Identidades in English No 4, December 2014 | Page 45

Ever since October 2013, this bank entered into an agreement with the sex professionals via the Association of Prostitutes of Minas Gerais (APROSMIG). For these women, the program was profitable: they were furnished with cards and credit card processing machines along with direct access to lines of credit with the lowest interest rates. The contract provisions also safeguarded the security and safety of their clients. The Caixa Económica Federal “offers everyone the opportunity to have access to bank services like a checking account, special checks and credit cards. Bank clients who have a CNPJ can also gain access to services such as receiving payments via credit and debit cards.” In this way, there is no way to see the agreement or arrangement between the bank and sex professionals. For the women, another way this is progress is that they no longer had to pay up to 20% to any sort of agent. The APROSMIG president even created a motto: “Achieve orgasm first, pay later.” Problems with this sort of contract came after the World Cup, when they had to declare their accounting to the Housing Minister, who charges taxes on rents. For Brazilians, the legacy of the Cup of Cups may be infamous, because the whole thing failed (DIP, 2012). Organization for the event had the goal of watching out for FIFA, sponsors’ and Brazilian lenders’ interests, all the interests of those involved in the construction of the stadiums and a number of public transit initiatives. Final considerations So, what do women have to do with the World Cup? Women in host cities—Salvador, Fortaleza, Recife and Natal—mobilized around this question when they saw that the Cup of Cups would not guarantee anything. The tournament was not concerned with minimizing poverty, exploitation or sex tourism; nor were there any significant outcomes regarding these issues. Sex workers earned good money. And, even though it has been in the works since 2003, the bill to regulate prostitution has not been approved due to civil society’s political and religious conservatism. The financing offered by the Caixa Económica Federal did not resolve the problem because prostitutes, as selfemployed individuals, have to report the earnings through an accountant. Some cities on the World Cup circuit also experienced a sort of “social cleansing”: the disappearance of beggars, prostitutes, and transvestites. Of course, many of these individuals did not have the opportunity to use a credit card machine, since tourists complained of the high prices, for which many decided to have fun without women. At least the Federal Government approved one law that made the sexual exploitation of minors a heinous crime. Although expressing concern by attempting to combat sex tourism, human trafficking, and the sexual exploitation of minors, the government adopted palliative measures to solve the problem - a problem that continued after the World Cup, because the main focus was on tourists and not on our Brazilian citizens. Regarding sales of local products, the World Cup did not result in great profits, particularly for the Olinda tapioqueras (tapioca cake sellers)16, who are their families’ main earners. They were not able to use their profession to improve their families’ financial situations during the World Cup. Dissatisfaction with the World Cup had to do with commerce. Due to FIFA interference, cities emptied out and sales people in Salvador suffered from decreased sales. In the end, beggars, prostitutes, and minors who sell themselves once again took up with their prostituting positions. The idea of the available black women—sensualized and described as they were between the lines of Freyre’s Casa Grande y Senzala—will endure in our society, a place where white women are for marrying, mulatto women are for fornicating, and black women are for working. 45