other side they do hurt society - they do hurt marriages - they do create sexual problems for men and subsequently for women.

Men want these clubs and unfortunately it continues to be a reality that men continue to get what they want.

user-pic

hey look everyone, its the over-sensative feministic bitch! Just in time!

Give me a break about how horrible strip clubs are. You know, they probably do cause some marriage problems for some people… but so do things like money, sports, ex’s, annoying little kids, etc etc. Maybe the government should just take care of everything that causes marital stress.

Oh, and what about male strip clubs? Sure, more gay men than women probably frequent such places, but women do still go. How dare those women hurt society? How dare any stripper, male or female, make the choice to work in such a setting! Please save me from my own libido… i can’t take care of myself!

user-pic

“On the other side they do hurt society - they do hurt marriages - they do create sexual problems for men and subsequently for women.”

You have made a valid arguement for why men shouldn’t GO to strip clubs, not why the government shouldn’t allow them to exist.

user-pic

“… how sad to have such a sex drive that your intelligence means little to you (men)”

It’s no sadder than having a sex drive such that money and a flashy car mean everything.

user-pic

””… how sad to have such a sex drive that your intelligence means little to you (men)”

It’s no sadder than having a sex drive such that money and a flashy car mean everything.”

And the cigars! Can’t forget the cigars!

user-pic

Hey Mac, you forgot to mention the adult video store on the south side, near Todd Drive and the Beltline. I work there, and if you come in some time, I’ll give you a nice discount.

user-pic

Sometimes a cigar is just a cigar.

user-pic

… and by “nice discount” he means “further the subversive gay agenda,” and by that he means “sneakily put his wang in your butt.”

user-pic

If butt sex is cool, call me Miles Davis.

Donate