I was only saying that if you claim that pro-legalisation advocates want to force women into prostitution etc, then you are fighting a strawman. It was sort of pre-emtive, but the argument isn't unknown.
Well, I'm not arguing that pro-legislation folk want to force women into prostitution. I'm arguing that just legalizing prostitution does nothing to protect women from being forced into prostitution, so by legalizing prostitution you/we could unintentionally be encouraging traffickers to coerce more women into prostitution to fulfill "demand", unless we do something else to specifically crack down on trafficking.
You could say that it is an argument from reverse authority. As I said, feminism isn't a unified movement by any means, and there are wildly varying viewpoints on this issue from people who call themselves feminists. Melissa Farley claims to be an expert on prostitution and violence against women, and attacking her work isn't an an hominem, it's attacking her credentials. I'm claiming that the extreme radical feminist position is wrong, because it is not supported by solid research, and a large number of claims made are provably untrue.
I think you are stretching. Some papers might have some questionable research, true, however, I don't believe that automatically negates all "radical feminist positions".
Just so you know, I agree that Farley uses emotive language, and I'm not impressed by that either. I would much rather let good research and facts dictate to me the situation than have someone tell me what to think. I'm not going to throw all of Farley's research out, though, because of it. I think you presume to know more about her intentions and what she could have done than is realistic. You presume she only talked to street walkers intentionally to skew her findings, I suspect that most of her research was done on streetwalkers because they were easier to find and more willing to talk to her.
Interesting article here, on the difficulty in getting or doing good research on prostitution:
Prostitution: Reconsidering Research by Wendy McElroy
http://www.zetetics.com/mac/articles/spin1199.html
I also found another interesting source of information here:
http://www.uri.edu/artsci/wms/hughes/pubtrfrep.htm
I have not read them all, but the few that I have seem to be a bit more neutral in their language.
Thinking about Smiley's request for evidence that prostitution is healthy for all parties involved..
The Fact Sheet on Domestic Sex Trafficking and Prostitution in the United States quotes a mortality in a long-term cohort (1967-1999) study of 1,969 prostitutes in Colorado Springs that says:
The extrapolated workplace homicide rate for prostitutes in this study was 204 per 100,000.
That comes in at over twice as dangerous as the most dangerous jobs.
According to this article about the most dangerous jobs in the US:
http://money.cnn.com/2005/08/26/pf/jobs_jeopardy/
1 Logging workers 92.4/100,000
2 Aircraft pilots 92.4/100,000
3 Fishers and fishing workers 86.4/100,000
4 Structural iron and steel workers 47.0/100,000
5 Refuse and recyclable material collectors 43.2/100,000
6 Farmers and ranchers 37.5/100,000
7 Roofers 34.9/100,000
8 Electrical power line installers/repairers 30.0/100,000
9 Driver/sales workers and truck drivers 27.6/100,000
10 Taxi drivers and chauffeurs 24.2/100,000
If I'm doing the math right, more prostitutes die per 100,000 than trash collectors, farmers, roofers, electrical installers, truck drivers, and taxi drivers all put together.