I don’t agree with this.
No, it’s not because I have a high respect for the profession. I look at it like prostitution, though. Here in the states, prostitution is illegal. The women get abused by pimps, regularly get STD’s, get raped and murdered, and women are abducted by cartels to be sold into prostitution.
In Australia, where prostitution is legal and regulated, the women work under fair bosses at brothels, the men by law have to be checked for STD’s and the women are not abused or abducted by pimps. They make their wage and live pretty normal lives.
By making it illegal all Iceland is assuring is that the show will be run by organized crime and pimps, just like prostitution is over here. I understand what Iceland is thinking. It thinks that by outlawing stripping, it will be eradicated. It’s a moral gesture, absolutely. Prohibition of alcohol in the United States was a moral gesture also. Was it moral? Absolutely. Did it work? Of course not. When alcohol was prohibited, organized crime took over the operation underground and made quite a bit of money off of it.
I agree with the intent behind the law. Respectable women shouldn’t be objectified in such a way. I don’t agree with assuring that the two industries become the lifeblood of dangerous pimps and organized crime, though. That’s more immoral than the industry it’s self.