dann said:
You are so tolerant! You don't even care that they need this in order to perform the services that they sell in order to make a living!
Of course I care. I'd rather no one had to work at a job they don't enjoy. But, given the
reality that such is the case for some people, I don't see why prostitution should be singled out and treated differently from the variety of other jobs that people take because they need money. I don't begrudge a factory worker having a few beers when he gets home, either, if it makes things easier to deal with. I don't really see how it's different.
It wouldn't be a prerequisite of working as a prostitute, it would only be a prerequisite of working as a legal prostitute - which, of course, they would all be, wouldn't they?
No. Illegal prostitution would continue to exist, but it can't
possibly be worse than the status quo, can it? I think the amount it could be reduced would depend on the manner in which it is legalized. Under the right conditions, and with proper enforcement of the law, I believe it could be reduced considerably.
Ah, well-ordered conditions, right?! It didn't occur to you that legal prostitution then co-exists alongside illegal prostitution? It didnt' occurt to you that prostitutes with HIV now work somewhere else?
Well, Nevada is an exception in many ways, but no, I don't believe that to be the case there. First, unless the situation has changed very recently, no legal prostitute in Nevada has ever tested positive for HIV, so any discussion of where they are working now is moot. Second, I don't believe there is enough of a market in those counties to support both legal and illegal prostitution working concurrently -- typically, brothels in Nevada exist in areas with quite low populations.
As for elsewhere, yes, I've already said that illegal prostitution is not going to disappear. My goal is merely to minimize it and have some semblance of legal protection for the women (and men) who find themselves in that position.
Yes, and no. Yes, I think it's possible, and no, I don't need to take any economics classes. What you may have heard at yours is a lie: http://www.gegenstandpunkt.com/english/poverty.html
I read that article already. Is that all you're basing your position on? I found it rather shortsighted. For one thing, it only claims to address the question of poverty in the developing world, ignoring the fact that you can find poor people everywhere. I also disagree with some of its explanations; I believe that developing countries are suffering mainly because political instability deters foreign businesses from investing in infrastructure. A vicious cycle, but not the one described in your article.
Now, if you are arguing that it's possible for the world to become
less poor as a whole, then I agree. As technology improves, I expect that quality of life will continue to go up all across the board. What I don't expect to see is an even distribution of wealth between all people. Some will always be poorer than others -- and then the goalposts will move, and the "poorer" will become the "poor" of the day.
I NEVER SPOKE IN FAVOUR OF ABOLISHING PROSTITUTION! WHY IS IT SO DIFFICULT TO UNDERSTAND?!
That's not exactly true. You said, "There's nothing more annoying than a very poor country abolishing hunger, illiteracy and prostitution, establishing a health care system etc. That just has to be the Devil's work! We cannot allow that to happen!" After parsing through the sarcasm, that seems to me to be in favor of abolishing prostitution, at least in some situations.
To answer your question, your position is difficult to understand because you are not making it very clear, especially by not proposing any remedy of your own.
It's further muddied by the fact that you seem to want to do away with prostitution because you view it as a symptom of the underlying problem of poverty. That's fine; what I don't understand is why you focus on prostitution in particular, and ignore all the other crappy jobs people take because they need money. If the issue is poverty, not prostitution, why focus on the latter so intently?
My point exactly! Maybe not the most effective in general, but in the unfortunate circumstances they find themselves in. And therefore you think of it as a blessing, any streetwalker's dream, right?!
I don't know what you mean by this, so I'm sorry if this is not answering your question, but no, I don't think the life of a typical prostitute (male or female) is anyone's "dream." I think they consider it a necessary evil. People working crappy jobs because of lack of opportunity have my sympathy.
Jeremy