How is something being legal or illegal a false dichotomy?
I didn't say it was. I was responding to Gurdur's suggestion that this thread involved a false dichotomy.
I was pointing out that legal/illegal is not a false dichotomy.
How is something being legal or illegal a false dichotomy?
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Citations please!
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Citations please!
Foolmewunz was being sarcastic.
Ah, another forced binary choice thread. The fallacy of false dichotomy is so common.
Since Dann seems to be a lot cause, I'll try this one.
Why is it a false dichotomy?
Either people should be punished for selling sex (illegal) or they should be able to make that choice (legal).
Some choices actually are binary. This is one of them.
Passing Trucker said:Unlike supposedly "decent" women, sex workers understand what men need to have on a regular basis. In contrast, "decent" women often give you "not tonight, I have a headache" line, then later cry foul when her husband wanders elsewhere to seek out what she had deprived him in the bedroom.
Michelle Lyon said:The mistake some are making in this thread is in thinking of prostitution and rape as the same thing, across the board, and they aren't the same. They certainly overlap in some ways, but they're not the same.
No. See above post, please.
I think you attribute a statement that was not actually made there. Certainly if it was made it can be shot down very simply.Passing Trucker's argument leads directly to the legitimisation of rape, because not everybody has money to buy sex. Since he characterises sex (for men but maybe not exclusively for men, that is not clear from his post) as a "need" and also as a "right", then men without the money are justified in rape: it makes no sense to apply moral or legal judgment to this issue since it is presented as a biological imperative.
It's the oldest profession simply because men had and have more power than women.
But in talking to women in the field, many feel that they are the ones in control, because they can set a price and they can choose--
It's up to the women involved to determine whether they are the exploited or the exploiters of mens eagerness to pay for sex.
In the past and in many places, it is the ONLY way for a woman to make money-- a necessity even if she and her children are to survive. Unless there are better options, you're better at protecting such women from rape and venereal diseases then you are from taking away their livelihood. Just because you wouldn't choose such a "job" or you find it exploitative, doesn't mean that the women involved feel so. Some might indeed-- but making it illegal doesn't help the cause. You need to think of the overall goal. Prostitution is an exchange of goods for services-- rape is stealing those services without offering goods.
It's important to make the distinction. Why don't you think the men are being exploited in that their primal urges are encouraging them to spend money for a very temporary pleasure....? Few women have such urges or the need, so they are less likely to be "exploited" in this way. I rented my home to an exotic dancer who paid the entire rent in small bills after a night of shaking her breasts at strangers and making them feel they had a chance-- who is the exploited one?
Yes. I've seen the post, and it doesn't change matters one bit. Things can be illegal, or they can be legal.
If you think prostitution should be illegal but that there should be no punishment, such as in Germany, then your position is that it should be illegal.
If you think prostitution should be legal but that it should be heavily regulated and controlled by the government, then your position is that prostitution should be legal.
Such semantic quibbles such as, "Illegal but not punishable," make no difference to the fact that the legal/illegal dichotomy is a true dichotomy and not a fallacy.
.... Such semantic quibbles such as, "Illegal but not punishable," make no difference to the fact that the legal/illegal dichotomy is a true dichotomy and not a fallacy.
No, they can be inbetween. See the laws on libel for example.Yes. I've seen the post, and it doesn't change matters one bit. Things can be illegal, or they can be legal.
..... Either people should be punished for selling sex (illegal) or they should be able to make that choice (legal).
If you think prostitution should be illegal but that there should be no punishment, such as in Germany, then your position is that it should be illegal.
If you think prostitution should be legal but that it should be heavily regulated and controlled by the government, then your position is that prostitution should be legal.