Since most of what you respond is just "THAT'S DOGMA," I have to ask what your principles are.
Freedom of thought, freedom of speech, personal freedom, human rights, and individual rights.
If you truly believed this, and wanted to be consistent, you should definitely not support the legalization of prostitution, since it would be, in your defition, legalized rape.
I don't see how it follows. Work is (for most people) manditory if they want to live and support a family, prostitution is still a choice.
Oh, and you should make it illegal to hold a job too.
Why?
If an employer uses his position to coerce sex out of someone, where it wasn't previously agreed upon, then it's a breach of the contract. In fact, I've already made that very clear:
Then why the hell don't you let it go?
That was in the VERY FIRST POST where I addressed this issue! You should have read it.
I did. But you continued to harp on it.
I'm talking ONLY about cases where the employer and the employee agreed to have sex AND PUT IT IN THE JOB CONTRACT. As you will correctly note, that narrows it down to eliminate many of the cases you're imagining.
Then I say that's silly and highly unlikely, and has nothing to do with what I'm saying.
Now, you might say that this means it should be illegal to offer a job with sex being a "requirement." I'd respond that it simply doesn't- if an employer offers a job that he states, in advance, requires both sex and accounting, then they agree to sign a contract holding her to both sex and accounting, and THEN she has sex with him as per the contract- THAT'S LEGAL.
It is? Show me the law that says someone can consign themselves to sexual slavery. Then show me how that's consistant with libertarianism.
So when you say, "No contracts, no pre-determined agreements," you're setting up a strawman. I've held through the whole thread that this would have to be agreed upon in the job contract.
And I've held that I'm not talking about that.
So I'll ask you- since I'm talking only about cases where this is in the contract, and is agreed upon by both PRIOR to taking the job- should it be legal?
Only on a small scale, only for niche markets and regulated. A married mom who is looking for a job shouldn't have to endure being solicited for sex.
Actually, they do if they're a church
Evidence?
I'm honestly interested in hearing what your principles are about when it is and when it is not OK to take from other people. (I'm not sarcastic).
During times of oppression, misery, poverty and when the gap between the haves and the have-nots is extreme. I'd say it's not ok in the adverse circumstances. Do you support the American Revolution? The French? The Russian? Should all the property than the royal families of those domains lost be returned or compensated?
Why are you responding this way? It's not how rational, skeptical people act. It's how second graders act on the playground. "You're wrong." "Why?" "Because you're stupid." It doesn't prove anything.
Because I see no use in responding any other way. People like you tend to be too devoted to your theories to think critically about them. I don't think it's possible to be a skeptic and still hold on to freemarket beliefs.
But you think it's rape. So you say that you think it is rape, but it is OK if it is relegated to a niche segment of the market?
When did I ever say prostitution is rape? I said it was rape to use a position to coerce sex from someone.
Crack's an odd example, since it's illegal (shouldn't be, in my opinion, but that's another issue). Let's take food stamps. Obviously it would be a gross and illegal breach of contract for me to say, "OK, I know I said I'd pay you twenty thousand dollars, but I'm giving you it in food stamps."
But (and this is a serious question in terms of legality, though it's one that wouldn't actually happen), if an employer says to his employee IN ADVANCE that he'll pay him with ten thousand dollars in food stamps, and the contract reflects this, then is it illegal?
I'm not a lawyer, but I'm pretty sure it is illegal.
WHOA- you grossly misquoted me. When I said that women can't be forced to have sex, I meant LEGALLY. I meant it was her RIGHT not to be forced to do so. Obviously it's PHYSICALLY possible to rape someone.
You're right. It is her right not to be forced to do so. Which is why it's wrong for an employer to demand sex as a condition for employment in a non-sex industry job.
It's not a strawman. It's what I've been speaking out against, and which you (seemingly) have been supporting.
Also, in your moral system, is it murder not to give money to someone who needs money to survive?
No. I don't see how this question relates.
Because you could misquote me?
How did I missquote you? Those were your words verbatim.
He's not being forced not to do this?
Nope. He can't be forced not to do something he doesn't have the right to do in the first place. Perhaps I'm confusing "intiate force" with "use force", but he is the one intiating force to get sex. The government would be protecting the victim from his force.
But what's the difference between being part of the job and being a requirement for the job? They mean the same thing.
No they don't. The most obvious difference is in the language. "Part of the job" and "Being a requirement for the job". There is a vast difference, you're simply trying to equate the two to support your dogmatism.
A checker at Wal-Mart may be required to take a pee-test to get the job, that doesn't mean taking pee-tests are part of the job. Checking out goods, dealing with money and greeting customers are part of the job.
I was talking about this with Belz in an earlier post. Hmmm.
So then, it's your contention that employment isn't required for most people to support themselves and their families? That people simply work because they want to and for no other reason?