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Pornography and prostitution



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Original post

Posted by Account deleted, 11.11.2006 - 14:17
what do you all think about these two taboo subjects? in sweden, prostitution is illegal. i think this is wrong. i want a more liberal society. supply and demand should be put to use. people who are against prostitution always gives the argument "the girls are being used by the men". well, thats the same thing as the guy working at mc donalds is being used, coz its a shitty job with low wage. but what if the girl chooses to be a prostitute. then why is it wrong?
the same with pornography. people say "men learn to see women as objects". well, i admit that i've watched porn, but that doesnt make me look at women as objects. its still supply and demand. people are willing to expose themselves on the camera, and people are willing to pay to see the movies.

as long as no one gets hurt, it should be legal

am i right? what do you think?
06.02.2011 - 02:14
Dane Train
Beers & Kilts
Elite
Written by Guib on 04.12.2010 at 22:57

I just think that if someones stupid enough to sell his body to someone else for a night... then OMG let that person do so.



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(space for rent)
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06.02.2011 - 13:38
Tranquillizer
Account deleted
Quote:
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same with me....as for prostitution some friends of mine have their first time with some "salesgirl of love"....I've meant on that.....


One guy told me his story. When he turned 18 his dad paid a prostitute for him as a gift, without him knowing. He took him to see her, but he also took his shotgun to make sure dad's little boy "gets the job done or else"

Also, I know of a case where a father and his 2 sons used to go to Hungary together to a club known here to offer such services. Hows that for a family trip.
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06.02.2011 - 14:02
IronAngel
It's not that prostitution is wrong in itself (it's just like pornography, in theory), but you can't dismiss the real social problems related to it just by calling it a choice. The fact is, it's not a choice for many people. Some prostitutes are pretty much slaves imported from foreign countries and forced to work - for a living, for their families' living, for their ability to stay in the country and not be exported, or even for their personal safety. It's not an issue with glamorous Pretty Woman prostitutes, it's an issue with the human trafficking that really happens. Criminalizing prostitution aims, or should aim, at preventing this kind of business. How well it achieves that it another matter, but you need to remember that the primary motivation is this and not some ethical distaste for blowjobs - even if that may be a part of some political rhetoric, especially in the US. (In Finland, you'd probably just make a fool of yourself.)
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06.02.2011 - 14:43
ANGEL REAPER
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Written by Guest on 06.02.2011 at 13:38


same with me....as for prostitution some friends of mine have their first time with some "salesgirl of love"....I've meant on that.....


Hows that for a family trip.

Sounds gooooooooooooodddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddd
BTW like I said if prostitution was legal there would be less crime around it....
----
"Cross is only an iron,hope is just an illusion,freedom is nothing but a name..."
"Build your walls of the dead stone...Build your roofs of a dead wood..Build your dreams of a dead thoughts"
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06.02.2011 - 15:18
IronAngel
Written by ANGEL REAPER on 06.02.2011 at 14:43

BTW like I said if prostitution was legal there would be less crime around it....


How do you suppose? Do you simply mean that it would no longer be a crime if it was decriminalized? If so, that's pretty trivial and unhelpful. But if you mean legalizing it will somehow stop human trafficking, coercion and consequent social exclusion (which is not a crime, but one of the largest social problem in Western countries), then I don't see your logic.

I'm not for or against it, I just want to emphasize that questions of choice and lifestyle shouldn't be the focus of any prostitution discussion. Social problems and crime are the real questions, and a rich white boy's freedom for fun is the least of our worries.
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06.02.2011 - 15:23
Dane Train
Beers & Kilts
Elite
Written by ANGEL REAPER on 06.02.2011 at 14:43

BTW like I said if prostitution was legal there would be less crime around it....



This all comes from some files I have on the subject.

Myths and Facts about Trafficking for Legal and Illegal Prostitution (March 2009)

These myths and facts are adapted from 5 sources by Melissa Farley:
1) S.M. Berg "Frequently-Asked-Questions" on Genderberg
http://www.genderberg.com/phpNuke/modules.php?name=FAQ&myfaq=yes&id_cat=2&catego
ries=Prostitution+FAQf

2) Melissa Farley "Legalization Fact Sheet" from Nevada Coalition Against Sex Trafficking
http://www.nevadacoalition.org/content/blogsection/1/2/
3) National Center for Missing and Exploited Children. "Female Juvenile Prostitution:
Problem and Response" © 1992 Available at
http://www.operationlookout.org/lookoutmag/11_Myths_About_Prostitution.htm
4) Janice G. Raymond "Ten Reasons for Not Legalizing Prostitution And a Legal Response
to the Demand for Prostitution" in Prostitution, Trafficking, and Traumatic Stress (M Farley
(ed) 2003) Also available at http://action.web.ca/home/catw/readingroom.shtml?x=32972
5) Sexual Violence Policy Monitoring Sub-group of the Women's National Commission -
U.K. February 2008
http://womensphere.wordpress.com/2008/02/27/sexual-violence-policy-monitoring-subgroup-of-the-womens-national-commission-february-2008-prostitution-q-a/


1. MYTH: Legalizing prostitution gets rid of its criminal elements - pimps and
traffickers.
FACT: Legalizing prostitution benefits pimps and traffickers. It also benefits johns. What does legalization of prostitution mean? In the Netherlands, legalization amounts to socially and legally sanctioning all aspects of the sex industry: the women themselves, the buyers, and the pimps who are transformed into third party businessmen and legitimate sexual exploitation businessmen. Legalization of the sex industry converts brothels, sex clubs, massage parlors and other sites of prostitution into legitimate venues where commercial sex acts flourish take place with few legal restraints.
Some people believe that legalizing prostitution would offer dignity and professionalism to women in prostitution. But legitimizing prostitution by legalizing it does not change the actual experience of prostitution nor does it dignify prostituted women who still experience stigma and other harms in legal prostitution.

Once prostitution is legalized, pimps become legitimate businessmen, and the predatory purchase of another person for sex is now a legitimate business transaction. Women in prostitution should not be punished for their own exploitation. The seller of sex should be decriminalized, as in the Swedish law on prostitution. But governments should not decriminalize pimps, buyers, procurers, brothels or other sex businesses.

2. MYTH: Men need sex therefore prostitution must exist. Prostitution is a natural form of human sexuality
FACT: The sex of prostitution is not "sex" for women in it. Most men who use women in prostitution have other sexual partners.
This statement justifies the existence of prostitution, and supports the myth that men have uncontrollable sexual urges that must be fulfilled. The act of prostitution is structured 2by the desires and fantasies of the buyer, which have nothing to do with the sexual desires of the person who is being bought.
No one 'needs' sex like they need food, water and air, and no one has the right to purchase access to another person's reproductive organs in order to masturbate themselves. Men do not have the right to unlimited sexual access to women. In a sexual exchange of equal partners there is always the risk of refusal, disagreement and the need for compromise. Buying women and children in prostitution is less about sexual gratification than power gratification, 85% of US johns have regular female sexual partners. 60% are married.

3. MYTH: Prostitution is sexual liberation
FACT: Prostitution is sexual exploitation.
The sex acts performed in prostitution may be liberating to the john (although over the long term, it is likely that prostitution harms johns). However, women in prostitution tell us that the sex acts of prostitution are not sex for her. They tell us that prostitution involves acting and usually also dissociating the mind from the body. One of the long-term effects of prostitution is the destruction of women's sexuality.

4. MYTH Women choose to enter prostitution. It's better to choose to make lots of money as a prostitute than to choose to work at a minimum wage job like McDonald's.
FACT: It is profoundly unjust to declare that prostitution is an acceptable job for some women - those who are mostly poor, mostly women of color, mostly young.
Prostitution is an intrinsically abusive institution and women stay poor in prostitution (although lots of cash passes through their hands on the way to pimps, stripclub managers, bartenders, taxi drivers, casino hosts and other predators). Women deserve equal pay for equal work. There is a lack of adequate housing, and educational opportunity in the US and elsewhere. Racism limits educational and job opportunities for people of color, leaving prostitution as the only sustainable alternative for some young women.

Yet prostitution is an activity unlike any other "work," which is why we should see it as the Swedish do: as institutionalized sexual oppression or as a human rights violation. Women are in legal prostitution for the same reasons they're in illegal prostitution -a lack of alternative survival options. Most women in prostitution did not make a choice to enter prostitution from among a range of other options. They did not decide that they wanted to be prostitutes instead of doctors, lawyers, website developers, or politicians. Instead, their "options" were more in the realm of how to get enough money to feed themselves and their children. If prostitution were really a choice it would not be those people with the fewest choices available to them who are disproportionately in prostitution. Such choices are better termed survival strategies.

Few laws make clear what choice and coercion are. An exception is a 2006 Florida state law that permits women who are coerced into prostitution via exploitation of their social and legal vulnerability to sue johns and pimps for damages. According to this law, coercion is defined as restraint of speech or communication with others; exploitation of a condition of developmental disability, cognitive limitation, affective disorder, or substance dependence; exploitation of prior victimization by sexual abuse; exploitation during the making of pornography; and exploitation of the human needs for food, shelter, safety, or affection.

Prostitution is about not having a range of educational and job options to choose from. Most women in prostitution end up there only because other options are not available. They do not have stable housing, they urgently need money to support children or pay for school, and they often have limited or no education. Prostitution is not labor, it is paid sexual exploitation. It is often paid rape. It is intrinsically harmful and traumatic. As a society, we do not allow the sale and purchase of body parts, such as kidneys. This is because we know that it would be the poor and disadvantaged who would exercise their 'choice' to sell body parts for cash. Others would be likely to 'choose' to live a healthier and longer life. A john described prostitution as "renting an organ for 10 minutes." Why should we assume that anyone really chooses to rent out her sexual organs?

Women involved in prostitution almost always have backgrounds of abuse, neglect and disadvantage. Sexual and physical abuse in childhood, running away, poverty and homelessness, are factors that precede entry into prostitution. These vulnerabilities make it very difficult for women to escape prostitution. In order to survive, they may have learned maladaptive behaviors that place them in harm's way. Accessing public benefits, especially housing, is very difficult for women who are socially isolated, who may have criminal records and prison time, and erratic lifestyles.

When prostituted women are asked, consistently around 90% say they want out of prostitution immediately, but the decision is out of their hands and in the hands of their pimps, their husbands, their landlords, their addictions, their children's bellies. A study of women in street prostitution in Toronto found that about 90% wanted to escape but could not and a 5-country study found that 92% of women, men and transgendered people in prostitution wanted immediate help to escape prostitution. If they are there because they cannot leave, then prostitution is not a freely made choice.

While there are a few women who apparently earn large amounts of money in prostitution, these women are in an extreme minority. An economic analysis showed that over the life course, prostitution is a route into poverty for most women. Even women in legal brothels report having to pay extortionate sums for rent and food. They also pay pimps inside and outside the brothels. They are not free to come and go as they wish.
Women in prostitution must continually lie about their lives, their bodies, and their sexual responses. Lying is part of the job definition when the customer asks, "did you enjoy it?" The very edifice of prostitution is built on the lie that "women like it." Some prostitution survivors have stated that it took them years after leaving prostitution to acknowledge that prostitution wasn't a free choice because they had to lie to themselves in order to survive.

There is no doubt that a small number of women say they choose to be in prostitution, especially in public contexts orchestrated by the sex industry. It is not clear how many of these women perform sex acts with many buyers each day as opposed to being protected (often because of race and class privilege) from the usual life of women in prostitution. It's also not clear how many of these spokeswomen are actually pimping other women. Some sexworker advocates have themselves been arrested for pimping: Robyn Few, Maxine Doogan, Norma Jean Almodovar and Margo St. James. Nonetheless, they continue to present themselves as sexworkers and not pimps. COYOTE member Carol Leigh acknowledged in a 2004 debate at UC/Berkeley (with Angel Cassidy and Melissa Farley): "95% of my friends want out of prostitution."

Some people choose to take dangerous drugs such as amphetamine. However, even when some people consent to use dangerous drugs, we still recognize that is harmful to them, and most people do not seek to legalize amphetamine. In these situations, it is harmto the person, not the consent of the person that governs how we understand the activity. When a woman remains in an abusive relationship with a partner who batters her, or even when she defends his actions, most people now understand that she is not there 4voluntarily. They recognize the conditions under which she acquiesced. Like battered women, women in prostitution may deny their abuse if they are not provided with safety or meaningful alternatives.

5. MYTH : Prostitution is a victimless crime. Legal prostitution protects women in prostitution.
FACT: All prostitution harms those in it. Legal prostitution does not protect women in prostitution from harm.
It's not the legal status of prostitution that causes the harm, it's the prostitution itself. The longer she is in prostitution - legal or illegal - the more she is psychologically harmed and physically endangered. Women who sell sex report high levels of physical and sexual violence, including verbal abuse, threats and intimidation - one UK study found that 63% of women in street and indoor prostitution had experienced violence. Selling access to her body parts and faking pleasure has a very negative psychological and emotional impact on women. A study of prostituted women from nine countries found that two thirds met criteria for posttraumatic stress disorder which how profoundly stressful prostitution was for them. In two studies of186 victims of commercial sexual exploitation, women consistently indicated that prostitution establishments did little to protect them, regardless of whether the establishments were legal or illegal. One woman said, "The only time they protect anyone is to protect the customers."

One of these studies interviewed 146 victims of trafficking in 5 countries. Eighty percent of the women suffered physical violence from pimps and buyers and endured negative health consequences from the violence and sexual exploitation, regardless of whether the women were trafficked internationally or were in local prostitution.Research on legal brothels in Nevada shows that legalisation does not protect prostituted women from the violence, abuse and psychological and physical injury that occur in illegal prostitution. In many senses the opposite might be true. A pan-European study also found that levels of violence were high in both indoor and outdoor settings and where brothels are regulated. In the Netherlands, where prostitution has been legal since 2000, the government is rethinking its approach as it is seeing more and more signals that abuse of women is continuing.

Legal prostitution in the Netherlands, Nevada, and in Australia has been connected with organized crime. Two-thirds of the legal brothels in Amsterdam's red light district have been closed down because it was impossible to control organized crime, according to the mayor.

Contempt and ill treatment of those in prostitution stays the same whether prostitution is legal or illegal. Women are frequently raped in escort and brothel prostitution. And almost everyone in prostitution was raped as a child before she got into it. Incest and rape are boot camp for prostitution. While women can report rapes and assaults to the police under current laws, many women in prostitution do not report rapes and assaults because their experience is that police also treat them badly.Legalized systems of prostitution may mandate health checks, but only for women in prostitution - not for male buyers. Health examinations for women but not for men make no sense from a public health perspective. Women are not protected from HIV contracted from johns. In one study, the longer women were in brothel prostitution, the more likely they were to be infected by HIV.

Throughout the world, study after study documents that about half of all johns request or insist that condoms are not used when they buy sex. Many factors militate 5against condom use: the need of women to make money; older women's decline in attractiveness to men; competition from places that do not require condoms; pimp pressure on women to have sex with no condom for more money; money needed for a drug habit or to pay off the pimp; and the general lack of control that prostituted women have over their bodies in prostitution venues.

Even though sex businesses had rules that required men to wear condoms, men nonetheless attempted to have sex without condoms. According to an economic analysis of condom use in India, when extremely poor women used condoms, they were paid 66%-79% less by johns.

"Safety policies" in brothels did not protect women from harm. Where brothels allegedly monitored the buyers and employed "bouncers," women stated that they were injured by buyers and, at times, by brothel owners and their friends. Even when someone intervened to momentarily control buyers' abuse, women lived in a climate of fear.

6. MYTH: Most prostitution does not involve pimps.
FACT: Most prostitution involves pimps. Health service providers, shelter staff, survivors of prostitution, and law enforcement sources estimate that 65%-85% of all prostitution is pimp-dominated.

Pimps are the people that johns pay to outsource the violence necessary to keep women in prostitution obedient. While it is difficult to obtain accurate percentages of women who have pimps, consider that pimps are not named "pimps" by women in prostitution. They are named boyfriends, husbands, friends, sometimes girlfriends. Pimps are also taxi drivers, casino hosts, strip club owners, valets, massage parlor managers. bartenders, and many others who earn money by selling or helping to sell women in prostitution. Legal pimps own brothels, and legal pimps control legal prostitution the same
way illegal pimps run their businesses.

7. MYTH: Legalizing prostitution would protect sexually exploited children. When prostitution is legal, licensed brothel owners do not hire minors or trafficked women.
FACT: Legal prostitution increases the sexual assaults of children in prostitution.
Legalization of prostitution increases the number of minors who are prostituted. Legal prostitution means that there are more locations for children to be sold for sex. And wherever there is a legal sex business, there are likely to be be 5 times as many illegal sex businesses as well. Therefore, it is good business practice for traffickers to sell children in or near a legal sex business. That's where the buyers are.

In the UK, approximately 50% of women in prostitution began selling sex under the age of 18. The average age of entry into any kind of prostitution in the US is 13-14 years of age. There are a range of precipitating factors including family disruption or dysfunction, sexual or physical abuse, alienation from school, running away and homelessness and substance misuse. There are well-established links between foster care experiences and routes into prostitution. These experiences render young women vulnerable to grooming by older predatory men and being pimped into selling sex. Sometimes it appears as if young women and girls are 'choosing' to enter prostitution. The UK children's charity Barnardos refers to this as 'constrained choice,' recognizing that sexually exploited young women have histories that create vulnerability to pimp manipulation. A Florida state law crafted by Margaret Baldwin recognizes that coercion to prostitution exists whenever the human needs for affection and protection are exploited.

Pimps want to make money. They don't care if someone is illegal, age 16, or 6 whether she was trafficked. There has been inadequate protection for children against prostitution in New Zealand since decriminalization of prostitution in 2003. According to the New Zealand decriminalized prostitution law, the police have no right of entry into brothels, and have no right to ask for age-identification papers of those in prostitution - thus investigation of suspected youth prostitution is extremely difficult, according to police officers, who asked that the law be revised.

An argument for legalizing prostitution in the Netherlands was that it would help end child prostitution. Yet child prostitution in the Netherlands has increased dramatically during the 1990s. The Amsterdam-based ChildRight organization estimates that the number of children in prostitution has increased by more than 300% between 1996 (4000 children) and 2001 (15,000 children).

Prostitution of children increased in the state of Victoria compared to other Australian states where prostitution has not been legalized. Of all the states and territories in Australia, the highest number of reported incidences of child prostitution came from Victoria. ECPAT (End Child Prostitution and Trafficking) conducted research for the Australian National Inquiry on Child Prostitution, and found that there was increased evidence of organized commercial exploitation of children in Australia.

8. MYTH: Prostitution is the world's oldest profession.
FACT: Slavery and pimping and agriculture are the world's oldest professions.
Prostitution is not the oldest profession, slave trading is. This statement suggests that we can do nothing to abolish prostitution so we might as well give up - even though that's the same thing people said about the US slave trade when it was at its height. The misogynist notion that prostitution will always be with us also hints that men have no responsibility or choice for their predatory behaviors in buying women for sex because prostitution is ultimately the fault of those wily, seductive, evil women who victimize men.

9. MYTH: Social stigma is the most harmful aspect of prostitution.
FACT: The worst thing about prostitution is not social stigma, it is rape, strangulation, beatings, toxic verbal abuse, and other violence from johns and pimps.
Women don't want to be prostitutes and the shame and stigma of prostitution persists despite legalization. Although they would have been earning retirement benefits if they registered, women in Dutch prostitution did not register as legal prostitutes because they are ashamed to be publicly known as prostitutes. Regardless of its legal status, women would prefer to get out of prostitution and usually feel ashamed of it. Does any woman in prostitution deserve to be treated disrespectfully or stigmatized? Of course not. But prostitution inevitably means that you're treated like an object to be masturbated into.
In Germany, the service union ver.di offered union membership to Germany's sex workers. They would have been be entitled to health care, legal aid, thirty paid holiday days a year, a five-day workweek, and Christmas and holiday bonuses. Out of an estimated 400,000 sex workers, only 100 joined the union. That's .00025% of German sex workers. The same phenomenon (not joining prostitute unions) is true in the Netherlands. Legalisation does not erase the stigma of prostitution and could even make women more vulnerable because they must lose anonymity.

10. MYTH: If you try to abolish prostitution, it will go underground.
FACT: There is no evidence for that extortionate attitude.7
This myth assumes not only that men have a right to buy sex, but that if they are denied that right, then they will make things a whole lot worse (meaning rape) for "good" women who are not prostituting. This myth also hints its converse: that we can "control" prostitution by legalizing or regulating it. This is also not true. Once socially tolerated or state-sanctioned, both legal and illegal prostitution increase. Trafficking increases and johns feel justified in seeking out and buying sex.Basing public policy measures on the extortionist threat of increased violence in an already violent environment is no way for a civil society to operate. Furthermore, legalization of prostitution has not stopped the violence in prostitution. Legalization has made it more difficult for victims to 'prove' they were coerced and it has increased the number of people in illegal sex businesses.

11. MYTH: Prostitution is a deterrent to sex crimes.
FACT: Research indicates that prostitution is associated with increased rates of rape.
The sex industry has been cited as a public service that reduces rape. However, there is no evidence for this. First, consider the rapes of women involved in prostitution. Women in prostitution have been described as the most raped class of women in the world. Women in prostitution tell us that prostitution is "paid rape" to them. Even though money is paid, the sex acts of prostitution are unwanted, often humiliating and degrading. Evidence from Nevada and Australia, where prostitution is legal, indicates that legal prostitution fosters a 'prostitution culture' that affects all women and children. This results
in increased sexual harassment. The province of Victoria, Australia (with legalized prostitution) has the country's highest rates of both domestic violence and prostitution of children.

Legal prostitution does not decrease the rapes of women in Nevada. Quite the opposite. Nevada's women are raped at rates that are twice that of New York and a fourth higher than the U.S. average. Women are three times as likely to be raped in Las Vegas as compared to New York City. College-aged men in Nevada are much more likely than college men in other states to use women in prostitution, to go to strip clubs and massage parlors. Nevada college students tend to justify sexual exploitation and considered it acceptable that their future sons would use women in prostitution. They found it acceptable that their future daughters might become prostitutes.

12. MYTH: Pornography and stripping are not prostitution.
FACT: Pornography, stripping/exotic dancing/lap dancing are almost always prostitution. If being paid to perform sex acts is prostitution, then using a camera to record
people getting paid to perform sex acts is recording prostitution. People may name those whose images appear in pornography as 'porn actresses' to distance themselves emotionally from the truth that they pay a third party for recording acts of prostitution. Pornography actresses have much in common with others in prostitution such as their poverty, history of sexual abuse and drug addictions.

Strip clubs, pornography, Hooters, mail order brides, online escorts, and other prostitution are sexual exploitation not sex work. 100% of women at a strip club in one study said they had been propositioned as prostitutes by strip club johns. Thus men who go to strip clubs consider women in strip clubs to be prostitutes. In strip clubs, the job 8definition of what it means to be a stripper would be called sexual harassment in any other location.

13. MYTH: Legalization of prostitution is an entirely separate issue from human trafficking.
FACT: Prostitution is the destination point for trafficking. Legalization of prostitution promotes sex trafficking.Prostitution and sex trafficking are linked. Sex trafficking happens when and where there is a demand for prostitution and a context of impunity for its customers. Legal prostitution sanitizes prostitution, making the harms of trafficking for prostitution invisible. Suddenly, dirty money becomes clean. Illegal acts become legal. Overnight, pimps are transformed into legitimate businessmen and ordinary entrepreneurs, and men who would not formerly consider buying a woman in prostitution think, "Well, if it's legal, now it must be O.K."

Governments that legalize prostitution as sex work tend to have an economic investment in the sex industry because they earn taxes from prostitution. This will foster governments' increased dependence on sex businesses for revenue. If women in prostitution are considered workers, then governments can abdicate responsibility for making decent and sustainable employment available to women. In Nevada, women are trafficked primarily into the state's illegal prostitution venues: strip club prostitution, escort prostitution, and massage parlors that function as illegal brothels. But there also a number of reports of women trafficked into Nevada legal brothels.

Trafficking of women into the sex industry is a direct consequence of men's demand for sexual access to women and girls in prostitution. In countries where prostitution is legal, sex industries are larger and create a demand for more women to sell sex, attracting traffickers and others who exploit women for financial gain. The legal sex industry then acts as a magnet for traffickers, increasing the number of women who are being exploited. Legalization also results in the growth of a parallel illegal sex industry as has been extensively documented in Australia. Since 1999, there have been reports that at least 80% of women in Dutch legal prostitution had been trafficked. In 2009, the Dutch government has closed approximately
2/3 of the legal brothels in Amsterdam because of its inability to control traffickers and other organized crime.

By the mid-1990s, 75% of women in legal German prostitution were from other countries, a majority trafficked from Eastern Europe. Trafficking of Asian women into Australian prostitution has been noted by the US State Department.

14. MYTH: Even if it's not perfect, legalizing prostitution would at least make prostitution a little bit better.
FACT: Legalization of prostitution increases illegal prostitution. It does not improve the lives of women in prostitution. Prostitution can't be made "a little better" anymore than domestic violence can be made "a little better." Women in prostitution tell us that they want the same options in life that others have: a decent job, safe housing, medical care including psychological counseling. They deserve that, not just an HIV test to make sure that they are "clean meat" for johns or a union to ensure that they get an extra dollar or two for being paid to be sexually harassed, sexually exploited and often raped.9In theory it sounds OK to state that sane, reasonable people should have the right to sell a kidney for $500 or more if they choose to. But opening the door to body organ selling would not lead to nearly as many middle class white men selling organs as other people whose social circumstances does not permit a free, uncoerced choice. Organ sales would open the door to brokers who exploit poor people. While a few body organ sellers may make a free choice to do that, prohibition of organ sales prevents widespread exploitation of less privileged people.

A truly progressive law promotes women's equality, not women's prostitution. A 1999 Swedish law describes prostitution as a human rights violation against women. Understanding the massive social and legal power difference in the prostitution transaction, Sweden arrests johns but not the women in prostitution. Trafficking and prostitution have plummeted in Sweden since the law was introduced. If you don't want to get paid for having sex with 10-20 strangers a day that pimps send your way, why do you think anyone else does? [For men who don't understand: the parallel for them would be having a pimp while you're in prison] Women in prostitution do not want to be in legal brothels: 81% of the women in the Nevada legal brothels urgently want to escape prostitution.

A goal of state-sponsored legal prostitution was to move prostituted women indoors into brothels and clubs where they would presumably be less vulnerable than in street prostitution. And where they'd be socially invisible. However, many women are in street prostitution because they want to avoid being controlled and exploited by pimps (transformed in legalized systems into sex businessmen). Other women do not want to register or submit to health checks, as required by law in some countries where prostitution is legalized. Arguing against an Italian proposal for legalized prostitution, Aghatise
suggested that brothels actually deprive women of what little protection they may have on the street, confining women to closed spaces where they have little chance of meeting outreach workers or others who might help them escape prostitution.In the Netherlands, women in prostitution point out that legalization or decriminalization of the sex industry does not erase the stigma of prostitution. Because they must register and lose their anonymity, women are more vulnerable to being stigmatized as "whores," and this identity follows them everyplace. Thus, the majority of women in prostitution still operate illegally and underground. Some members of Dutch Parliament who originally supported the legalization of brothels on the grounds that this would liberate women are now seeing that legalization actually reinforces the oppression of women. In December 2008, 50% of Amsterdam's legal brothels were closed down. Why? Because Dutch legal prostitution created an environment that was so attractive to organized crime that the Dutch could not control the traffickers and pimps. International organized criminals began to take over the city. A report by Karina Schaapman, a former prostitute and a member of the Amsterdam city council, described a police file of 80 violent pimps, of whom only three were Dutch-born. 75% of Amsterdam's 8,000 to 11,000 women in prostitution were from Eastern Europe, Africa and Asia.Chief Inspector Nancy Pollock established Glasgow's street liaison team for women in prostitution in 1998. Pollock stated that legalization or decriminalization of prostitution is "?simply to abandon women to what has to be the most demeaning job in the world."

Countering the argument that legalized prostitution provides safer venues for women, Pollock noted that women in sauna prostitution, for example, "have even less control over what services they will perform.The argument that legalization was supposed to take the criminal elements out of sex businesses by strict regulation of the industry has failed. The real growth in prostitution 10in Australia since legalization took effect has been in the illegal sector. Legalization of prostitution in the State of Victoria, Australia, resulted in massive expansion of the sex industry. In one year, illegal brothels in Victoria tripled in number. Along with legalization of prostitution, other forms of sexual exploitation, such as tabletop dancing, bondage and
discipline centers, peep shows, phone sex, and pornography, have developed in much more profitable ways than before legalization. Prostitution has become an integral part of the tourism and casino boom in Victoria with government-sponsored casinos authorizing the redeeming of casino chips at local brothels.

15. MYTH: Legalized prostitution would control the sex industry.
FACT: Legalization/decriminalization of prostitution expands the sex industry. Over the last decade, as pimping was legalized, and brothels decriminalized in the year 2000, the sex industry increased by 25% in the Netherlands. Similar increases have been documented in Australia, since prostitution was legalized.Once prostitution is legalized, men who previously would not have risked buying women for sex now see prostitution as acceptable. When legal barriers disappear, so do the social and ethical barriers to treating women as sexual merchandise. Legalization of prostitution sends the message to new generations of men and boys that women are sexual commodities and that prostitution is harmless fun.

16. MYTH: Legal prostitution brings tremendous tax benefits to cash-strapped regions. Nevada's rural counties reap economic benefits from legal prostitution.
FACT: Regions with legal prostitution experience adverse economic impacts. Pimps tell women in prostitution: You'll get rich! You'll make $15,000 a week? They also lie to Nevada's citizens, telling them that rural counties are supported by brothels. It's actually the other way around: the counties are supporting the brothels. By the time licensing, policing, and other state-paid tasks are performed, most counties with legal brothels barely break even.
The money that might be raised by taxing prostitution is offset by the need to police prostitution and the fact that organized crime is attracted to areas with legal prostitution also necessitating increased police activity. Pimps are known to launder money, and they avoid reporting the cash revenue from prostitution. Pimps do not suddenly become law-abiding taxpayers because prostitution is legalized and taxed. Mustang Brothel in Nevada was shut
down because of the legal pimp/owner's conviction for tax evasion. Pimps are simply not going to hand over the enormous profits that they make from the business of sexual exploitation.

Major corporations have avoided setting up businesses in Nevada because of many counties' proximity to legal prostitution. Legal prostitution almost always results in expensive legal challenges to zoning of prostitution because no one wants prostitution zoned into their neighborhood or near their
children's schools. Prostitution often ends up zoned into the neighborhoods of poor people who can't afford the legal battle to keep it away from their homes.

17.MYTH: If you oppose legalization of prostitution, you're saying that prostitutes should be arrested.
FACT: The abolitionist Swedish law, which is a model law, decriminalizes women in prostitution but arrests their predators: johns, pimps, and traffickers. 11 Being desperately poor, abused or sexually exploited is not a crime. But johns, pimps and other sexual predators perpetrate criminally abusive behaviors and should be appropriately charged with those crimes. While legalization is a failed social experiment, Sweden has had excellent success
both criminalizing sexual predation while at the same time assisting people in getting out of prostitution. Since the 2000 Swedish law on prostitution was implemented (arresting johns), trafficking into Sweden has almost completely stopped.

18. MYTH: If you oppose legal prostitution, you're a moralistic, judgmental, prudish person who is pushing your value system on people who think differently from you. FACT: While people are entitled to their moral and religious beliefs, our opposition to the institution of prostitution is based on evidence of the harms of prostitution documented by researchers, health service providers, and law enforcement. Legalizing prostitution is a failed experiment and we now have much evidence that it does not work to benefit individuals or communities. Regardless of prostitution's legal
status and regardless of its indoor or outdoor location, prostitution is a violation of women's human rights that results in massive harms.
----
(space for rent)
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06.02.2011 - 18:03
ANGEL REAPER
Written by IronAngel on 06.02.2011 at 15:18

Written by ANGEL REAPER on 06.02.2011 at 14:43

BTW like I said if prostitution was legal there would be less crime around it....


How do you suppose? Do you simply mean that it would no longer be a crime if it was decriminalized? If so, that's pretty trivial and unhelpful. But if you mean legalizing it will somehow stop human trafficking, coercion and consequent social exclusion (which is not a crime, but one of the largest social problem in Western countries), then I don't see your logic.

I'm not for or against it, I just want to emphasize that questions of choice and lifestyle shouldn't be the focus of any prostitution discussion. Social problems and crime are the real questions, and a rich white boy's freedom for fun is the least of our worries.

I meant on sex-trafficking and related shit....
----
"Cross is only an iron,hope is just an illusion,freedom is nothing but a name..."
"Build your walls of the dead stone...Build your roofs of a dead wood..Build your dreams of a dead thoughts"
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06.02.2011 - 18:11
ANGEL REAPER
Written by Dane Train on 06.02.2011 at 15:23

Written by ANGEL REAPER on 06.02.2011 at 14:43

BTW like I said if prostitution was legal there would be less crime around it....



This all comes from some files I have on the subject.


How is this related to my opinion?
I understand and know all this,so I don't get the relation between my opinion and this bunch of myth/truth facts....
All I said is that if someone wants to sell his/her body that should be legal...And if it is legal number of people forced to do so by mafia/organised crime/other will reduce....and yes I know that poverty is only thing that don't fit in my idea ....
----
"Cross is only an iron,hope is just an illusion,freedom is nothing but a name..."
"Build your walls of the dead stone...Build your roofs of a dead wood..Build your dreams of a dead thoughts"
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10.02.2011 - 14:06
ForeverDarkWoods
Written by ANGEL REAPER on 06.02.2011 at 18:11

Written by Dane Train on 06.02.2011 at 15:23

Written by ANGEL REAPER on 06.02.2011 at 14:43

BTW like I said if prostitution was legal there would be less crime around it....



This all comes from some files I have on the subject.


How is this related to my opinion?
I understand and know all this,so I don't get the relation between my opinion and this bunch of myth/truth facts....
All I said is that if someone wants to sell his/her body that should be legal...And if it is legal number of people forced to do so by mafia/organised crime/other will reduce....and yes I know that poverty is only thing that don't fit in my idea ....

This proves that you do not understand the issue. If you read the post above again, you will understand that what you are saying (the stuff about organized crime related to prostitution would reduce) is wrong and turned away from reality. When prostitution is legal, both legal and illegal forms of prostitution become more common.

Sure, you are entitled to your opinion, but that doesn't mean your opinion can't be wrong.

Decriminalization of the actual act of selling your body is another issue entirely, as it sometimes lets law enforcement agencies get ahold of the johns and pimps (which is a good thing).

And yes, I completely oppose the current legal status of pornography as well.
----
Free nations are peaceful nations. Free nations don't attack each other. Free nations don't develop weapons of mass destruction!
- George W. Bush, ex-president of the United States of America
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10.02.2011 - 15:23
Valentin B
Iconoclast
I have to say Dane Train's post made me think. Looking back at my childish posts here i realize that i was also somehow participating in propagating the horrible stigma and social problems of prostitutes.

the way i see it right now, the best way to make legal prostitution work and gradually minimize its damaging effects would be to simply ban private ownership of brothels and turn them into some kind of "social help homes" with government-appointed directors who would gradually help the women who were forced into it, out of prostitution and into a more normal life by means of social and laboral integration.

if it was up to me the brothels would be subject to health and security inspections and be very strict when it comes to tax evasion (maybe giving the clients mandatory access cards would work). all the while there would be harsh crackdowns on illegal prostitution and there would be big public awareness campaigns of the negative effects of prostitution for those who did not voluntarily choose this profession. the anonimity would be quite strict too, with (ideally) the real identities of the women being stored only electronically with very limited access.

in other words, prostitution would still be legal but extremely discouraged, and gradually there would remain in the business ONLY those women who actually don't mind doing it and began doing it by choice like some person above said, the "pretty woman" glamour girls.
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10.02.2011 - 15:53
Himann
Orm KrigGud
Was a long read there. Definitely Dane Train's post brings in a convincing side of morality to the discussion which was probably lacking in previous posts. It sort of makes it a responsibility to ensure that crime does not step ahead and that people are helped as opposed to simply making it a logical heartless debate. Currently I think I would lean towards outlawing the whole thing for the overall good of the people.
----
To be Draped by the Shadow of your Morbid Palace. Ohh, Hate Living...The only heat is warm blood

So Pure... So Cold
Transilvanian Hunger
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11.02.2011 - 18:45
ANGEL REAPER
Written by ForeverDarkWoods on 10.02.2011 at 14:06

Written by ANGEL REAPER on 06.02.2011 at 18:11

Written by Dane Train on 06.02.2011 at 15:23

Written by ANGEL REAPER on 06.02.2011 at 14:43

BTW like I said if prostitution was legal there would be less crime around it....



This all comes from some files I have on the subject.


How is this related to my opinion?
I understand and know all this,so I don't get the relation between my opinion and this bunch of myth/truth facts....
All I said is that if someone wants to sell his/her body that should be legal...And if it is legal number of people forced to do so by mafia/organised crime/other will reduce....and yes I know that poverty is only thing that don't fit in my idea ....

This proves that you do not understand the issue. If you read the post above again, you will understand that what you are saying (the stuff about organized crime related to prostitution would reduce) is wrong and turned away from reality. When prostitution is legal, both legal and illegal forms of prostitution become more common.

Sure, you are entitled to your opinion, but that doesn't mean your opinion can't be wrong.

Decriminalization of the actual act of selling your body is another issue entirely, as it sometimes lets law enforcement agencies get ahold of the johns and pimps (which is a good thing).

And yes, I completely oppose the current legal status of pornography as well.

Ok man just like I said : in my opinion that would be better than both thing just to be baned because "morale"etc...Maybe I am wrong but than again ....
If people want to something they should be allowed to do so...That thing is called freedom of choice ...So,as a human being I have freedom to watch/record pornography and should be able on my free weal to be consumer/provider of sexual "goods" ....I also dont approve if such things are done in force ,or by any treat by some crime organisation or any man(that is involuntary act therefore a lack of freedom )
----
"Cross is only an iron,hope is just an illusion,freedom is nothing but a name..."
"Build your walls of the dead stone...Build your roofs of a dead wood..Build your dreams of a dead thoughts"
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11.02.2011 - 22:30
ForeverDarkWoods
Written by ANGEL REAPER on 11.02.2011 at 18:45

Written by ForeverDarkWoods on 10.02.2011 at 14:06

Written by ANGEL REAPER on 06.02.2011 at 18:11

Written by Dane Train on 06.02.2011 at 15:23

Written by ANGEL REAPER on 06.02.2011 at 14:43

BTW like I said if prostitution was legal there would be less crime around it....



This all comes from some files I have on the subject.


How is this related to my opinion?
I understand and know all this,so I don't get the relation between my opinion and this bunch of myth/truth facts....
All I said is that if someone wants to sell his/her body that should be legal...And if it is legal number of people forced to do so by mafia/organised crime/other will reduce....and yes I know that poverty is only thing that don't fit in my idea ....

This proves that you do not understand the issue. If you read the post above again, you will understand that what you are saying (the stuff about organized crime related to prostitution would reduce) is wrong and turned away from reality. When prostitution is legal, both legal and illegal forms of prostitution become more common.

Sure, you are entitled to your opinion, but that doesn't mean your opinion can't be wrong.

Decriminalization of the actual act of selling your body is another issue entirely, as it sometimes lets law enforcement agencies get ahold of the johns and pimps (which is a good thing).

And yes, I completely oppose the current legal status of pornography as well.

Ok man just like I said : in my opinion that would be better than both thing just to be baned because "morale"etc...Maybe I am wrong but than again ....
If people want to something they should be allowed to do so...That thing is called freedom of choice ...So,as a human being I have freedom to watch/record pornography and should be able on my free weal to be consumer/provider of sexual "goods" ....I also dont approve if such things are done in force ,or by any treat by some crime organisation or any man(that is involuntary act therefore a lack of freedom )

What I think is flawed with your argumentation is that you think of the individual man first, and not about society as a whole. In order to understand this stuff you need to see a bigger picture than just the supposed freedom of a hypothetical individual (you know, how one thing leads to another and so on).

There are concrete examples to look at, and I feel not enough people who propose any type of legalization do so. Look at places like Amsterdam, Thailand and so on. You know, concrete stuff instead of talking about foggy and ambigous words like "freedom" and "rights".

If you read classical rhetoric, argumentation can be summed up into ethos, pathos and logos. Of these, the logos part is the most concrete, and the other two are mostly ways of conveying the concrete part to the listener. Without logos, an argument is inherently flawed (yours is an example).
----
Free nations are peaceful nations. Free nations don't attack each other. Free nations don't develop weapons of mass destruction!
- George W. Bush, ex-president of the United States of America
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12.02.2011 - 00:48
ANGEL REAPER
Written by ForeverDarkWoods on 11.02.2011 at 22:30

If you read classical rhetoric, argumentation can be summed up into ethos, pathos and logos. Of these, the logos part is the most concrete, and the other two are mostly ways of conveying the concrete part to the listener. Without logos, an argument is inherently flawed (yours is an example).

I was just stating my own opinion about it and as much as I respect yours I dont give a shit about trying to convince something to you...
You stated yours opinions,I've stated mine....
I thought that I was just misunderstood but I was not trying to convince you on anything ...
And also I think that you are smart man,as you clearly pointed that out ,so if you found my opinion dumb why didn't you just ignored it?
Live and let die,so to speak....
----
"Cross is only an iron,hope is just an illusion,freedom is nothing but a name..."
"Build your walls of the dead stone...Build your roofs of a dead wood..Build your dreams of a dead thoughts"
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15.02.2011 - 00:48
Bad English
Tage Westerlund
Legalice proistitution, ok maybe iun Sweden, Finlan it would work, but in eatern Europe where whole structure is rotten from isnide, do you think mob be happy , why Bulg and Ro dont get in Shengen, one of point was because of crime and coruption, image in area sudenly gourement start legalise it , do you think mafia who get miliards of it be happy, its be miliards away from mob and also even if its been legal there still mob controll, in western Europe yes it might work well, and works in Ned, but in easten Europe, 1th step is get rid of mob and organise crime and it never will hepen maybe after 100 years, USA fight whit Italian mob, where is results, it reorganises and go deeper underground, same in italy mob go deeper underground
I heard Columbia want legalize drugs to stop drug crime and murders, but well I dobt cartels ever acceot it ,same like east Europian mafia and anywho's connected and belive em non cares how those girls feel, non acres, mob, and cliants
----
I stand whit Ukraine and Israel. They have right to defend own citizens.

Stormtroopers of Death - ''Speak English or Die''
apos;'
[image]
I better die, because I never will learn speek english, so I choose dieing
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15.02.2011 - 12:58
whatsacow
I personally think it boils down to free will. If you want to have sex for a living, that should be your choice to make. Prostitution and Pornography shouldn't be taboo. It's just because of our view on sex, which is still a very christian one. I find it funny that you can watch a movie like saw, or hostel, and people won't look at you funny. It's just a bit of harmless torture and mutilation... but if you go and by a porno, people look at you funny. It's like go out, kill, torture, mutilate, BUT DON'T FUCK ANYONE!!!!!!

But whilst I would personally prefer my friends do something better with their life, and go to better places, I wouldn't look down on them if they chose that lifestyle.
----
When God made up the golden rule, do you think he noticed that it condones rape?
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15.02.2011 - 13:59
Bad English
Tage Westerlund
Written by whatsacow on 15.02.2011 at 12:58

I personally think it boils down to free will. If you want to have sex for a living, that should be your choice to make. Prostitution and Pornography shouldn't be taboo. It's just because of our view on sex, which is still a very christian one. I find it funny that you can watch a movie like saw, or hostel, and people won't look at you funny. It's just a bit of harmless torture and mutilation... but if you go and by a porno, people look at you funny. It's like go out, kill, torture, mutilate, BUT DON'T FUCK ANYONE!!!!!!

But whilst I would personally prefer my friends do something better with their life, and go to better places, I wouldn't look down on them if they chose that lifestyle.


what is situation in Ausie whit it? prostitition is legal, elegal, hard to get etc
----
I stand whit Ukraine and Israel. They have right to defend own citizens.

Stormtroopers of Death - ''Speak English or Die''
apos;'
[image]
I better die, because I never will learn speek english, so I choose dieing
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15.02.2011 - 21:37
whatsacow
Written by Bad English on 15.02.2011 at 13:59

Written by whatsacow on 15.02.2011 at 12:58

I personally think it boils down to free will. If you want to have sex for a living, that should be your choice to make. Prostitution and Pornography shouldn't be taboo. It's just because of our view on sex, which is still a very christian one. I find it funny that you can watch a movie like saw, or hostel, and people won't look at you funny. It's just a bit of harmless torture and mutilation... but if you go and by a porno, people look at you funny. It's like go out, kill, torture, mutilate, BUT DON'T FUCK ANYONE!!!!!!

But whilst I would personally prefer my friends do something better with their life, and go to better places, I wouldn't look down on them if they chose that lifestyle.


what is situation in Ausie whit it? prostitition is legal, elegal, hard to get etc

Prostitution is legal, but highly frowned upon. In some states it's illegal. Pornography is very hard to get your hands on too, unless you live in the capital city.
----
When God made up the golden rule, do you think he noticed that it condones rape?
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15.02.2011 - 23:58
Bad English
Tage Westerlund
WAC - how much might cost girl there and what is Hells Angels, Comancheros, Bandidos, finks, Gypsy Jokers, Desecnadts get from elegal prostituition?

Isnt there any porn channel on TV Thats why I prefere Europe Marc Dorcel is only good 100% porn channel others sucks
----
I stand whit Ukraine and Israel. They have right to defend own citizens.

Stormtroopers of Death - ''Speak English or Die''
apos;'
[image]
I better die, because I never will learn speek english, so I choose dieing
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16.02.2011 - 04:47
ArtKiz
It's all about the moral implications of these professions. It really depends on culture of the society where it occurs. For a conservative society, it may frowned upon or even illegal. For a liberal society it might be tolerated or even legal.

IMHO, it's not about the prevalence of these profession that used as basis on legality. It's about a society's beliefs. It's like trying to legalize "killing (murder)" because it's so prevalent. Killing is morally (human rights) and ethically "bad" that's why it's illegal everywhere.
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16.02.2011 - 12:37
whatsacow
Written by Bad English on 15.02.2011 at 23:58

WAC - how much might cost girl there and what is Hells Angels, Comancheros, Bandidos, finks, Gypsy Jokers, Desecnadts get from elegal prostituition?

Isnt there any porn channel on TV Thats why I prefere Europe Marc Dorcel is only good 100% porn channel others sucks

I don't know, I've never hired a hooker, thats what my girlfriends for lol. But there are porn channels, you just need to pay for them, and they're shit anyway. Unless you're massively into girls who don't look like they have foot fungus, but are just one giant piece of foot fungus... Oh well, there's always the internet lol.
----
When God made up the golden rule, do you think he noticed that it condones rape?
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16.02.2011 - 12:43
Bad English
Tage Westerlund
I see. Me einther so Í know prises from old american films 1h was 100 dollars
There cant be better porn channel like Marc Dorcel, here porn are on Canal+ Hits and Action and TV1000 and TV1000 action at 0:00 at night
----
I stand whit Ukraine and Israel. They have right to defend own citizens.

Stormtroopers of Death - ''Speak English or Die''
apos;'
[image]
I better die, because I never will learn speek english, so I choose dieing
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18.02.2011 - 04:21
Thunderhead
There is no mankind without porn or prostitution.
Simple as it can be.
----
"You may got money, and can buy anything you want. But there's a thing you will never be able to buy. It's a dinossaur!" - Homer J.Simpson
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18.02.2011 - 08:19
Angelic Storm
Melodious
Written by Thunderhead on 18.02.2011 at 04:21

There is no mankind without porn or prostitution.
Simple as it can be.


Which is a very depressing, and sad thing....
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18.02.2011 - 12:27
ForeverDarkWoods
Written by Thunderhead on 18.02.2011 at 04:21

There is no mankind without porn or prostitution.
Simple as it can be.

Untrue. It has not always existed, and it will not always exist. It has only existed for as long as there have been people needing to sustain themselves in such a way, as long as class has existed.

When people are given other options and not need to resort to such methods to get food on the table, it will go away, since there is no need for it to exist anymore.
----
Free nations are peaceful nations. Free nations don't attack each other. Free nations don't develop weapons of mass destruction!
- George W. Bush, ex-president of the United States of America
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18.02.2011 - 16:14
0rpheus
The filthy porno industry is the cheapest ever! but artistic nude photography is totally different although many people are also against it.
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I would prefer not to.
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18.02.2011 - 16:55
Thunderhead
Written by Angelic Storm on 18.02.2011 at 08:19

Written by Thunderhead on 18.02.2011 at 04:21

There is no mankind without porn or prostitution.
Simple as it can be.


Which is a very depressing, and sad thing....


Why you say it's depressing?
Where not talking about child corruption, or sexual enslavement... etc.
It's Porno and Prostitution. Business + Freewill... Nothing to be depressed about!

Written by ForeverDarkWoods on 18.02.2011 at 12:27

Written by Thunderhead on 18.02.2011 at 04:21

There is no mankind without porn or prostitution.
Simple as it can be.

Untrue. It has not always existed, and it will not always exist. It has only existed for as long as there have been people needing to sustain themselves in such a way, as long as class has existed.

When people are given other options and not need to resort to such methods to get food on the table, it will go away, since there is no need for it to exist anymore.

I was being kind of sarcastic, you know... But i have nothing against prostitution or porn. Along as it's a choice the people who's into porn or prostitution make... And as long as it only involves over 18 year old people, i'm not against.

And you know, here in brazil there are two people who get involved with porn or prostitution.
The people who can't get another job, or can't have a proper education and don't want to get into crime (now prostitution don't seen so bad huh!?) or those people who like sex a lot and think is a great way to live this life, payd to have sex.

I'm not saying it's a good thing, or it's very nice, anything like that.
I'm just saying that we wast time thinking and reacting to things like that. Freewill man, in that case is what is all about.
Here in brazil we have major problems, like corruption of the politicians, and drug dealers (who are really a big mafia wich many politicians are envolved, as the cops too).... And the public education suck too, the public medic system exist only in paper, but many people dies every time, etc...

Porn and prostitution are nothing...

Written by 0rpheus on 18.02.2011 at 16:14

The filthy porno industry is the cheapest ever! but artistic nude photography is totally different although many people are also against it.


I'm sorry, but you are beign hipocrity and controversy. How can you sustain that nude photos are art, and porn are not?
It's different kinds of art, but with the same tematics, erotism.
It's the same you say:

Grindcore and Brutal death metal are the cheapest styles in music! Power metal is totally different, although many people are also against it.
Get it? Huh? huh?
----
"You may got money, and can buy anything you want. But there's a thing you will never be able to buy. It's a dinossaur!" - Homer J.Simpson
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12.03.2011 - 08:46
I think if governments were to legalize prostitution it would allow them to regulate it so that a lot of the serious problems with it would be reduced or even marginalized. Through health and safety regulations, legal age restrictions, and thorough monitoring of the industry, child prostitution, human trafficking, and spreading of disease could be controlled and limited. People would not be turning tricks in back alleys or cars, they would be indoors where it is safe and clean. They wouldn't be able to work high on crack and would be more responsible for taking care of themselves than your average crackwhore.

In Canada prostitution is technically legal, except profiting from prostitution, operating a 'bawdy house', and a few other legal barriers pretty much negate the social value of legalization. We do have lots of brothels, but due to the fact that they are operating outside the law they are only a small step above street prostitution. We need to step beyond these 19th century christian ideals and do what is best not only for those who seek the simple pleasures of a prostitute, but for society as a whole.

And while I would raise an eyebrow at anyone saying that porno has artistic merit, abolishing or criminalizing it in any way is absolutely absurd. I know it is still illegal in many muslim countries...seriously, the idea of a god frowning on you masturbating is bad enough, but a government who can throw you behind bars for looking at a dirty magazine? Just wrong on so many levels.
----
Sonorous Odium...
...Embrace the consonance.
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19.03.2011 - 18:39
Yasmine
There's no reason to keep ADULTS away from either of these things. Consenting adults should have the right to make choices about prostitution and porn, period.
----
"Both optimists and pessimists contribute to our society. The optimist invents the airplane and the pessimist the parachute." G B Stern
"Society is like a stew. If you don't stir it up every once in a while then a layer of scum float u
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29.03.2011 - 13:24
Andre
I stand firmly on the side where Prostitution should not be banned or prohibited.
There are risks and all kinds of bad vibe going on and shit, but if you take a closer look around we can see that there are corrupt politicians, judges and polices with all kinds of dirt sticking to them, that leads to bad decisions and bad results. The worst a hooker can do is transfer diseases, but you can control this right?!
It's far easier to control their pussy instead of the others' heads.

It's just my opinion. I know both cases are complicated and shit. But hey, i still stand firm that hookers should exist.
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