L
Leegal
Guest
Forcing someone to work, by my definition, is not only physical force. Someone who has been sexually abused by a child may be “forced” to turn to prostitution having been previously exploited as a child. She now sees, for her own reasons, that this is the way to earn money. Further, yes, prostitutes can make more money than check out operators. For many reasons women are “forced” into prostitution because they have no better way of supporting themselves. They don’t see the alternatives. By the way, garbage men here make excellent money; they are a uniformed service, it’s hard work and they receive excellent compensation. Garbage men are unionized and work for the government.Many prostitutes make more than engineers. If paying well is indirectly forcing someone to work then a lot of people are being exploited. As long as a prostitute is being paid a reasonable wage for her services there would be no exploitation. If it was legal you could better set wages to make sure they received a just wage. Even if being a prostitute is a decision brought upon by economic distress, how is that different that someone who ends up a garbage man because of hard luck? That person may not want to be a garbage man anymore than a woman wants to be a prostitute but as long as they are both paid a fair wage there is no exploitation is there?
Obviously if such was occurring it would be illegal. Your assuming of course that all prostitutes are being used against their will or without their consent which is not true. You could actually use this as an argument for making prostitution legal since you could make sure that those who wished to provide the service freely were able to do so, and could crack down on those making women do so against their will much more easily.
I never said we should legalize prostitution. I gave the reasons why we should not and cannot. Yes, they are being “used” in some fashion. See my reply in #21.