I don't think that you should look in the link for a description or an explanation of
”the difference of doing any job you hate out of poverty (which is what plenty of people do), and doing prostitution out of poverty”.
However, I like the way you describe your job and your reasons for doing it! It is not all that different from my own situation. I am dealing with
students instead of
customers, I correct and grade papers instead of taking calls, but like you I don't pretend to do it because my life would be
meaningless without this activity. It gives me a pay check, and without the pay check, which I
need, I'd be doing something else. I don’t work to kill time, which is what many people – at least in my country – claim is the major reason for working, as if the pay check were just an extra benefit.
So, yes, you and I both
"do it out of poverty". I don't have to pay child support, but I suppose that you would also have to work even if you didn't have that expense on top of the others that an ordinary life demands. You have bills to pay, rent, have to put food on the table etc.
Unlike you, however, I don’t
hate my job, but I do hate certain aspects of it, not least grading and (consequently) flunking students!
Still, like I said, even so I have never considered prostitution an option because I would hate to have sex with somebody I do not find attractive. And I think that most people would feel the same way
And even if you hate your job, it’s probably not so unsavoury that you have to do drugs in order to endure it.
And even though I don’t know the exact wording of the questions answered by the prostitutes in San Fransisco, but I seriously doubt that they were asked if they would rather be stinking rich, live in luxury and never have to work another day in their lives than turn tricks! Questions in surveys like tend to be fairly realistic.
In other words, and I mentioned this already: When you are poor, i.e. when you don’t have the independent means to support yourself, you are forced to find some other way of buying the necessities of life. This means that you depend on the people with money, to whom you sell your services, and to that extent you can compare yourself with a prostitute – or a pauper. The difference is that the latter (usually) don’t even have the options that you do: the skills required for your services to be useful to the moneyed interest – and in this society these skills depend on the competition from suppliers like yourself. If you are slower or don’t do the job as well as somebody else, you may be out of a job even though you are not by definition without working skills. In capitalism you are. If you cannot sell the skills you have, they are worth nothing.
edited to add:
Okay I read it. It seems like a lot of confusing rhetoric to me. Sorry. To me, it doesn't prove a thing. It's trying to convince me that there's no free will when it comes to prostitution and if you are going to argue that, then I can argue right back that there is no free will in any job you take.
No, I’m not going to argue that, and, no, that is not what the article says. It never claims that there is
no free will, it is not a treatise on philosophy. Instead it describes the
very limited alternatives that this
free will has to
choose between:
The fundamental question of choice.
For the same reason, it is doubtful whether prostitution is ever a free choice. What proportion of prostitutes, given the possibility of earning the same or better in acceptable working con¬di¬tions and in which they did not need to sell their bodies, would choose nonetheless to continue in prostitution? A study made among prostitutes in San Francisco shows that nearly 90% want to leave the industry.
It is worth noting that the regulation camp , to prove that prostitutes choose their profession freely, cite the fact that they prefer prostitution to, say, working in a sweat shop for 15 hours a day. Of course they do. But a choice between two forms of exploitation is not a free choice, nor ever has been, but is purely and simply an abuse of the term. Article 23 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights could therefore only have been proposed by the regula¬tion camp by misrepresenting the very notion of "free choice".
http://www.fidh.org/lettres/2000pdf/angl/cah38uk.htm
Another study says:
http://www.prostitutionresearch.com/fempsy3.html
Apologists for prostitution legitimize it as a freely made and glamorous career choice. We are told that people in prostitution choose their customers as well as the type of sex acts in which they engage . Bell (1994) suggested that prostitution is a form of sexual liberation for women. We are also told that 'high-class' prostitution is different, and much safer than street prostitu¬tion. Referring to prostitutes in general, Leigh said 'most of us are middle class' (in Bell, 1994).
None of these assertions was supported by this study. Our data show that almost all of those in prostitution are poor. The incidence of homelessness (72 percent) among our respondents, and their desire to get out of prostitution (92 percent) reflects their poverty and lack of op¬tions for escape. Globally, very few of those in prostitution are middle class. Prostitution is con¬sidered a reasonable job choice for poor women, indigenous women and women of color, instead of being seen as exploitation and human rights violation . Indigenous women are at the bottom of a brutal gender and race hierarchy. They have the fewest options, and are least able to escape the sex industry once in it. For example, it has been estimated that 80 percent of the street prostituted women in Vancouver, Canada, are indigenous women (Lynne, 1998).
And a UN report has this to offer:
http://www.un.org/News/Press/docs/2002/wom1355.doc.htm
According to the report, the high levels of economic hardship had led to a possible increase in prostitution. While there was insufficient data on the practice, there was a distinct link be¬tween prostitution and poverty, as the majority of women engaging in the practice did so for economic reasons.
This might in accordance with your idea that:
Everyone takes a job because of poverty.
But it does not justify your conclusion that:
In that case, prostitution is no different than cooking at McDonalds.
You know that it is very different. It may be the same
needs for money that makes you flip burgers or turn tricks, but that does not mean that the two jobs are indistinguishable, no matter how hard you try to abstract from the differences:
And BTW, I consider cooking VERY intimate. Think of it: we all trust a stranger who we never met or even saw, to create something that we PUT INTO OUR BODIES and hope we don't get food poisoning from it. We trust people we don't know to deliver it, and the government to enforce the regulations on the food. (And I'm Italian, so you know how intimate we are about food! ).
Yes, I know, but do
you notice something very important in this description of the ‘intimate’ of cooking? You describe it
from the point of view of the consumer, not from the point of view of the workingwoman or -man! The johns are not usually the ones who feel inclined to take drugs in order to be able to provide the kind of ‘service’ they sell. And even though burger flipping or other MacJobs may not be very pleasant, I don’t think that cooks tend to do drugs in order to endure their jobs.
(And, no, I never worked in that line of business either, but I was a teacher at the
Hotel and Restaurant School of Copenhagen for seven years, teaching foreign languages and health and safety regulations for waiters, so I know that it’s not a particularly pleasant occupation either. Back then (18 years ago) the excess mortality rate for waiters from cirrhosis of the liver was 450 percent! And apropos of prostitution: The students’ entrance was in Skelbækgade, a well-known place to pick up streetwalkers in Copenhagen back then (probably still is), which was sometimes a problem when our students were waiting to be picked up by in the afternoon and were propositioned by cruising johns instead. Once I left half an hour after closing time and saw a girl leaning on my motorcycle. It was raining, and I asked her why she didn’t wait for her relatives inside since she could watch the street from the window. She told me that she would rather not, and even so I was so stupid that it took me a while to figure out that she was not a student and that it was important for her that people driving by could see her …).
edited to add:
So I still say:
I thought that was the question because that is what you quoted. Now you tell me you don't know what the exact question was. I say that the survey is moot because we don't know the question. As to the rest of it, I see opinions and rhetoric not facts. Sorry.
No need to be sorry. I provided you with the quotation. You had the opportunity to read it. You cannot really blame me that you made the wrong conclusion based on a wrong assumption. Unfortunately studies aren’t always published along with the questionnaires that they are based on. And, like you, I wish that they were. I, too, would have liked to see the exact questions, but in this case I cannot help you. I haven’t got them.
I will agree with you on this: Yeah, you're right. Poverty sucks. That's why everyone at one point or another does a job they'd rather not do ranging from prostitution to CEO of a fortune 500 company. So?
So? That’s it. Not everyone, but definitely
most people at one point or another do jobs they’d rather not do.
Very few have the option of working as
“CEO of a fortune 500 company”, however, and the people who don’t have any other options at all sometimes have to resort to prostitution. A lot of people have to do MacJobs for the rest of their lives, and some cannot even hope to get that. That is the truth about the relationship between
work and wealth in the market economy.
So? Your willingness to abstract from
this difference indicates that you don’t want to recognize it at all. Did you notice, by the way, that – as imperfect as they may be – so far I’m the only one to come up with anything other than anecdotal evidence in this debate? And not for the first time either …
Prostitution Reality Check
http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showthread.php?postid=2496288#post2496288
http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showthread.php?postid=2497034#post2497034
http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showthread.php?postid=2498549#post2498549
http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showthread.php?postid=2498551#post2498551
http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showthread.php?postid=2498821#post2498821
http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showthread.php?postid=2499382#post2499382
http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showthread.php?postid=2499417#post2499417
http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showthread.php?postid=2499546#post2499546