I don't know, I think dedication is more important than "smarts." I work in a university and the amount of common sense many PhD's are lacking is often astounding.
While there may indeed be some percentage of prostitutes that chose the profession of their own complete and informed free will out of many possibile professions available to them, there is also a percentage of prostitutes that were and are coerced into the job.
What would legalization of prostitution do to help those women?
When I hear arguments for legalization and regulation of prostitution for "disease control", it seems that usually people are just talking about testing the prostitutes for STDs. The assumption seems to be that the client has some right to purchase disease free sex. Shouldn't the sex worker have that same right? In the U.S., more and more cities are going "smoke free" on the grounds that workers' health is endangered by passive smoke inhalation. They are not given the option to "choose" whether they're willing to risk it or not, the government wants to look after us. Shouldn't we look after our sex workers with the same level of concern? It seems to me that the clients should have to show themselves to be disease free prior to being permitted to partake of the "services".
If prostitution is legalized and considered a legitimate profession, should a woman be denied unemployment, welfare, or any other kind of social assistance if she refuses to apply for work at the local brothel?
If prostitution is legalized and considered a legitimate profession, will there be less societal motivation to provide job training, assistance or education to poor women? Would pretty women be denied scholarships or educational assistance because they could (or should?) hook their way through college?
I wouldn't want my daughter to become a prostitute.
Or with the normal instincts that evolution suplied them.Girls with sexually liberated attitudes that haven't been infected by the anti-sex priggishness of "Judeo-Christian morality."
Do you really believe those are "typical" working conditions? I'd call those sites very biased. The span of working conditions for prostitutes varies enourmously, with the "bottom" end being dominated by drug abusers or extreme poverty, usually combined with illegality and the inability to get help from police. Illegality creates the need for pimps.
Legal prostitution works, at least in western societies like Germany.
When I hear arguments for legalization and regulation of prostitution for "disease control", it seems that usually people are just talking about testing the prostitutes for STDs. The assumption seems to be that the client has some right to purchase disease free sex. Shouldn't the sex worker have that same right? In the U.S., more and more cities are going "smoke free" on the grounds that workers' health is endangered by passive smoke inhalation. They are not given the option to "choose" whether they're willing to risk it or not, the government wants to look after us. Shouldn't we look after our sex workers with the same level of concern? It seems to me that the clients should have to show themselves to be disease free prior to being permitted to partake of the "services".
That's both a poor analogy and completely impractical. First off, sex and smoking have no relation beyond maybe the latter being done after the former. Anti-smoking legislation protects people who do not wish to inhale cigarette smoke. Which of the two parties - hooker and John - is going to object to sexual penetration?)
In all seriousness though, I'd rather my daughter became a prostitute than a christian. (no, I am NOT kidding)
I voted Planet X option, because none of my concerns seem to be addressed in any of the voting options.
If prostitution is legalized and considered a legitimate profession, should a woman be denied unemployment, welfare, or any other kind of social assistance if she refuses to apply for work at the local brothel?
I'm trying to figure out how that makes it different from a fry cook at McDonalds.If prostitutes were offered an occupation in which they could earn equally as much money without having to have intercourse with utter strangers (and throw in any rehabilitation and counseling that they may require), and they should turn that opportunity down, then i might listen.
Richard Masters said:And let's make the military illegal as well. I don't feel comfortable with young men prostituting their body for money and a worthless cause such as killing other people.
Neither do I. It would actually be a very good idea to put a stop to "young men (...) killing other people", in particular the legal kind of killing that the state pays soldiers to do!
Darth Rotor said:Good luck. How are you gonna stop it, my neo-pacifist friend?
Firstly, is this unique to prostitution? and Secondly are these conditions inherent in prostitution itself, or an artifact of its legal status?I notice that no-one here seems to be talking about the children of prostitutes. I know that I will now face a barrage of mocking "won't someone think of the children" posts, but this is a serious point. Prostitutes do work anti-social hours in dangerous conditions and often in very poor accommodation.
And would this be different if she were working in a safe(er) regulated, inspected and legal brothel? if not, why not?I have personally been involved in long discussions with one prostitute who had to face the question of whether she could care adequately for her child and keep him safe. She could not and she decided she must ask for alternative care for him.
Perhaps you could try and not make such bald faced appeals to emotion. There is a difference between saying "I would not mind my daughter being a prostitute in a safe, legal environment" and "I wouldn't mind her beign a prostitute under any circumstances".For those of you who have said you do not mind if your daughters become prostitutes may I ask if you are equally sanguine about raising your grandchildren and explaining to them that this is because their mother had been "empowered"?
If prostitution is legalized and considered a legitimate profession, should a woman be denied unemployment, welfare, or any other kind of social assistance if she refuses to apply for work at the local brothel?
yes, but how would your regulate it without legalisation?When I hear arguments for legalization and regulation of prostitution for "disease control", it seems that usually people are just talking about testing the prostitutes for STDs. The assumption seems to be that the client has some right to purchase disease free sex. Shouldn't the sex worker have that same right?
no, in the UK, for instance, a woman (or a man) cannot be denned benefits if they chose not to work in the legal "sex industry" including taking a job at "Anne Summers, a high-street "sex shop".If prostitution is legalized and considered a legitimate profession, should a woman be denied unemployment, welfare, or any other kind of social assistance if she refuses to apply for work at the local brothel?
Ar they currently denied scholarships because they should become strippers instead?If prostitution is legalized and considered a legitimate profession, will there be less societal motivation to provide job training, assistance or education to poor women? Would pretty women be denied scholarships or educational assistance because they could (or should?) hook their way through college?
I don't entirely agree. If prostitutes are in the top 10% of income earners, they would need to be in pretty high-powered jobs to earn similar money. The competition at that level is pretty fierce and I doubt whether many current hookers would survive. But, say a chick is smart enough to become a doctor; she looks at seven years intense work or an afternoon's "training" at the brothel where she can start earning the same money tomorrow. Some choose the second option.
Coercion disappears with legalisation of prostitution. When a brothel-owner can make the almost the same money legally, where is the incentive to enslave young women?
Each year about 3,500 women are trafficked to the Netherlands to work in brothels or illegal escort agencies even though the Dutch have thousands of self-employed prostitutes and some of the most liberal sex laws in the world, research shows.
The Netherlands is a source, transit, and destination country for men, women, and girls trafficked for the purposes of commercial sexual exploitation and forced labor. Trafficking for sexual exploitation is more prevalent than labor trafficking. Internally, women and girls are trafficked by "lover boys," young men who seduce young women and girls and force them into prostitution. Women and girls are trafficked to the Netherlands from Nigeria, Bulgaria, People's Republic of China (P.R.C.), Poland, and Romania for sexual exploitation. To a smaller extent, men are trafficked to the Netherlands from India, P.R.C., Bangladesh and Turkey for forced labor in ports, factories, restaurants, and as domestic workers.
"Legalizing prostitution creates a legitimate business front for the most brutal exploitation of women," said Mark Lagon, the U.S. ambassador-at-large to combat human trafficking. "It is the demand that draws a flow of people and a dark underground sex trafficking industry."
Bulgarian officials said that the flows of trafficked women from their country were directed chiefly to places in Western Europe like Germany and the Netherlands where prostitution is legal.
"The traffickers are very practical businessmen. They are going to the countries where the law is not suppressing them," said Antoaneta Vassileva, executive secretary of the national anti-trafficking commission here.
Women are prostituted both in brothels and through escort arrangements. It is commonly assumed that, in states where prostitution is legal, trafficked women are found predominantly in illegal brothels. In Victoria at least, this is not the case – trafficked women have been located in a number of legal brothels. This is an issue that prostitution regulatory regimes have yet, in my opinion, to seriously address.
Not to mention that the difference in timing between infection, symptom and test results would make the entire process impossible. As I noted above, prostitutes can and do decline to offer their bodies to some customers. In a world with illegal prostitution, it isn't necessarily easy for a prostitute to get rid of a customer. In a legal brothel - it's very easy.
A 23-year-old woman working as a prostitute, who declined to give her name to keep her family from finding out about her occupation, said that she preferred working on the street because she could make a judgment about whether to go with a client.
"If you're in a club you go to addresses and you don't know what will happen," she said through an interpreter, referring to making house calls out of a brothel. "They may beat you. That has happened."
No, but if prostitution is kept illegal and maybe driven out completely, will the state and federal governments organise additional payments to the poor women who currently fund their studies through prostitution? Are you happy to take away the opportunity for some young women to lift themselves out of the gutter?
I have an excellent friend who was a down and out, destined for committing suicide at age 19. Thanks to a stint working in a brothel, she was able to turn her life around and is now a registered nurse with a long-term boyfriend with whom she intends to have children.
Not all hooker stories are nightmares - are you prepared to deny the chance to those who use it positively?
Don't know if I heard this correctly on the TV last night, or how accurate it is, but it would appear Client 9's hooker put a new song out there yesterday for downloading at $0.90 a pop, and she had close to a million downloads last night.
And Penthouse magazine is negotiating about having her on a cover.
And I'm hearing on the news this am that her supposed history of abuse as a child may not be true. Seems some of the abuse she suffered was not getting a new car after she'd cracked up her stepfather's Porsche.
I'm sure details will follow in due course.
Firstly, is this unique to prostitution?
and Secondly are these conditions inherent in prostitution itself, or an artifact of its legal status?
And would this be different if she were working in a safe(er) regulated, inspected and legal brothel? if not, why not?
Perhaps you could try and not make such bald faced appeals to emotion. There is a difference between saying "I would not mind my daughter being a prostitute in a safe, legal environment" and "I wouldn't mind her beign a prostitute under any circumstances".
If you think you were exposed to HIV, you should wait for two months before being tested. You can also test right away and then again after two or three months. During this "window period" an antibody test may give a negative result, but you can transmit the virus to others if you are infected.
About 5% of people take longer than two months to produce antibodies. There is one documented case of a person exposed to HIV and hepatitis C at the same time. Antibodies to HIV were not detected until one year after exposure. Testing at 3 and 6 months after possible exposure will detect almost all HIV infections. However, there are no guarantees as to when an individual will produce enough antibodies to be detected by an HIV test.
Decriminalization of prostitution by itself does nothing to better the lives and working environments of those that do it, nor does it combat the very real problem of human trafficking. Only laws specifically aimed at protecting prostitutes will protect prostitutes. Only laws specifically aimed at human traffickers will stop human trafficking.