10/26/2008 7:29:21 PM
10/26/2008 7:33:51 PM
^^I can't speak for Smoker4, but I believe his point is that the market may have reached saturation - i.e., the point about exacerbating harms through issues like trafficking, etc. That is, pimps and such operate brazenly out in the open now - i.e., his point is how much is decriminalization really going to exacerbate the problem. In other words, has the problem reached a "saturation point."I'm not entirely sure I agree with his contention - I think that it's possible to get worse. However, if we assume saturated conditions - i.e., where the supply of new workers coming in is enough that certain issues like trafficking are not notably expected to increase - his point is whether on the balance decriminalization is still a net gain. (i.e., is the current regime doing anything about the problem right now vs. how much worse do the problems actually get?)Like I've said, though - I strongly feel that decriminalization is half-assing it. Even if we make the generous assumption that things overall don't get any worse, we're only attacking the problem at the margins. It is, at best, a marginal improvement (if any at all) - namely one of law enforcement priorities.Much like marijuana decriminalization, really.
10/26/2008 7:43:14 PM
marijuana decriminalization has virtually no effect on the social fabric, crime stats, or health care costs. it has no perpetrators or victims. it doesnt destroy families or ruin careers and livelihoods.
10/26/2008 7:47:46 PM
10/26/2008 7:50:48 PM
^^^
10/26/2008 7:53:13 PM
^ But that's my whole objection to your point. It's not going to get any worse, and on the margins, things are generally better.I'm willing to accept some mission creep backwards if the overall direction for freedom is a positive one. And again - even if some folks call for greater regulation later, this is still on the net a gain over the status quo.
10/26/2008 7:55:11 PM
no way.heres a real world example in seattle.theres a chain of strip clubs in seattle (and a few more other cities on west coast) owned by some sicilian familiy with mob connections and lengthy criminal record. father and son both have done time for murder, racketeeringthe dancers there have to pay a large "rent" to dance each night. if they don't wind up covering their stage rent in tips and lap dances for that night, then they go in the hole. the club economics is such that only the most popular dancers can make a decent wage on a regular basis. the rest have to improvise. out and out prostitution occurs there on a regular basis. for so many of the dancers its the only way they can make money. most of them had no intention of ever prostituting themselves. many are young, single mothers trying to survive, not having any real marketable skills of industry value. topless dancing, while perhaps not a socially esteemed profession, is legal and a woman in many venues can make a livable wage for herself and feed her children.once they got connected into these clubs the pressure became implicit that if they werent a top stage performer, they would have to have sex for pay or quit.the only way this became known to seattle residents in general was through repeated police raids that were reported in the media. decriminalizing prostitution -- declawing the vice police -- will give these sleazy club operators and others like them free reign to work their "girls" as they see fit, without consequence.your libertarian theory is nice and clean. until you apply it to real world problems. this is what most people recognize, and one of the main reasons the L-party will continue hover around 0.3% of the national vote.
10/26/2008 8:11:37 PM
^^ i know that's what you're saying, I posted that to indicate I was agreeing with you.^ that seems more a problem with those particular scumbags. Most strip clubs (I would guess, I don't know) would not encourage prostitution, as their aim seems to be.[Edited on October 26, 2008 at 8:16 PM. Reason : ]
10/26/2008 8:15:27 PM
it depends on the level of law enforcement.guys go to strip clubs with hard cocks and fistfuls of cash.how many times are they going to leave frustrated and how many times are they going to come back.demand is definitely there. supply is there, or easily could made to be there.all a club owner needs is to foster a climate where there is an ability provide the connection. because if a dancer has her lap dance revenues increase from $25 to all of a sudden getting $200 or more... the club owner is NOT going to allow that kind of $$$ to flow without inserting himself as the middleman and getting a cut. the pressure is going to be either to prevent it at all times or allow it all times. allowing it in piecemeal adds complexity for economic and legal issues.[Edited on October 26, 2008 at 8:27 PM. Reason : ]
10/26/2008 8:23:48 PM
^ interesting...You clearly have a grasp of strip club dynamics
10/26/2008 8:26:46 PM
10/26/2008 8:28:17 PM
10/26/2008 8:31:15 PM
heres an indepth report on the Seattle strip clubs in question"WoodFellas: Frank Colacurcio and His Million-Dollar Empire of Flesh"Seattle Weekly July 09, 2008http://tiny.cc/ktfYm[Edited on October 26, 2008 at 8:39 PM. Reason : ]
10/26/2008 8:35:41 PM
10/26/2008 8:45:09 PM
it makes me feel smugly superior when I can snidely dismiss out of hand political/economic philosophy I don't agree with.does that make me a bad person?
10/26/2008 9:06:31 PM
When it's completely ungermane to the conversation and unwarranted at that... yes, yes it does. It makes you kind of a jerk.
10/26/2008 9:14:48 PM
10/26/2008 9:16:01 PM
Earlier on pretty much anything that could cause sexual arousal (other than a naked wife) was illegal in America. Now we have copious amounts of free porn online, so much that you can surf all the time and rarely see the same picture. We also have a huge dildo and sex doll emporium right on western blvd in between a bunch of restaurants and fast food places. We have legal strip clubs, and open prostitution on craigslist.It should be pretty clear the direction in which we are heading. As soon as male birth control (like a pill or something non surgical) comes along its all over with.
10/26/2008 11:01:35 PM
10/27/2008 1:39:24 AM
Why not go for the Swedish approach? Only criminalize buying sex.
10/27/2008 1:45:10 AM
10/27/2008 7:32:23 AM
Since STD exposure form sex workers would also involve indirect pathways of exposure to people not patronizing the sex workers there is a good argument for imposing health regulations on it. Given the high rate of infidelity in America, you're protecting a lot of unknowing partners from indirect exposure by requiring regular STD screenings for sex workers.I'm sure almost anyone would stop their "big brother" arguments if their mom got aids from their dad enjoying his dirty untested hookers. It's true that it's not government's place to keep you from risking your own life if you so chose, but it does have a place in protecting people from the stupidity of others. It's the same idea behind the handwashing laws- since you don't know your food was contaminated with e coli until you're in the hospital with kidney failure. Similarly, you don't know the person you've been fucking supposedly exclusively for 10 years has HIV until you get a disturbing call after your next physical.Leaving this kind of thing to the market is ridiculous. Read The Jungle if you think the free market forces will work to keep your food, hookers, and workplaces clean and safe. Yeah, to some extent market forces will create some avenues for people to obtain things that are as clean and healthy as regulations help make them today. Unfortunately those hygienic standards wouldn't be the norm, they'd be a premium. That and they'd come out of publicized death, outbreaks, and widespread fear. Maybe some people can accept a few thousand dead from easily prevented diseases in the name of the purity and goodness of free markets and small government. I'd wish they'd be happy playing Russian roulette in their own basements than with my cheeseburgers and my hookers. I can see the logic to the argument that legalizing prostitution without also regulating it could make things worse. If only that legalizing it could increase the number of pratrons- which increases the number of secondary exposures to STDs. Whether or not decriminalization would improve the lives of sex workers in the long term, in the short term they still have the same number of STDs among them tomorrow that they did today. Still, I can't see any way of arguing that such increased risk from legalization would be anything but marginal and come anywhere close to outweighing the benefits. You'd still do away with a lot of the pimps and the fear prostitutes have of going to the police when they're in trouble. So, even without health regulations it's still probabaly a net benefit to a city with a decently sized unground sex-worker population.That does not however excuse the morons who crafted this initiative. It is lazy and irresponsible to decriminalize prostitution without putting some basic public health regulations in as well. There is absolutely no excuse for not including some of the basic STD screening requirements that many other areas with legalized prostitution require. It's just sloppy, lazy, short sighted half-governance. [Edited on October 27, 2008 at 9:28 AM. Reason : ]
10/27/2008 9:09:20 AM