- 120
- Posts
- 15
- Years
- Gettysburg, PA USA
- Seen Jun 24, 2011
i have to say no to this topic. it's not right. it's like human abuse. i wouldn't want it legalized ever. if it does, then people really made a big mistake. no offense.
>Talk about the horrors of human trafficking
>Say it should still be illegal because there's apparently not a huge difference between slaves and employees
>Women are significantly less likely to tell officials if they've been sexually assaulted, for fear of being put under arrest
>Streets will be cleaner
I can't be bothered to read that much
so I just want to know how keeping prostitution illegal will reduce trafficking. If you don't mind of course, friend ^^
So, Yellow, you're definitely down in the "trafficking is endemic to prostitution" column. I don't mean to single you out, but if you don't mind answering another question: do you think that there's any way - and feel free to think in terms of a best case scenario, such as all world human trafficking being eliminated - to restructure prostitution so that it isn't exploitative?
I'm still in favor of legalizing it in ideal circumstances. Meaning that there is good oversight and regulation. I wouldn't, for instance, advocate legalizing it in countries where you couldn't trust the government to make things better.
Yeah, yeah, wikipedia isn't reliable, but I wanted a concise definition. Prostitution is an institution like marriage insomuch as it has its own rules for how people are supposed to behave and interact. That's how I meant the word.
Typically, contemporary sociologists use the term to refer to complex social forms that reproduce themselves such as governments, the family, human languages, universities, hospitals, business corporations, and legal systems.
If it is legalized, it could very well make prostitution a good, safe and productive business, or have absolutely no effect on it whatsoever. We just don't know yet.
If the majority of prostitutes are victims of human trafficking/slavery, then if prostitution is illegal (not just pimping or human trafficking), doesn't that make the prostitute a criminal too, not the victim? It also makes the prostitute one to be arrested and taken to jail and given a criminal record too. Who is going to want to hire someone with a criminal record for prostitution?
If there was the possibility of a person ever escaping this slavery then it's disappeared with a mark on their name and a criminal record.
If they're just a victim of human trafficking or simply cannot find any other means of support then how is labelling them a criminal going to improve their situation?
then work could be done for the stigma associated with it to be abolished.
I'm not saying it would be instant or completely disappear but work could be done.
And I don't know if this is too idealistic or not (I don't know if we're looking at this based in a specific country or worldwide), but what about also attacking the root of the problem? The poverty that makes prostitution such an easy way out and the offers of a better life by traffickers so appealing? Possibly too ideal.
So, in summary, my opinion is that that I don't agree with prostitution, but in answer to the question, I do see merit in having it legalized. There is obviously still alot of illegal prostitution going in Queensland as well, I would imagine, however there are a number of legal brothels, and I really think that this helps reduce the illegal side of the "trade".
And, out of interest, who made your opinion the only one that matters? I was under the impression this was a PUBLIC forum?
Yellow's side of the argument seems to be defining the resulting effects for each side of the choosing/forced split that legalizing prostitution would cause as such: at best, legalizing prostitution will do nothing to help the people forced into prostitution, and that the people who choose of their own free will to be prostitutes are being punished by the law for choosing to do something morally wrong and that changing the law so as to not punish those who need to be punished is wrong. This is a situation where nothing is gained, regardless of which side of the split you are looking at.
Before I proceed any farther, I'd like to ask if I'm summing this up correctly, or if I'm misinterpreting or missing the point of either side. Does anyone object to what I'm stating about their side of the argument?
I understand that everyone has an opinion, but she can't seem to see merit in other peoples. From my skimming I have seen that she likes to shut down everyone else's thoughts and make judgements.
Google is where you search, and that leads you to other sites.... I got the information from the Queensland Government website after following a link from Google. I'm pretty sure, given that the Queensland Government regulates the industry here in Queensland, that the information available from their website IS going to be reliable ;)
Oh, and the original post didn't mention debating, just personal opinions and a discussion.
So I put mine forth :) Not saying my opinion is better than anyone else's, or more correct, like everyone else seems to think of theirs.
But hey, of course all of these people younger than me know MUCH more about everything than I do :)
My age isn't listed, and if yours is correct you are much more than a year younger than me? As is freaky?
Oh yeah, and to prove that I wasn't lieing or make things up.....
https://www.pla.qld.gov.au/
Prostitution Licensing Authority of Queensland.....
The number of street workers in the state has dramatically declined from 800 offences per year to 60 since the last review in 2004.
Although prostitution had been regulated in Queensland since 1999, the CMC said the illegal prostitution market is thought to be larger than the legal sector.