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Thread: Prostitution

  1. #16
    Jethro BienvenuJDC's Avatar
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    This is how I THINK about the issue, not how I FEEL. According to my Christian beliefs, I firmly say NO, but in order to answer the question that you asked, I have done my best to put my beliefs aside.

    To respond to the second part...mind you I haven't gotten a long time to think about it...

    I pose the question since I don't have a full understanding... To many men, it is JUST sex. I can understand that, but I don't totally agree with that, but to women it is more (again this is a generalization). I would have to think that there are psychological impacts that we as a society are not ready to deal with.

    Actually Mt Endon, you cannot answer that question without establishing some sort of standard of spirituality (at least I'm not thinking that an answer can be obtained). If I believe that 'God' created the sexual experience for the man and the woman as a form of bonding, then I would have one answer; however, if you took a position that did not include any Creator that applied an intrinsic design, then you may have a completely (180 deg) answer. Unless we can set SOME sort of parameters, the question becomes too difficult.

    Quote Originally Posted by amarna View Post
    Making condoms obligatory, which is one of the most important claims of prostitute's organisations, is a good example for what I mean by "regulating working and security standards".
    Condoms only reduce the chances, it does not completely take care of the problem. But I understand your position...and murder is not the best analogy, however, just because we cannot prevent something doesn't mean that we should allow it.
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  2. #17
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    [offtopic] BienvuJDC, I'm not fond of prostitution. But the world is as it is, and reality does not care for my or your ethical preferences. I think, if you can't remediate a social evil, you can leastwise try to manage it reasonably. [/offtopic]
    Last edited by amarna; 07-03-2009 at 03:41 PM.

  3. #18
    Vincit Qui Se Vincit Virgil's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Mr Endon View Post
    So Virgil, though I understand and respect your stance on the moral side of the issue, I still think it's possible to disapprove of something and still be against its criminalisation, if only for the sake of freedom and for other people's welfare.
    So be it. But you won't get me to support a politician that endoreses legalizing prostitution. What a disgraceful country it would be if it were legal. Shameful. It has been one of the major criticisms of democracy that the lowest common denominator will prosper. With the discussions of legalizing prostitution, drugs, and other issues I won't even mention the lowest denominator seems to be coming to fruition. I guess once we have removed the moral basis of society, then all things are allowable if you can get people to support it.
    Last edited by Virgil; 07-03-2009 at 07:28 PM.
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  4. #19
    a dark soul Haunted's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Mr Endon View Post
    2) Is it inherently humiliating?
    It's my assumption that prostitution is not a profession by choice. If you ask a child what she wants to be when she grows up, there's a good probability you won't ever get one saying she aspires to be a prostitute. Most of these women have reached a point of no return, it's either do it or die. Some do it out of coercion—those being pimped out. Most out of desperation. Or both. At the end of the day it's not about humiliation, it's about compassion. It's sad. Take them as they are. It's not my place judge people who have to do what they got to do to survive because they have no other options available. The rest of us (we) are just the lucky ones.

    [is it / should it be / can it ever become] possible to lead a 'normal' life as a prostitute?
    "normal" is relative. I honestly don't know what normal is.
    Last edited by Haunted; 07-03-2009 at 07:47 PM.

    "But do you really, seriously, Major Scobie," Dr. Sykes asked, "believe in hell?"
    "Oh, yes, I do."
    "In flames and torment?"
    "Perhaps not quite that. They tell us it may be a permanent sense of loss."
    "That sort of hell wouldn't worry me," Fellowes said.
    "Perhaps you've never lost anything of importance," Scobie said.

  5. #20
    Vincit Qui Se Vincit Virgil's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by JBI View Post
    That's a cultural assumption - different countries have different attitudes.
    Well I live in a culture. You can live as an animal for all I care. I know of no country that legalizes prostitution today.
    LET THERE BE LIGHT

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  6. #21
    Bibliophile JBI's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Virgil View Post
    Well I live in a culture. You can live as an animal for all I care. I know of no country that legalizes prostitution today.
    Haha, that's funny, considering your own country has a legalized prostitution zone known as Nevada, though, from what I have read, some of the legal restrictions in place are quite barbaric: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prostitution_in_Nevada if that is anything to go by.

    Quote Originally Posted by Haunted View Post
    It's my assumption that prostitution is not a profession by choice. If you ask a child what she wants to be when she grows up, there's a good probability you won't ever get one saying she aspires to be a prostitute. Most of these women have reached a point of no return, it's either do it or die. Some do it out of coercion—those being pimped out. Most out of desperation. Or both. At the end of the day it's not about humiliation, it's about compassion. It's sad. Take them as they are. It's not my place judge people who have to do what they got to do to survive because they have no other options available. The rest of us (we) are just the lucky ones.



    "normal" is relative. I honestly don't know what normal is.
    In a sense, though I know of no kid who says they want to be a bagger in the supermarket either. Certain jobs never have child appeal, unfortunately - doctor, lawyer, racecar driver or whatever may appeal, but in reality,there are always people whose job it is to do the undesirable things in society - is the problem really to outlaw it, or to try and fix the income inequality gap - generally the people who target prostitution the most seem the least likely people to want to change the system that creates prostitution in the first place, which is ironic - you don't get rid of something, something which has had a history in the world for the longest time, by outlawing it.

    I personally would never frequent a prostitute, or a strip-club for that matter, but I am not silly enough as to say they should be illegal. There are, for instance, highly paid prostitutes who supposedly like their work - I think of most pornographic movie stars as such figures, though there are ones, supposedly who work the upper classes, and do not appear in films.

    But what constitutes a prostitute even? Do we imply a direct transfer of cash for sex? Does it need to be intercourse (Bill Clinton anyone)? What about a gold digger, does that constitute as a long term prostitution contract? Our "culture" as a whole seems built around exchanging of favors for money, it would seem only natural that if someone can exchange their physical health by busting their back laboring, that someone can exchange their sexual favors for money, which often is better paying than manual labor to begin with. What about a girl who goes out with a guy because he is rich and buys her nice presents - what about a girl who goes home with a guy after he buys her a few drinks at a bar?

    The only way to remove "prostitution" in this sense, is to completely outlaw it, and make breaking the law unbearable, which is to say, make premarital sexual relations illegal, or to, quite simply, remove the sort of economic plight that creates these situations, namely, get rid of material possession, and bingo - no more prostitutes (though perhaps people may run to the next town to raid women, as was the practice in pre-industrial societies that lacked senses of property).

  7. #22
    Registered User mona amon's Avatar
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    I know of no country that legalizes prostitution today. - Virgil
    Legal or not, it flourishes all over the world like the green bay tree, so like JBI, I see no point in outlawing it. Legalising prostitution does not mean giving it moral sanction. it only means allowing (decriminalising) those aspects of it which are not criminal to start with, so that time, energy and resources can be diverted into fighting the genuinely criminal aspects of organised prostitution like abduction, trafficking in women and children, forced prostitution, child prostitution and so on.
    Exit, pursued by a bear.

  8. #23
    Registered User Delta40's Avatar
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    What standards of morality is it that men impose upon prostitution to make it acceptable so that it should be legalised? I mean there is a class issue here. The poor filthy prostitute who is good enough to service the lower classes in the alleyways is doing just as much of a service for that population as the upper class pro who has the elite clientele who can afford all the comforts of home. Despite the motives involved, why wrinkle your nose in disdain?

    Broaden your horizons as well and consider the female clientele. The child prostitute who is there to meet the needs of men. What about the ethics of this? Is not supply and demand an equally viable factor? When is sex - the prohibited kind, which is half the excitement of the prostitute, really prohibited? In the minds of intellects?

    Isn't the 'prostitute' whoever it may be simply the filthy dark truth of the base needs of man? and the issue of how to dignify that truth and legalise it, the all time challenge?

  9. #24
    Haribol Acharya blazeofglory's Avatar
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    Prostitution is man- made and in nature there is no prostitution. For society creates it. In point of fact all I feel is in nature it is taken naturally and there is no abuse of it.

    And society is guilty of it.

    “Those who seek to satisfy the mind of man by hampering it with ceremonies and music and affecting charity and devotion have lost their original nature””

    “If water derives lucidity from stillness, how much more the faculties of the mind! The mind of the sage, being in repose, becomes the mirror of the universe, the speculum of all creation.

  10. #25
    Internal nebulae TheFifthElement's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Virgil View Post
    I know of no country that legalizes prostitution today.
    That's just because you're badly informed.

    As I understand it prostitution is legal in the Netherlands, Germany, Greece, Latvia, Switzerland.

    In many other European countries including UK, Belgium, Spain, Italy and France prostitution is not illegal though soliciting (advertising sexual services, running a brothel, kerb crawling, pimping and the like) is illegal. You can read all about it here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prostitution_in_Europe

    Bearing in mind this comment:
    Quote Originally Posted by Virgil
    What a disgraceful country it would be if it were legal. Shameful.
    and this one:

    Quote Originally Posted by Virgil
    Well I live in a culture. You can live as an animal for all I care
    you must think we're all depraved 'animals'. Nice.
    Last edited by TheFifthElement; 07-04-2009 at 11:30 AM.
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  11. #26
    Bibliophile JBI's Avatar
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    You are all assuming that all prostitutes are female - there is quite a thriving male prostitute industry in much of the world, and even a large tourist industry built around it. Jamaica, for instance, is considered a major destination for female sex tourists, and there are countless Kuta Cowboys (named after the beach village off the coasts of the Indonesian island of Bali) who are constantly frequented by female tourists = and that is just two examples;

    But that isn't even the point - the language spoken in the Patpong area of Bangkok, for instance, is not Thai, but rather, American English - the only Thai people there are the pimps and prostitutes, meshed in around thousands of smelly American tourists. There is even a male-prostitution district a few blocks away, which too seems to speak American English.

    In a sense, one could argue "no civilized country could legalize prostitution", yet the countries where it is legal, to me, seem the amongst the most civilized, whereas where it isn't legal, not only does it seem prostitution is as, if not more frequent, but a) the standards are lower, and b) the actual cultures themselves seem to backward, in both treatment of women as a whole, and in treatment of prostitutes. Compare, for instance, Germany, The Netherlands, Italy, France, and Austria, with China, Saudi Arabia (which has laws restricting almost every sexual act except that between a husband and his wives, and even that is limited), Burma, The Democratic Republic of the Congo, Sri Lanka, etc.


    It seems, in terms of the divide, that the more "civilized" that, is, the better a human rights record a country has, generally, the more accepting of prostitution it seems to be. The reason, is, quite simply, it is not the State's decision whether or not someone is allowed to sell their body. There are exceptions, namely, Sweden for example, which makes it a crime to buy sex, but not to sell it, but on the whole, even countries where it is technically illegal, like Canada, there is still an accepted freedom given to prostitutes, as long as it can be confirmed to be their choice.

    Of course, the problems really arise when the spread of deceases, and severe corruption are mixed in. But ultimately, regulation and legalization would simply remove those problems - a much healthier system, I would argue. It is a disgusting industry, but there are real people in it, and they deserve rights as much as the next person.

    How many, for instance, Iraqi female refugees ended up in prostitution pens around the Gulf? Yet in those countries, it is illegal.

    Quote Originally Posted by TheFifthElement View Post
    That's just because you're badly informed.

    As I understand it prostitution is legal in the Netherlands, Germany, Greece, Latvia, Switzerland.

    In many other European countries including UK, Belgium, Spain, Italy and France prostitution is not illegal though soliciting (advertising sexual services, running a brothel, kerb crawling, pimping and the like) is illegal. You can read all about it here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prostitution_in_Europe

    Bearing in mind this comment:
    and this one:



    you must think we're all depraved 'animals'. Nice.
    Why flock to Europe, like I posted above, The US has legalized prostitution in two of its States, but, in addition, also has a significant portion of the world's sexual tourists in countless countries across the globe. So as for civilized country, there really is no grounding - in this regard, very few cultures are civilized - the only way to really remove prostitution, is to increase promiscuity, or to live in a police state.

  12. #27
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    Quote Originally Posted by JBI View Post
    The only way to really remove prostitution, is to increase promiscuity, or to live in a police state.
    It can't imho be removed, but it can be decreased, for instance by funding educational facilities for prostitutes who want to exit the scene and for socially deprived women in general.

  13. #28
    MOST HANDSOME TheInsomniac's Avatar
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    Refer to signature.

    vvvvvvvvvvvv
    'A bird may love a fish signore, but where would they live?'

    --
    I believe that sex is one of the most beautiful, natural, wholesome things that money can buy.

  14. #29
    Internal nebulae TheFifthElement's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by JBI View Post
    Why flock to Europe,
    only region I can speak about with any degree of certainty, that's all.
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  15. #30
    Orwellian The Atheist's Avatar
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    Oh wow! One of my expert subjects! There are some things I can be pretty unequivocal on, and this is one the big ones.

    Quote Originally Posted by Mr Endon View Post
    Alright, two questions, one dealing with law and the other with ethics:

    1) Should it be legalised and regulated or not?
    Absolutely legalised.

    I'm not into victimising women, and as the enormous majority of prostitutes are women, I vote they should be able to use their bodies in any way which doesn't harm others.

    Quote Originally Posted by Mr Endon View Post
    2) Is it inherently humiliating?
    I can't answer from personal experience as I've been neither female nor prostitute, but I do have a very good friend who runs a brothel and I am on good terms with many of the women who have worked there over the years. One of the women who worked there for a couple of years was a friend before and during her stint, and remains a close friend today.

    On the basis of knowledge of this eclectic bunch of women, I have to answer (2) in the negative.

    I think prostitution is often humiliating, but certainly is not an inherently humiliating occupation.

    NB. I have never been there as a client, but sit and drink Earl Grey tea with the chicks inbetween customers. I know stuff about blokes in Auckland which would make your hair turn white immediately!

    Quote Originally Posted by Mr Endon View Post
    [is it / should it be / can it ever become] possible to lead a 'normal' life as a prostitute?
    Again, based on quite a substantial number of cases over many years, I must answer that with a definite yes.

    Quote Originally Posted by BienvenuJDC View Post
    Should customers have to be tested before they can be serviced (since they have the potential to permanently disqualify a prostitute?
    Can't be done. There are no instant tests for the really bad diseases.

    Quote Originally Posted by BienvenuJDC View Post
    Or should there only be State ran prostitution facilities?
    Absolutely not!

    It would drive the business underground immediately. You don't imagine a judge is going to go to a a hooker employed by his own employer, do you?



    Quote Originally Posted by BienvenuJDC View Post
    Should a prostitute then be allowed to discriminate against anyone based on any reason?
    Absolutely, as they are in places where it's legal.

    A hooker may legally refuse any client at any time. And they do.

    Quote Originally Posted by Virgil View Post
    I find it amazing how some people find a way to justify a lack of dignity and self respect.
    I'd love to take you with me to meet the women who work in the brothel and point out where they lack either self-respect or dignity.

    Quote Originally Posted by JBI View Post
    Legalized, regulated, and taxed. That way, it will be clean, safe, and profitable, and will keep out all the pimps and drug dealers, as well as reduce the spread of Sexually transmitted deceases. Beyond that too, it will generate a sizable profit for the tax system, that will, ultimately, pay to fund better programs and give back to society.

    If someone wishes to sell their body, than it is their choice - all the government can do is make sure that it is done properly, and without violence or duress, and that it is monitored, and regulated, and taxed, as it is, hypothetically, a business, and should be subject to income tax.
    Yep, that's exactly how it works where it is legalised and controlled.

    Fewer sex slaves, less gang involvement and a working - but very, very quiet - relationship with the cops, instead of the suspicion and avoidance in illegal situations.

    Ask a cop anywhere; hookers are a great source of information, and when those hookers know with conviction that if they have a dodgy customer, the cops will come running, they can be an extremely useful source.

    Quote Originally Posted by Virgil View Post
    What a disgraceful country it would be if it were legal. Shameful. It has been one of the major criticisms of democracy that the lowest common denominator will prosper. With the discussions of legalizing prostitution, drugs, and other issues I won't even mention the lowest denominator seems to be coming to fruition. I guess once we have removed the moral basis of society, then all things are allowable if you can get people to support it.
    Ah, the slippery slope argument.

    What you need to do is put those comments into the perspective of homosexuals. I still hear the exact same comments about gay marriage - it will destroy morality! Even India has now legalised gay love and the world isn't about to end. I think your view on prostitution is more about doctrine than facts. It is a victimless crime, and really has little to do with general morality.

    We've had prostitution for thousands of years and civilisation hasn't died off yet. We haven't descended into anarchy for more than short periods, and it's been shown time and time again that postitution doesn't increase after legalisation.

    Quote Originally Posted by Haunted View Post
    It's my assumption that prostitution is not a profession by choice.

    Like most assumptions, it would be wrong.

    Quote Originally Posted by Virgil View Post
    Well I live in a culture. You can live as an animal for all I care. I know of no country that legalizes prostitution today.
    Now you do!

    I see they've given the namby-pamby, pseudo legality of Europe, where you cna be a prostitute, but not solicit.

    Compare that to New Zealand's proud history, where we are - I'm fairly sure - the only state where prostitution is totally legal nationwide. Prostitutes advertise openly in the press and on radio and television.

    We legalised prostitution five years ago, and New Zealand is nothing if not the fairest society on earth. We don't tolerate crime, nobody is campaigning for paedophilia to be legalised and the fabric of our culture is not about to shatter.

    Unlike virtually everywhere else on the planet, a woman can be a prostitute, protected by laws and the police, and offer her body for rent without fear of coercion.

    I know numerous women who have made very good money out of hooking, entirely by choice, and I have yet to see one of the women at the brothel I know that could be classed in any way as a victim. The women there are the best bunch of women I know - great sense of humour, a geneuine camaraderie I've yet to see in any other workplace, and a respect for themselves and what they do.
    Go to work, get married, have some kids, pay your taxes, pay your bills, watch your tv, follow fashion, act normal, obey the law and repeat after me: "I am free."

    Anon

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