Why is prostitution illegal?

I don't think prostitution should be illegal. I think buying sex directly should be illegal. I have few problems with discrete, independent escort services which offer company for a period of time to a client. If the escorts and clients mutually agree to have sex during their time together, what they do is up to them.

???????

Okay.... soooo...let's take this example then: if a gentleman is caught with a streetwalker, and the streetwalker claims that she was just walking with this gentleman to protect herself from those "evil men" out there, when they got to talking and she couldn't help herself and just let them do what they "mutually agree" to do, and the gentleman just decided to give her a gift......

isn't that exactly the same as "independent escort services which offer company for a period of time to a client. If the escorts and clients mutually agree to have sex during their time together, what they do is up to them", just instead of an escort, it's a streetwalker?

If so, what exactly does this law accomplish? Why is it so good?

Again, you've said nothing that is convincing that this law you are championing does any good whatsoever.........

Sorry....
 
???????

Okay.... soooo...let's take this example then: if a gentleman is caught with a streetwalker, and the streetwalker claims that she was just walking with this gentleman to protect herself from those "evil men" out there, when they got to talking and she couldn't help herself and just let them do what they "mutually agree" to do, and the gentleman just decided to give her a gift......

isn't that exactly the same as "independent escort services which offer company for a period of time to a client. If the escorts and clients mutually agree to have sex during their time together, what they do is up to them", just instead of an escort, it's a streetwalker?

If so, what exactly does this law accomplish? Why is it so good?

Again, you've said nothing that is convincing that this law you are championing does any good whatsoever.........

Sorry....

Because the escorts would have to be registered businesses and would be subject to regulation.

But I'm sure you can think of at least a dozen more examples to show why a closely regulated escort industry would not have the desired effect, but brothels, which only a minority of prostitutes could work at, would.
 
I am no lawyer. But I am a voter and an American citizen. I know it's not supposed to work like that, but sometimes, I think it does. In this case, yes. It's an easy target, it involves "SEX", (and say that in a "red state" and hear all the disapproving cries coming from it), moreover, it involves a practice that it totally "unchristian". Unfortunately, fear, god and "family values" are all weapons used a lot by politicians to change voter's minds.

You are making no sense. If what you say is true that is what the voters already think. Where then is the evidence it is used to change people's minds? Either you are arguing that it is not what the voters already think; and in that case it seems an awful lot of bother to go to, to get elected on policies which depend on changing a majority of people's minds: or you are arguing that the politicians are using what the people already think to make themselves acceptable to the voters. If you are arguing the first then your politicians have a lot of integrity and are to be admired. if you are arguing the second then that is democracy and unless you oppose democracy you don't have a case

Add "supposed to" to that statement and I will agree with you.

No, for the reasons I give above. Why don't you try applying your mind to this question instead of these soundbites? Why is anything illegal?

<snip?


I feel that there is always a choice. <snip> Let us leave it at I understand that when some people, for example, such as the victims of human trafficking, are in prostitution, have no choice.

Which is it?


Honestly, I wasn't sure if he was being funny sarcastic or serious. If he was being funny sarcastic, eh, no big deal because I joke like that all the time without really meaning what I'm joking about. However, if he was serious, it would make me very sad.

I saw no indication it was a joke, but you may be right. If it was not then I have no idea why it would make you sad. It is hardly an uncommon stance. It stinks but it is not unusual


Again, Fiona, I agree with you. One reason why what I call political showboat works so well....

What are you talking about? What political showboat? Oh ....the one where politicians reflect the view of the voters who elect them? Strange you call it a showboat: I call it democracy


Here, I don't quite agree with you. As long as it's illegal, for both prostitute and client, there will always be a stigma of "criminal" stamped on it. Making it legal for both wears the ink off a little.

Do you have evidence for that statement? There are things which are illegal which carry no "stigma": drunk driving used to be like that and it is not now. The stigma does not come from the legal status of the activity


I agree with you, except one point: I DO understand what you are saying.

Ok lets look.

You know I make pornography. I've admitted as much. I can tell you that first and formost, I do not wish to exploit my models. I have been told that I am the most respected, fair, honest and pleasant filmmaker that the models ever worked with. If a model doesn't want to do what I request her to do, she doesn't have to do it and I still pay her or him. In fact, I get offers from models I've never even contacted because I am so fair and respectful. Now some people might say that it doesn't matter that I am that way, that I'm still exploiting them regardless. Well, I've thought about it a lot, yes I've done soul searching here, and I do not agree.

No I don't think you do. You are still talking about what she does. That is utterly irrelevant. The point is about what you do. Now do you understand?

As a side point, if the model does not want to make pornography as you define it do you still pay her? If you do then why bother with the shoot? Just give them the money.

I will admit that eariler in my youth I have gone to a prostitute. I won't lie. But I will tell you that I've kept my respect for her, talked to her, treated her like a human.

Nice conflation of terms JFrankA. In what sense did you treat her like a human being? Do you argue that you treat the person at the check out in a supermarket as a human being? Because if that is the sense you are using I see that as treating them as a machine, with a few social graces added on because all human interaction tends to include some speech. You need not disrespect such a person, by for example being rude to them: but it is hardly a human relationship. Truly treating someone as a human being involves a relationship between free people who may or may not decide to play badminton together or go to bed. That is not what prostitution is usually like, but of course you may be the exception.


Now a lot of people won't, mosty men, I'll agree with that. But I think exploitation is actually in the eye of the beholder. Because if that prostitute or any of the models I film ever, ever say to me "I don't want to do this", or "I don't want this produced", I will respect their wishes.

Again you are making no sense. If the "lot of people" don't do what you do, are they exploiting prostitutes? If they are then it is not in the eye of the beholder. If they are not then why do you bother? There is no difference between you. You are both paying to use someone else's body for your own gratification. A polite "customer" is a little more pleasant than an impolite one but there is no essential difference between the two.

Let me give you another angle of exploitation. I work as a customer service rep. There are times when customers want a free item and/or have it shipped to them overnight for free. They will yell, scream, lie, threaten, and no, there's no physical threatening, as I'm sure there are with prostitutes, but I know there would be if the customers were physically near me. And most of the time, I have to give them what they want. Am I (and my company) being exploited? I think so at that time. Most of the time, no. I can imagine it being a lot worse for a prostitute, but the point I'm making is that I don't

You did not finish your thought so I cannot be sure I am addressing what you meant to say. For what it is worth, I have answered this above. But I love the way you glide over the difference between real physical threat and being yelled at. You cannot be so naive.

Again as an aside. You have complained about your job many times on this board. So why not just go and be a prostitute. There are lots of lonely old women out there and many people here have said that it is very lucrative. You can apparently work short and flexible hours so there is a lot to be said for it. Since it is just like any other job I cannot for the life of me understand why you do not do this. You obviously have the time.


You're right, I don't see anything wrong with a having a moral position, but I feel a lot of people use morals to force their beliefs and their judgements of others on others. More simply put, there seems to be a lot of people who use their morals to bully and intimidate other people.

I see no evidence of this at all. What I do know is that there are a lot of people who bully and intimidate and abuse and murder prostitutes. I do not think they are moral people.


What I feel is that when someone says to me something like if there is this thing (or lack of this thing), it will cause everyone to think (and do) this other thing that's incredibly horrible and scary. That's what I was refering to as a slippery slope.

It is not a slippery slope if they are correct. It is merely a statement of fact. But once again I have not seen any such argument. I have seen arguments based on the evidence that legalising prostitution does not do what the proponents claim: I have not seen you answer that with anything other than your "feelings"

Sorry, Fiona, I'm afraid I'm misunderstanding you here. Please rephrase?

Yes we have already established that you do not understand this point. It is once again about your moral position. As I said, if you view it as morally legitimate to use other people as objects for your own gratification and ends, then you are perfectly free to use prostitutes. I do not see why you try to deny the real circumstances they are in, because there is no reason to do so, if this is your position. It is nothing to do with law: it is your own behaviour which is in question. It would not be inconsistent to wish to improve the situation for those women for reasons of your own: prevention of diseases you might catch, for example. But you deal with that by choosing the source of the object and legalisation is irrelevant.


I do too. Unfortunately, it's been my experience that a lot of corrupt politicians uses prostitution, geez, even just plain old sex as a "fear weapon" to the well-meaning, but gullible voters.

How can you expect me to believe you respect prostitutes when you have just disrespected some millions of voters? :con2: Are you the only one with the wit to think this through and all the rest of us are merely gullible? Wow.


My apologies to you, Fiona and the rest of the thread. I was venting out some frustration. I do feel, however, that someone who just cries out "it's wrong" without providing some kind of possible discussable solutions, then it's just grandstanding. I've seen that in a lot of threads, not just here, but even in politics,

I am glad you apologised. However I have not seen one single person who has not addressed this issue seriously in this thread and nobody has said it is wrong without giving a reason. This is just smearing and I am happy that you are going to stop it

I am not ignoring the evidence. I am merely stating that keeping prostitution has not worked for a long, long time. I have also stated that legalizing prostitution will not solve all the problems, but it is the first step to make it better. Keeping it illegal makes making policies to help protect streetwalkers impossible. Even with it being legal to sell, illegal to buy, it's doesn't help the most destitute prostitute. But, making it legal, we can fix the policies so the problems that do exist can be tackled.

Read the evidence again. I used to think as you do. It is not supported by the evidence we have, so far as I can see. It has surface plausibility: but like many things it just turns out to be wrong.

For one example, if it was illegal to make cakes, and people are making cakes. If a cake maker is using spoiled ingredients, or if a cakemaker is using superior ingredents, both will be treated equally: both will be arrested. However, once legal, there can be programs that help the people who use spoiled ingredients can be helped to get better ingredents without interfering with the superior ingredent using baker.

What a sweet, naive analogy :). Do you honestly believe that the people who are making cakes with poisonous ingredients are doing so because they cannot do it with good ones? If that were true there would be no good cake makers. I think they are doing it because they can, and because it is cheaper.They will not stop if cake making becomes legal. They will continue to use spoiled ingredients because they can and because it is cheaper. The analogy falls because regulation is possible since cakes must be made somewhere and because spoiled ingredients make folk ill. But the basic point stands

As I said, it's not a cure-all. But it is a real start.

No. It isn't. Not on the basis of the evidence we have. It appears to make no difference at all, at best: and there is some evidence to show it makes matters worse. Can you address that please?

am sorry I am giving that impression. I don't think I am. But if I seem that way, then I'm sorry and I'll be more aware of when I am doing that. However, I do feel that if I'm guilty of that, I'm sure that there are others on this thread who are doing that as well.

I think it has been said in other threads, it's been implied here, in my humble opinion.

We will agree to differ.
 
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But I'm sure you can think of at least a dozen more examples to show why a closely regulated escort industry would not have the desired effect, but brothels, which only a minority of prostitutes could work at, would.

???????????

Excuse me, where have I said that I didn't want independent escorts to be regulated? When have I ever, ever said no regulations?

I don't like the idea that of sell sex = legal, buy sex = illegal: problem solved. Because nothing gets solved.
 
I don't think prostitution should be illegal. I think buying sex directly should be illegal. I have few problems with discrete, independent escort services which offer company for a period of time to a client. If the escorts and clients mutually agree to have sex during their time together, what they do is up to them.

That's so damn hypocritical. What you're saying is essentially that prostitution should be illegal in name only, and that prostitutes should be free to work so long as they don't actually say what they're doing and call themselves 'escorts'.

"Oh, I don't mind prostitution, so long as it's completely hidden under the radar and I don't have to see or think about it."
 
Wow, Fiona....sorry, but in my humble little opinion you are really seriously overthinking here....

And may I say you seem to be taking all my statements as an absolute. In other words, I'm making statements

Either you are arguing that it is not what the voters already think; and in that case it seems an awful lot of bother to go to, to get elected on policies which depend on changing a majority of people's minds: or you are arguing that the politicians are using what the people already think to make themselves acceptable to the voters. If you are arguing the first then your politicians have a lot of integrity and are to be admired. if you are arguing the second then that is democracy and unless you oppose democracy you don't have a case

I'm not arguing. I making a statement. It's both. Yes. It's both. Depending on the people involved and the topic. I don't oppose democracy but I do know that there is corruption and integrity depending on the person, the situtation and the area. There are no absolutes.

No, for the reasons I give above. Why don't you try applying your mind to this question instead of these soundbites? Why is anything illegal?
Nope, I'm not playing that game. Sorry, Fiona. A) that wasn't the point of the topic, B) there are different reasons why different things are illegal. C) Some things that are illegal are not as horrible as others.

Stop trying to pigeon hole me into absolutes.

My stance is that prostitution being illegal is based upon morals and political grandstanding.

If it was not then I have no idea why it would make you sad.

Why? Is it wrong to feel that way?

Do you have evidence for that statement? There are things which are illegal which carry no "stigma": drunk driving used to be like that and it is not now. The stigma does not come from the legal status of the activity

Oh, but prostitution remaining illegal does wonders to remove that stigma, huh?

As a side point, if the model does not want to make pornography as you define it do you still pay her? If you do then why bother with the shoot? Just give them the money.
Yes. There had been a time where I had a model who I was filming then she was going to do something but at the last minute, she didn't want to do it. I honored her request and paid her the full amount agreed upon even though she only did about a quarter of what we did agree to do.

Guess what? Later she came back and did the entire shoot and I paid her in full again.

Truly treating someone as a human being involves a relationship between free people who may or may not decide to play badminton together or go to bed.

Well, we talked to each other, I was polite, made her laugh, enjoyed her company. I try to do that with everyone. If that's not treating someone like a human being, then okay -- I treat everyone like a robot.

...Sorry everyone!

Again you are making no sense. If the "lot of people" don't do what you do, are they exploiting prostitutes? If they are then it is not in the eye of the beholder. If they are not then why do you bother? There is no difference between you. You are both paying to use someone else's body for your own gratification. A polite "customer" is a little more pleasant than an impolite one but there is no essential difference between the two.
...then by your standards, all customers, all strangers fail at treating others like humans. Again, you are talking in absolutes.

I'm beginning to feel very sorry for you, Fiona.....
You did not finish your thought so I cannot be sure I am addressing what you meant to say. For what it is worth, I have answered this above. But I love the way you glide over the difference between real physical threat and being yelled at. You cannot be so naive.
To be honest, I meant to delete that. I started with a point, and I kinda meandered around and lost it.

But basically, what I was trying to drive at is that what you might see as exploitation, the people involved might not. And someone might feel exploited in a situtation with one person involved, but take out that person and put in a different one, and they do not.

However, I suspect that you think that people are exploited no matter if they feel that way or not. If I'm wrong with that assumption, I'm sorry.

I see no evidence of this at all. What I do know is that there are a lot of people who bully and intimidate and abuse and murder prostitutes. I do not think they are moral people.

I agree that those people are not moral people, however, I do not think that all or most people are like that to prostitutes.

You have complained about your job many times on this board. So why not just go and be a prostitute. There are lots of lonely old women out there and many people here have said that it is very lucrative. You can apparently work short and flexible hours so there is a lot to be said for it. Since it is just like any other job I cannot for the life of me understand why you do not do this. You obviously have the time.

I do wear my heart on my sleeve. :)

Anyway, I've seriously considered it. I didn't go into it because I don't think I'm physically attrative enough to do the job. I've recently lost 130 pounds and I'm still working on toning up.

I have not seen you answer that with anything other than your "feelings"

And that's all I've seen from the illegal side as well.....
And there's no evidence that prostitution remaining illegal is helping any of the problems associated with it.

It is once again about your moral position.
No, it's about everyone's. Not mine, not yours, everyone's. I am not trying to force my morals onto someone else. By making prostitution legal, those who's morals say prostitution is okay can practice it and those who's morals say prostitution is bad can have regulations so that it doesn't interfere with their morals. Also, there's a whole range of morals in between.
Being illegal doesn't allow that whole range. It only satisfies one set of morals and nothing beyond that one set of morals.

As I said, if you view it as morally legitimate to use other people as objects for your own gratification and ends, then you are perfectly free to use prostitutes.

I view it as my morals to allow the people themselves to make their own decisions on whether they feel exploited or not.

I do not see why you try to deny the real circumstances they are in, because there is no reason to do so, if this is your position. It is nothing to do with law: it is your own behaviour which is in question. It would not be inconsistent to wish to improve the situation for those women for reasons of your own: prevention of diseases you might catch, for example. But you deal with that by choosing the source of the object and legalisation is irrelevant.

No, Fiona, I understand it all too well.

I KNOW my morals isn't right for everyone. I know that what I think is right is not for others. What you see as exploitive I don't, and vice versa. Just because we disagree doesn't mean I don't understand.

It doesn't work for you, fine. It works for me, fine. Let someone else decide if it works for them or not! Keeping it illegal doesn't give a person the chance to make a choice.

Don't forget I believe in choices. :)

And I know that some of them are in real bad situtations. In fact, I'm against the "Swedish law" because it does nothing to help prostitutes in a bad situtation. I'm against it being illegal because in all the years that it has been, the prostitute's situtation has not improved one iota.

So that leaves legalization. I am of the opinion that with the proper regulations, all prostitutes can be protected and/or helped. It may be a work immediently, it may take some trail and error to find the right regulations, but it is a start.

How can you expect me to believe you respect prostitutes when you have just disrespected some millions of voters? Are you the only one with the wit to think this through and all the rest of us are merely gullible? Wow.
Absolutes, Fiona. Again, my advice is to stay away from absolutes.

Is it disrepectful to say that there are corrupt polictians out there? Is it disrepsectful to say that a lot of people fall for those tricks?

Nope, I don't think so. Because some people do fall into that catagory, some don't. And you know what? I do too, sometimes. We are all guilty of that. It's just part of being human. Look, I don't know everything, I am not bright enough to see everything others don't. In fact, when I'm wrong, I'm the first one to say so. And I've said, on this very thread, that sometimes I'm dim.

Please, Fiona, stop trying to put everything I say into an absolutes.

It is not a slippery slope if they are correct. It is merely a statement of fact. But once again I have not seen any such argument. I have seen arguments based on the evidence that legalising prostitution does not do what the proponents claim: I have not seen you answer that with anything other than your "feelings"

Oh they are correct? You have proof that if prostitution is legal all men with think that women are just an object? Really?
Seems to me that there are a lot of "feelings", not just mine, are being thrown about here.

Read the evidence again. I used to think as you do. It is not supported by the evidence we have, so far as I can see. It has surface plausibility: but like many things it just turns out to be wrong.

wrong? Why? Seems to me that it being illegal isn't that much better.

As to the evidence, I told you. I'm still sorting it out. Part of that is seeing the other side of the coin.

Another thing is seems to me that the favorite meathod of a lot of moral groups is to use fear tatics.

Do I possess more wit? No. But I do look at people who tell me to be afraid if this or that happens with a skeptical eye. I always suspect someone when they tell me to be afraid of something if this thing happens or doesn't happen. And I especially am skeptical when someone tells me that if something happens it will send a negative message to a certain group of people.

And when it comes to people, there is no such thing as absolutes.

No. It isn't. Not on the basis of the evidence we have. It appears to make no difference at all, at best: and there is some evidence to show it makes matters worse. Can you address that please?

I have. I've said that we need regulations. Not just legalization, but regulations. I've never said it was a cure all. I said it's a start.
Keeping it illegal is obviously not the answer. Keeping it semi-legal (only buyhing illegal) is only band aid: something to make the lawmakers look good. The streetwalker is suffering just as much, if not worse.

Make it legal. It's a start. We can build from there with regulations that will help all kinds of prostitutes. The other options certainly are not.



I am glad you apologised. However I have not seen one single person who has not addressed this issue seriously in this thread and nobody has said it is wrong without giving a reason. This is just smearing and I am happy that you are going to stop it

I am sorry about letting my anger through. I pride myself in my patience and tenacity. However, I have seen others "smearing" when you haven't seen it. Perhaps, just perhaps, I have been exploited but you don't see it that way. :)

Now it's very very late. If my grammer or spelling is off, or if I have offended anyone, my apologies.

Fiona, I don't mean to be rude or discourtious, but I don't think we understand each other very well. Although, I do think I understand you better than you wish to percieve I do.
 
That's so damn hypocritical. What you're saying is essentially that prostitution should be illegal in name only, and that prostitutes should be free to work so long as they don't actually say what they're doing and call themselves 'escorts'.

"Oh, I don't mind prostitution, so long as it's completely hidden under the radar and I don't have to see or think about it."

Hear, hear!

This is why I say it's a band-aid. Every article I've read about this "Swedish law" that actually talks to the streetwalkers all say that this law hasn't improved their lives, in fact, it's made it worse.

He's worried about the message that legal prostitution will send a message to men that women are a commodity. But it seems like burying the prostitutes further underground doesn't send message......
 
That's so damn hypocritical.

Is it?

What you're saying is essentially that prostitution should be illegal in name only, and that prostitutes should be free to work so long as they don't actually say what they're doing and call themselves 'escorts'.

No, what I'm saying actually, is men and women should be free, as far as is possible, from the coercive forces which make them consider prostitution, but they should also be free to set up as an independent and regulated business which may involve them (if they so wish) having sex with clients who pay for their company for a period of time. I.e. there is no contractual obligation for them to have sex with anyone, they pay tax on their earnings and they have the same legal rights and responsibilities as everyone else.

"Oh, I don't mind prostitution, so long as it's completely hidden under the radar and I don't have to see or think about it."

I don't mind prostitution, so long as the vast majority of those engaged in it actively chose it, and go about their business responsibly and discretely.
 
Is it?



No, what I'm saying actually, is men and women should be free, as far as is possible, from the coercive forces which make them consider prostitution, but they should also be free to set up as an independent and regulated business which may involve them (if they so wish) having sex with clients who pay for their company for a period of time. I.e. there is no contractual obligation for them to have sex with anyone, they pay tax on their earnings and they have the same legal rights and responsibilities as everyone else.



I don't mind prostitution, so long as the vast majority of those engaged in it actively chose it, and go about their business responsibly and discretely.

...sorry, Ivor, sounds like to me you're changing your tune a little.

And how can this be accomplished at all if it's illegal to buy?

Why not have it legal for both buying a selling, with regulations that encompasses all kinds forms of prostitution, designed to support their safety and aid them.
 
...sorry, Ivor, sounds like to me you're changing your tune a little.

I'm sorry, is it against forum rules, after thinking about a subject, to modify one's point of view?

And how can this be accomplished at all if it's illegal to buy?

Because no one is buying sex, they are buying time with a person who may choose to have sex with them.

Why not have it legal for both buying a selling, with regulations that encompasses all kinds forms of prostitution, designed to support their safety and aid them.

Because it has been shown not to work particularly well.
 
It's like saying having higher priced original CD's increases the number of copies sold in the black market.

Er... no.

Prostitutes working in regulated brothels would charge higher prices than those working in the unregulated, illegal sector.

Since when is it cheaper when only available on the black market ?

The only sensible way to reduce the problems prostitute creates or perpetuates is to reduce demand. That requires changing public opinion.

Then your objection is a "moral" one, not a practical one.
 
I'm sorry, is it against forum rules, after thinking about a subject, to modify one's point of view?

No, but when you state it as tough it was always your position, it could be seen as intentionally dishonest.

Because no one is buying sex, they are buying time with a person who may choose to have sex with them.

Oh, please, Ivor. That's ridiculous. Why should they have to be so discreet about it, lest they be arrested ? Come on. If one person agrees with another to pay that person for sex, what the hell's the problem, and why should they instead "buy time" with that person and THEN decide to have sex ?
 
No, what I'm saying actually, is men and women should be free, as far as is possible, from the coercive forces which make them consider prostitution

Personally, I think that men and women should be free, as far as is possible, from the coercive forces which make them consider eating. Damn those urges, right ?

I don't mind prostitution, so long as the vast majority of those engaged in it actively chose it, and go about their business responsibly and discretely.

I hope you don't hold the same view towards homosexuals...
 
No, it's one based on the available evidence. You should take a look at it sometime.

Oh? And the available evidence of prostitution being illegal and the "Swedish law" shows that it works so perfectly as well???????

http://sensuellqkonsult.wordpress.com/2007/05/26/lies-about-sexwork-in-sweden/


So far, I haven't seen any evidence that says legal prostitution is worse for the prostitute than illegal prostitution. And with all it's faults, (which are fixable), it seems to me that the legal brothel regulations are a good model to start from and build from there to encompass all forms of prostitution.

And...if the regulations don't work... guess what? THEY CAN BE CHANGED!

If something is illegal, there are no regulations. It's just sweep them up and let god sort them out!

So we start with the legal models that are out there. What is working? What isn't working? What do we want to accomplish? Are the sex workers protected? Are the johns protected? What needs to be done so we can help the prostitutes who are in a horrible situation to make it better for them? Or even more so, help them leave the business if they so wish?

So the regulation doesn't work. Fine. Okay. FIX IT.

Illegal stuff doesn't have fixable regulations. It just has a finger pointing to the people with the loud voice booming the words "you're bad!!!!" at them. Doesn't take into account the situation, the people, the circumstances and most important, doesn't do a thing to change all that for the better.
 
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Originally Posted by JFrankA
<snip>

So wait...let me get this straight:

It's coerction and exploitation when a prostitute works at a legal brothel, has clients who pay legally, who's protected by a madam of house who has regulations to follow, such as days off, support the right not to work with a client they don't have to, provide protection, a safe and clean place to work, health care, (possibly child care and education expenses)

It sounds like a fantastic job! I'm amazed more women don't choose it when you describe it like that.

Which is part of the reason a lot of people want keep prostitution illegal. They do not want it to be a desirable job.

But it's NOT coerection and exploitation when the prostitute can't get a legally paying customer, can still get interrupted by the police at a moment's notice, has no protection from abusive customers, can't afford to refuse a customer, no health care, no child care, but not get arrested by the police????
That sounds more realistic for most prostitutes working in brothels and on the street, legal or not.

Do you have any idea about what you are talking about? Are your impressions of how legal brothels actually are from descriptions on prostitutionresearch.org and similar sites?

// CyCrow
 
Originally Posted by Ivor the Engineer
I do think if prostitution is legalised, the illegal sex trade will grow as well.

(Belz)
That makes no sense, whatsoever.

Except that is what the evidence says.

Really? I have seen this asserted referencing the Netherlands and Germany, but I didn't find the source credible. Do you have a good reference? At any rate, other factors like the inclusion of new EU countries and illegal immigration has changed the demographics of sex workers in recent years. Also remember that prostitution was tolerated and effectively legal before formal legalisation, so radical changes should not be expected. Legalisation did make it much harder to work in a brothel without a work permit.

And on a lighter note, if you need any interior decoration tips, here's a coffe-table book on brothel rooms: http://www.stern.de/unterhaltung/buecher/608087.html?cp=1 (Not entirely safe for work)

// CyCrow
 
Brilliant rebuttal.

What rebuttal ? You make a claim. It's not my job to prove you wrong.

This question is nonsensical given the statement I made.

Really ? What do you mean ? That you didn't imply that it's cheaper while it's illegal ? If that's not what you meant, that's certainly what you said.

No, it's one based on the available evidence. You should take a look at it sometime.

Amuse me. Where is this vaunted evidence ?
 

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