Listen, I get it. One could say I am forced to be an accountant. However, I would venture to say that is very different than basically being held captive by a pimp and having to have sex with strangers.
I was formulating a similar response in my head. Most of us are "forced" to work at something, but women who are dragged into stripping or prostituting typically don't "choose" what they're doing -- they end up in those jobs because they lack the skills for other jobs. Seriously, I've taught a couple high school seniors who were already stripping (and at least two who admit to being prostitutes), and all of them did it for the same reason: it pays well.
"Sex work" is a relatively new term that attempts to legitimize prostitution -- it's certainly more genteel than "whoring", which was the accepted word for generations. It's a term that tries to put this "job" on the same level as other work. In reality, the laws against prostitution serve to protect some of the weakest members of society (women with no other work skills) from being made victims. We need to protect these women (and girls), not allow them to become legally entrenched in a world that's often difficult to escape.
Finally, sex isn't an emotionless act, and selling yourself can easily come with emotional problems down the road -- even if you manage to avoid the violence, drugs, and potential for health problems and unanticipated children that may come of such "work". Do we really want to allow young women to get themselves into these situations, especially when they may not realize the full impact of the choice they're making?
Many prostitutes are victims of sex trafficking.
I read somewhere that teenaged runaways are typically swept up into the world of prostitution within 48 hours, and they usually begin by "selling themselves" for the price of a cheeseburger.
I tried to find the article but couldn't. I did find this article:
https://www.nytimes.com/2009/10/27/us/27runaways.html. Significant statements:
- “I’d also fallen for the guy. I felt trapped in a way I can’t really explain.”
- “Gangs used to sell drugs,” she said. “Now many of them have shifted to selling girls because it’s just as lucrative but far less risky.”
- They said they went after girls with low self-esteem, prior sexual experience and a lack of options.
- “My job is to make sure she has what she needs, personal hygiene, get her nails done, take her to buy an outfit, take her out to eat, make her feel wanted ... But I keep the money.”
- “I’ll look for a younger female with a backpack,” said Mr. Thurman, describing how he used to drive near schools after hours. “I’m thinking she’s leaving home, she’s leaving for a reason, she had a fight with her parents or she just wants to leave home.”
I read another article that used the term "survival sex". It means something women do because they have no other way to get money /to survive. So, yeah, in conclusion, the above poster jokingly says he /she is "forced" to be an accountant, but if suddenly the world no longer needed accounting skills, that person could probably could turn to any number of other occupations. Women who go into "sex work" mostly don't have other options -- they're doing it to survive.
But to be serious, I do understand there are women who choose to do this, by their own free will. I also recognize that many are victims of sex trafficking and have no say in what they are doing, under threat of injury or death. Those are the ones that make me hesitate in saying 'legalize it'.
Agree.