States Try To Reform Prostitution Laws—for Better and Worse
New bills in six states showcase some right and wrong ways to help sex workers, from full decriminalization to ramping up penalties for prostitution customers.

State lawmakers in at least six states have recently introduced bills related to sex work. Some of these measures would decriminalize prostitution, while others would stipulate stronger criminal penalties for prostitution.
States considering the former have the right idea. Decriminalizing prostitution has been linked to an array of positive outcomes, from lower rates of sexual violence and sexually transmitted infections overall to less violence against sex workers. It means fewer law enforcement resources wasted on policing consensual activity between adults, freeing up time and money for stopping and solving serious crimes. It's supported by organizations including Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch, the American Civil Liberties Union, the Global Alliance Against Traffic in Women, and the World Health Organization. It's also in line with what sex workers around the world say they need.
Lawmakers in Hawaii, New York, and Vermont have recently introduced measures that would decriminalize prostitution for both sex workers and their customers. And a group of Rhode Island lawmakers are pushing measures to protect sex workers and prostitution customers who report crimes.
Meanwhile, lawmakers in Massachusetts and Tennessee have introduced legislation that would provide some protections for sex workers while simultaneously strengthening or leaving alone laws related to people who pay for sex.
Here's a brief overview of the prostitution measures percolating in these states.
Hawaii
In Hawaii, Senate Bill 1204 would decriminalize prostitution between consenting adults. The bill, introduced by state Sen. Carol Fukunaga (D–Manoa), would repeal a section of Hawaii law criminalizing prostitution (which is defined as engaging, agreeing to engage, or offering to engage in "sexual conduct with another person in return for a fee or anything of value") and a section criminalizing "commercial sexual exploitation," which is defined as providing, agreeing to provide, or offering to provide "a fee or anything of value to another to engage in sexual conduct."
It would also repeal laws that criminalize "promoting prostitution," "loitering for the purpose of engaging in or advancing prostitution," "promoting travel for prostitution," "street prostitution," and soliciting prostitution near schools or parks.
Sex trafficking—that is, "compelling or inducing a person by force, threat, fraud, or intimidation to engage in prostitution," profiting from such conduct, or advancing or profiting from the prostitution of a minor—would still remain a Class A felony.
Senate Bill 1204 would also increase civil remedies available to victims of sex trafficking.
Another measure introduced by Fukunaga (Senate Concurrent Resolution 99) would establish a working group to "study the effects of New Zealand's model of decriminalizing prostitution on sex workers, their clients, and the broader community; consider the potential impacts of decriminalizing prostitution in Hawaii," and "make recommendations for amending Hawaii laws to decriminalize prostitution, including any necessary changes to health and safety regulations, criminal penalties, and labor laws."
New York
In New York, state Sen. Julia Salazar (D–Brooklyn) recently introduced the Stop Violence in the Sex Trades Act (SVSTA, a.k.a. S4396), a prostitution decriminalization bill that has attracted eight co-sponsors so far. The bill would repeal all parts of state penal law "that make sex work between consenting adults illegal," per a Senate summary. The bill would also repeal other statutes related to consensual adult prostitution.
"Presently, New York state law has more than two dozen anti-prostitution penal codes," notes the nonprofit advocacy group Decriminalize Sex Work. "About half of these codes target sex work between consenting adults, and the other half focus on trafficking, the exploitation of minors, and coercion into commercial sex. SVSTA upholds all felony anti-trafficking statutes that are designed to hold traffickers accountable."
"Trying to stop sex work between consenting adults should not be the business of our criminal justice system," states the justification section of SVSTA. "Criminalization drives sex work into the shadows in an underground illegal environment where sex workers face increased violence, abuse, and exploitation, and are more vulnerable to trafficking. Though anti-sex work laws may have originally been conceived as a protection of society's morals and perhaps even women, these laws now criminalize women and LGBTQ people for acts of survival and resistance to the force of economic insecurity. Decriminalizing sex work upholds the rights of those who trade sex, reduces violence and trafficking, and increases labor protections."
Rhode Island
Rhode Island House Bill 6064 was introduced on March 3 and referred to the House Committee on the Judiciary. In Rhode Island, it's already an affirmative defense to prostitution charges "if the accused was forced to commit a commercial sexual activity" because of physical violence or restraint, threats, or coercion. This bill—from Democratic state Reps. Enrique Sanchez (Providence), Brianna Henries (East Providence), and Jennifer Stewart (Pawtucket)—would further stipulate that "a person shall not be cited, arrested, or prosecuted [for prostitution] if the person witnessed or was a victim of, and reported to law enforcement in good faith and in a timely manner" offenses including assault, sexual assault, homicide, kidnapping, fraud, robbery, theft, embezzlement, extortion, stalking, child pornography, or human trafficking.
In effect, it would allow sex workers to come forward about crimes they witnessed or were victimized by without worrying that police would then arrest them for prostitution.
Likewise, the bill would prohibit prosecuting someone reporting one of these crimes for "procuring or attempting to procure sexual conduct for the payment of a fee," loitering for prostitution, "soliciting from motor vehicles for indecent purposes," or practicing massage without a license.
"Currently, many sex workers and sex trafficking survivors are more afraid of police than they are of violent perpetrators," says the sex worker–led group Call Off Your Old Tired Ethics Rhode Island (COYOTE RI), which worked with lawmakers to draft the bill. "A misdemeanor prostitution charge can mean losing housing, custody of children, and employment opportunities. Clients of sex workers are the people most likely to encounter a sex trafficking survivor, but reporting to police can mean criminal charges – in some states felonies – that can affect their employment and family." H.B. 6064 would mean "that sex workers, sex trafficking survivors, and their clients" could "report crimes like sex trafficking to police without being arrested," the group says.
VERMONT
In the Vermont General Assembly, H.372—"an act relating to voluntary engagement in sex work"—has attracted 14 sponsors. A preamble to the bill notes that Vermont law defines prostitution as not only "the offering or receiving of the body for sexual intercourse for hire" but also "the offering or receiving of the body for indiscriminate sexual intercourse without hire." Passed in the early 1900s, this law criminalizes "not only voluntary sex work but sexual activity outside marriage, and no longer reflect Vermont's commitment to personal and bodily autonomy," it states.
The bill—which is currently with the Assembly's Committee on the Judiciary—would repeal the part of Vermont's criminal code that outlaws engaging in prostitution, soliciting someone for prostitution, aiding and abetting prostitution, and related activities (such as permitting a place to be used for lewdness or prostitution and transporting someone to a place where they will engage in prostitution).
Lawmakers note that it is their intent "to repeal the laws prohibiting 'indiscriminate' sex and voluntary sex work between consenting adults while retaining strict prohibitions and criminal penalties for human trafficking of persons for sex work."
The bill would have no effect on Vermont's human trafficking law, which prohibits recruiting, enticing, harboring, transporting, providing, or obtaining any person for prostitution if they are under age 18 or will be compelled through force, fraud, or coercion to engage in commercial sex, along with patronizing anyone who would be defined as a trafficking victim under this statute.
MASSACHUSETTS
Massachusetts House Bill 1603—introduced in February by state Rep. Kay Khan (D–Newton)—would strike a section of the state's criminal code related to "night walkers" and "street walkers."
As it stands, the code says that "common night walkers, common street walkers, both male and female, persons who with offensive and disorderly acts or language accost or annoy another person, lewd, wanton and lascivious persons in speech or behavior, keepers of noisy and disorderly houses, and persons guilty of indecent exposure shall be punished by imprisonment in a jail or house of correction for not more than 6 months, or by a fine of not more than $200, or by both such fine and imprisonment." Khan's bill would remove "common night walkers" and "common street walkers" from this section.
H.B. 1603 would also remove a portion of the code criminalizing anyone who " engages, agrees to engage or offers to engage in sexual conduct with another person in return for a fee."
But it would leave in place the part of the law that criminalizes paying or offering to pay someone for sexual conduct. Essentially, the bill would implement what's known as the Nordic model of sex work laws, in which paying for sex is illegal but selling sex (at least under some circumstances) is not.
The Nordic model has been gaining proponents in the U.S., but it's not recommended by human rights, health, or sex worker advocacy groups, since continuing to criminalize prostitution clients keeps the industry underground and leaves in place most of the harms presented by full criminalization. A recent study of sex work law changes in Europe found that moves to fully criminalize or implement the Nordic model were associated with higher rape rates, with "the Nordic model ha[ving] a stronger effect on increasing rape than criminalization does."
TENNESSEE
In Tennessee, two Republican lawmakers—state Sen. Page Walley (Savannah) and state Rep. John Ragan (Oak Ridge)—have introduced measures (H.B. 1383 and S.B. 0182), offered in part to discourage the arrest of sex trafficking victims on prostitution charges. "This bill prohibits a person who in good faith reports a criminal act, committed against the person or another, from being arrested, charged, or prosecuted for prostitution if the evidence for the arrest, charge, or prosecution for the offense of prostitution resulted solely from the person's report of the criminal act," a summary of the bills states.
So far, so good. But the bills—which are being called the Tennessee Safe Crime Reporting Law—would also institute heftier penalties for people paying or attempting to pay for sex.
Right now, the crime of "patronizing prostitution" in Tennessee is already a Class A misdemeanor, punishable by up to 11 months and 29 days in prison and/or a $2,500 fine.
The "Safe Crime Reporting Law" would make patronizing prostitution a Class E felony, punishable by one to six years in prison and up to $3,000 in fines.
Increasing the criminal penalties for prostitution customers doesn't stop prostitution. But it may make customers more reluctant to engage in screening measures of the sort that make sex workers safer and less likely to accept other conditions that could increase sex worker safety, out of fear that doing so will leave a paper trail or otherwise make them more vulnerable to arrest. It could also change the makeup of prostitution customers, weeding out the more risk-averse or those with more to lose from being caught—which could leave sex workers with a less wealthy, respectful, or otherwise desirable class of customers and shrink the overall customer base.
While whittling down the number of people willing to pay for sex may be the goal of laws like these, it doesn't actually benefit sex workers, who may be forced to work more hours, engage in acts they aren't comfortable with, and engage in riskier activities to make ends meet. Sex workers strapped for customers and cash also become more vulnerable to homelessness, sexual violence, and needing to rely on violent or exploitative third parties to get by.
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Didn't Hawaii have to pass a law prohibiting police officers from engaging in sex acts with prostitutes before arresting them?
Gosh, what a
LibertarianLibertine. ENB is aiming to be the next Margaret Sanger.Why should government criminalise prostitution in the first place?
“Why should government criminalise prostitution in the first place?”
Because, you know, sex is “icky.” And even worse, it’s fun. The general populace must be restrained from having fun. And, heaven forbid anyone making money off of “fun.”
Why? Because a lot more women want it criminalized than want it decriminalized, and very few men are going to defend it publicly. Women feel that way because franchise owners always resent independent vendors.
Because fathers don't want their daughters to be hooking (while they pat their sons on the back when they bag a hooker).
I know it. Look at her support for eugenics and ridding the population of undesirables.
ridding the population of undesirables
Oh my God. That's why they lured us all into the comments section. IT'S A TRAP!!!!
The quality of prostitution in this country is a national embarrassment. We need to go back to the days when there were clean, safe, neighborhood whorehouses where sex was available at affordable prices to working men of modest means. All that's available these days in most places is either streetwalking crack whores who might or might not be female, and are likely to be diseased, or boutique brothels in inconvenient locations like in Nevada where an encounter can cost thousands of dollars. America, we can do better.
Now you're getting it! All you have to do now is apply the logic to drugs and any other victimless vice, and you're fully there with Libertarianism.
Legal prostitutes in Nevada cost far more than illegal ones—the opposite of what you've been claiming the result of legalizing narcotics would be. The same thing has happened in West Coast states that have "legalized" weed—your neighborhood illegal dealer is much cheaper than the legal stores.
With the legalization of prostitution, there would be no cost of treating disease, nor would there be the built-in cost of the prostitute paying for "protection" by either a pimp or a mobster. And under a Libertarian society, there would be no taxation and under a semi-libertarian society, no more taxation than other businesses. (Taxes are the big problem with legal dope.)
Beyond that, the cost of a prostitute's services would vary by Supply and Demand, including what the prostitute offered. The same would be true of drugs.
With legalization and the free-market, legal legitimate security and protection services would likely arise displacing pimps.
Craigslist and Backpage could have displaced and disintermediated pimps as procurers of Johns if the Feds had not clamped down on them.
Right now Nevada is the only state in the country that has legalized prostitution. When there is a small supply and a large demand, prices will be high. As more supply is introduced, through legalization, the price will drop.
Also, considering the quality and risk associated with illegal products, there is an additional factor that enters into the legal/illegal choice. Would you pay 5x more for a prostitute who is disease-free? 10x? 3x? What other factors will be guaranteed in a legal brothel that you can't count on from the black market?
Prostitution should be legal and regulated like any other legal business. They should be taxed like any other legal business (this has been the problem with legalized marijuana, the whole Puritanical "sin tax" concept).
Sex is something that people like. A lot. Those who are willing to provide it to people who want it for a price shouldn't have the government interfering because selling sex is "bad" or "wrong".
Legislating morality is always a bad idea.
Not true. Every major city has websites has many sources of prostitution. There are websites that promote escort services. There are massage parlors, mostly Asian.
Unless they're exclusively for Nevadans, they're most likely sting ops under our present laws.
And often they have a traffcking element involved. Separating people who are willing prostitutes from those who are compelled is another point in favor of legalized prostitution.
Just the IRS releasing individuals' tax info...
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A long awaited thread on the consequences of the 19th amendment. This is a distinctly nuanced position. It is miles above the low information, level one thinkers. Enjoy.
The framing of the 19th predicates voting based on vagina & penis, instead of skin in the game, like property/business ownership, service, taxes (theft), children, etc.
The founders saw voting as a states’ right, which is why voting is not included in The Bill of Rights. It’s not a negative right. It’s not a natural right. It was not enshrined upon us by our God just by the sanctity of being human. It’s a political process.
Woodrow Wilson hated the idea of women voting and was famously protested over it by unhinged suffragettes. But then he discovered women were less resistant to social engineering and could therefore be easily exploited, he signed that amendment. Your hero, ladies.
Prohibition and women’s suffrage have always gone hand in hand, with the latter actually happening when 19A was ratified just 7 months after Prohibition went into effect.
And once the women of the temperance movement got their way, with the 1919 passage of the Volstead Act outlining implementation of the Prohibition amendment, a woman actually enforced it: the 32yo assistant U.S. Attorney General Mabel Walker Willebrandt.
Since the ratification of 19A, the scope and size of the government has increased on a larger scale than any other cause in History. The 19th amendment itself is an infringement on the 10th amendment (states rights)
America has plummeted into a communist hellscape, from the depression, to 14 recessions, to FDR forcing Americans to turn in their gold, to internment camps, to the abolishment of the gold standard, to 31T in debt, to endless entitlements & wars.
Had Hillary Clinton won in 2016, we would have 3 additional Sotomayors on the Supreme Court, the last establishment holding us together, thus ending its integrity. We would have absolute Covid tyranny and the abolition of states rights (SCOTUS enforced). America would be dead.
[Graphic]
If states wanted women to vote, they could have done so under the 9th amendment. Wyoming— and I think Colorado did.
The founders saw one family, one vote, with the man of the house casting it, as men in general are more able to think logically about broad and abstract ideas and deduce suitable conclusions. Women, in general, think with their hearts.
Ironically, Dems HATE women. They let males are in our spaces & sports. And give them our awards along with the title of woman. But biological women are ungendered, unless the conversation has to do with abortion or the equal pay myth. They hold our identity hostage.
So when I make this argument, I mean it really screwed up America. It will never be repealed because EmPoWeRmEnT, all I’m saying is maybe we should hold off for a few years until we figure out how the hell we undue the damage and prevent further damage.
A woman's partner (guessing from the avatar anyway) quoting a Billy Madison movie in response could not be more apropos.
You don't know who the Red Headed Libertarian is?
I was referring to Greg Wood’s reply.
Edit: FFS -
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You're a sports and fitness professional and you look like that? Get your wife's ice cream, sit bag down on the couch to keep her feet warm, shut up, and watch 'Eat Pray Love' with her for the umpteenth time, Greg.
Voting isn't a 'right' at all.
It's a privilege.
The Voting Rights Acts weren't enacted to make voting a right. They were enacted to prevent Democrats from stopping people who had earned the privilege of voting from voting.
The only voting "right" in our laws is that all voters must be treated equally, regardless of sex or ethnicity. States have broad authority to allow or limit voting, so long as they don't illegally discriminate.
It's supported by organizations including Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch, the American Civil Liberties Union, the Global Alliance Against Traffic in Women, and the World Health Organization.
I was ready to give prostitution a fair shake until I read that list of endorsements. Now I'm pretty sure it's just a ploy to get more Mexican brides in and keep Russian brides out.
How silly! If they aren't Putineers, Kirilleers, Communists, Pamyatists, or any other Totalitarians, Russian wives are more than welcome by me!
By the way, would. Without the mask, of course! I live life in the fast lane!
🙂
I'll wait till the mask is off before committing.
There's always doggie style if her teeth aren't right.
🙂
I can't wait for price controls on high-cost escorts!
Nobody needs 23 different types of prostitutes.
Given the wide range of kinks out there roaming free in the wild, I think 23 is a gross underestimation. Hell, Falwell and his wife would need a few different types to satisfy their varied ... appetites.
"officer I don't get paid for sex I get paid to go home."
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Such confusing language by prostitution reformers! In drug reform, decriminalization can leave the action in question illegal, just not a crime. In prostitution "decriminalization" seems to mean what in the more straightforward language of drug reform is legalization, i.e. making it legal, not illegal at all. In prostitution "legalization" means some regulatory scheme that's not assumed in other contexts of legalization.
Yeah, people use the terms "legalize" and "decriminalize" backwards.
I foresee a new entry in the "Great Moments in Unintended Consequences" series as false accusations are incentivized.
I think that most sex workers prefer the current approach to a highly regulated and taxed approach. If sex work becomes legal, it will be highly regulated and taxed. Legal sex workers will be pitted against illegal (sex workers refusing regulation and taxation). The legal sex workers will collaborate with government to eliminate competition from illegal sex workers. A black market will develop because government will impose high taxes (probably 25%) and revenue from legal sex work must be declared as income.
The solution is to tax it or regulate it no more than, say, plumbers or any other trade or profession. Not a whole lot of underground plumbers, some unlicensed but not a lot. Even if unlicensed, big deal so long as they do good enough work, do the trick.
Never happen. Politicians cannot reduce the urge to tax. Sex work will be an easy target for taxation.
Sin taxes have always been problematic. There is a sizable portion of society that thinks that "bad" things like alcohol, weed, and sex should be taxed more than other legal products because they 'offend the morals'.
I was hoping that the hidebound conservativism of the morality police had faded as we become a more secular country, but as marijuana legalization shows it is a powerful force when partnered with those who, in general, like high taxes. Both of those groups scree the rest of us over.
Of course you'd expect it to be as with liquor: that the legal operators (no matter how or whether it's taxed or regulated) would not be the same as the illegal ones, who prefer to operate illegally. The street walkers of today won't be prostitutes legally, they were selected for by its illegality. You don't see today's drug dealers campaigning for legalization either.
The idea that a sex worker, if presented with an opportunity to work in a safer environment that provides a regular income and brings the customers to her/him, would not become a legal prostitute seems weird.
Some wouldn't, but it wouldn't be "illegal prostitutes will remain illgal prostitutes because they went into prostitution when it was illegal, so they chose illegal prostitution". Even the pimps wouldn't all refuse the chance to go legit.
Making broad generalizations about people is almost always doomed to failure. Especially when ascribing motives to people's behavior without any actual information about them.
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Is that what happens in countries or states that have legalised it?
And the argument that "legalisation creates a black market" is odd when the entire market is black when it's illegal.
Apparently a small black market is worse for society than a huge black market.
Is it time yet for a constitutional amendment that says when a previously illegal activity is "legalized", there can be no taxing, regulating, registering, or new bureaucracy created?
Who are "transgender men?" Hypothesis after talking to some skittle hair biological woman who identify as men. Most are not attractive..overweight not curvy..the worst a woman can be to attract men. They can't get a man to be interested in them so they decide they must be lesbians. After trying that and it not working they convince themselves they are really men. More than one I talked to is now dating for the first time in their life...a man who identifies as a woman. So they finally got a man just in disguises. They have deep seated hatred towards men as they could never get a date and believe they are in a 'tribe" that is discriminated against. Grooming little kids is a crusade for them as a way of retaliating against normal men and woman. What they could never get they want to destroy.
The only reason prostitution is financially worth it, is precisely because it is illegal.
Is that the experience in countries that have legalised it? Or is this just your wishful claim?
Prostitution is legal in parts of Nevada yet wildly profitable. Okay, not the best example since much of the demand comes from outside the jurisdiction. So let's look at other much larger jurisdictions.
Sex work is legal in Germany and has been for quite some time. Still profitable and not because of any "sex tourism" reputation.
Sex work is legal in Australia and almost entire unregulated in large parts of it. No reports of it being unprofitable there.
Prostitution is technically illegal in Japan but the definition there is so narrow (vaginal intercourse only) that lots and lots of sex work happens and is allowed under the law. Highly profitable - and again, no significant sex tourism effect.
Looking further back in history, you can find lots of other examples of legal prostitution. And lots of people who always find it "financially worth it".
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It depends on how heavily regulated it is. If the benefit of avoiding regulation doesn't outweigh the risk of doing it illegally, few people will choose the illegal path.
No, it's sold at a greater price. That price is set based on the increased risks and costs of delivering the service.
Yes, the existence of the taxman will also always drive a black market. Prostitution is legal and taxed in Germany - and yes, there's a black market there, too. That has not stopped the legitimate businesses from either existing or making a profit. I'm not saying that there's no effect - only that you're vastly overstating the effect.
By the way, your Time article is interesting but very high level (and a bit outdated). I recommend instead the text An Economist Walks Into A Brothel.
There is also a consideration of quality of the offerings. Disease would be less of a risk with legal prostitution, which in turn, makes legal prostitution more attractive.
The black market problem you speak of is creation of the taxman, the police, and the legislators who empower them, not the sex worker or the legalization of sex work! Dummy!
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If a man proposes, and a woman (in this hypothetical case) agrees, that if he takes her out to a tony diner (e.g., Morton's Steakhouse) or gifts her a 5-carat tennis bracelet, upon their return to her apartment she will hum him into heaven and then she will screw his eyeballs out, would that not violate the laws against the exchange of "anything valuable" for sex? Would the "he" in this case have broken a law? (Asking for a friend.)
Sex workers (mostly women) want laws against prostitution repealed. More women (a lot more) don't want prostitution laws repealed for the simple reason that easy purchase of a commodity for a pre-agreed fixed price devalues the chief commodity they have to sell for a price that is never disclosed prior signing on the dotted line on the license. Franchise holders always resent independent vendors.
Sez you, you creepy Dugin Hooligan Putineer!
I've probably broken more than a dozen bones in my lifetime. None of them were mine.
"Murder is fun."
Garnered from personal experience?
Murder is and infringment of individual rights, prostitution is not because it's voluntary.
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It's the experience with legal vs. illegal anything, anywhere, any time. When bars were made illegal, they didn't continue in the illegal business, and the ones that operated as illegal businesses didn't continue to operate as legal ones when liquor was re-legalized. Criminal laws select for criminals.
And most of the bills addressed here would reduce the amount of regulation.
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There’s also a couple of fundamental economic and well-known business principles being exploited here to give the illusion of “wildly profitable” not at all unlike saying because Lebron James makes $44M/yr. basketball is wildly profitable. Lebron makes more money outside basketball than in and if everybody could play basketball up to the value of $1K or $10K or $1M, Lebron wouldn’t play in front of 20K people and millions more on network TV.
Which isn't to say prostitution isn't profitable and doesn't push back against the issues it claims to alleviate but, just like with MJ legalization, fully decriminalizing and legalizing it tomorrow isn't going to make everyone richer, happier, and more inherently moral.
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It wouldn't surprise me.
Geiger Goldstaedt 10 hours ago
"It’s my experience from skull fucking your mother."
One of the most articulate concessions of a point I've heard in a long time.
That article compares ivory to prostitution, which are not comparable since illegal ivory is inanimate, can be easily concealed and doesn’t call the police. Also, trafficking is usually ill-defined, usually including voluntary prostitution with coerced, though the article intends to refer only to coerced. The article claims increase in trafficking where prostitution is legalized, but does not distinguish it from voluntary migration of prostitutes to jurisdictions where they won’t be prosecuted,
True, but you can't tell the likes of Goldie that.
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Well said. When a troll gets egg on his face he resorts to violent retorts.
We have actual examples of the very issue at stake, in several european nations that legalised prostitution this century. No need to reach for what happened with something else a hundred years ago (and get even that, only half right).