Making it legal (as it is in Australia) means it is safer for both sex workers and clients. Prostitution might not be a wonderful career choice, and probably wouldn't exist in an ideal world, but it won't go away. Why make criminals of sex workers?
Discussion split from this thread, where it was off-topic.Posted By: zooterkin
My 2c...
When the person receiving money for sex is doing so willingly and is aware of the possible consequences to their physical and mental health then I have no problem whatsoever with prostitution.
I have a problem where participants have been coerced into prostitution by others or have been forced into prostitution through economic necessity or drug and/or alcohol dependence. There are also the major issues of people trafficing and criminal gangs but some of this may go if prostitution is legal.
You are requesting I explain moral judgements?
If you are a moral person, you already know as much as I do. If you are not a moral person, I can't think of a way to explain it. Not that someone couldn't, but I can't.
But that isn't even a feature or aspect of prostitution.
I'd feel moral outrage if people were coerced into becoming bakers or bank clerks or taxi drivers, too.
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.An activity or person who disgusts the moral senses,generallypersonally perceived (and labeled) as wrong, evil, or harmful in an ongoing and fundamental way.
Does that work?
My 2c...
When the person receiving money for sex is doing so willingly and is aware of the possible consequences to their physical and mental health then I have no problem whatsoever with prostitution.
I have a problem where participants have been coerced into prostitution by others or have been forced into prostitution through economic necessity or drug and/or alcohol dependence.
Interestingly, most of the admonitions in Holy Writ are not "stop them from doing this morally repugnant thing", but rather "stop us from doing this morally repugnant thing, even though they are doing it."My 2c...
When the person receiving money for sex is doing so willingly and is aware of the possible consequences to their physical and mental health then I have no problem whatsoever with prostitution.
I have a problem where participants have been coerced into prostitution by others or have been forced into prostitution through economic necessity or drug and/or alcohol dependence. There are also the major issues of people trafficing and criminal gangs but some of this may go if prostitution is legal.
Interestingly, most of the admonitions in Holy Writ are not "stop them from doing this morally repugnant thing", but rather "stop us from doing this morally repugnant thing, even though they are doing it."
More to the point, it seems to say don't bother passing a law against it, as we do the right thing anyhow, and we don't really care if they do the right or wrong thing (we already know their judgement).Which does not seen to require, and therefore does not justify, passing a law agin it...
My 2c...
When the person receiving money for sex is doing so willingly and is aware of the possible consequences to their physical and mental health then I have no problem whatsoever with prostitution.
I have a problem where participants have been coerced into prostitution by others or have been forced into prostitution through economic necessity or drug and/or alcohol dependence. There are also the major issues of people trafficing and criminal gangs but some of this may go if prostitution is legal.
Can anyone come up with a rationale for prostitution being illegal?
That may be one of the most sexist things I've ever read.We've always had that image of the prostitute as the street walker, the call girl, a girl at the bunny ranch but I think the vast majority of what can be defined as prostitution is the woman trading sex for her rent, or to get her brakes fixed.
1) No, I would not equate prostitution with murder - save for this dimension: they are both illegal based on moral outrage by those who are empowered to make laws against them.
.We've always had that image of the prostitute as the street walker, the call girl, a girl at the bunny ranch but I think the vast majority of what can be defined as prostitution is the woman trading sex for her rent, or to get her brakes fixed.