I have mixed feelings about this approach. On one hand, I could care less if the citizens of San Francisco want to legalize prostitution. However, I just get this feeling that the approach they're taking, decriminalizing prostitution instead of legalizing it, is a halfassed measure that will not improve or may even aggravate the situation. Given the public health considerations, issues with sex trafficking, and some of the violent crimes surrounding the trade, prostitution, if legalized, should be regulated to ensure the safety of all participants.Given that we've done the general prostitution arguments many times, I would like to discuss the merits of the San Fransisco Proposition K specifically, especially since it could be a model for communities who wish to legalize the trade but are unable to due to state laws.http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2008/10/05/BAQ01387OA.DTL
10/22/2008 2:03:53 AM
i am for the legalization of prostitution, but i think this is a poor way to go about it. proponents aren't adequately addressing human trafficking, for one.why should the measure prohibit the police from investigating trafficking victims? racial profiling is bad but i think the ends certainly justify the means when you're dealing with enslaved human beings.if the measure is really to protect prostitutes, it should include a framework for regulatory oversight.
10/22/2008 2:22:22 AM
I agree with both of the above. Decriminalization isn't bringing prostitution above-board or dealing with the very real ancillary issues which have caused lawmakers to make it illegal in the first place - like public health, workers' rights, and issues involving human trafficking.All decriminalization does is says, "Well, we're not going to make this an issue anymore." Which, while good on theory in the sense that it commits less scarce police resources to what would otherwise be a private transaction between consenting adults, ignores the fact that while prostitution is still illegal, many of the problems inherent with it still stick around: abusive pimps, sex slavery, practicing in unsuitable areas, etc.This is just one of those things you don't half-ass. Nevada got it right. (Of course, this on the same ballot with other such measures as "impeaching President Bush" and so forth - obviously, SF has no regard for the scope of laws...)
10/22/2008 2:28:31 AM
^Luckily, I suppose, most ballot initiatives don't require any thought or effort on the part of lawmakers or officials and can be initiated by signed petition. Unfortunately, these petitions are often sent out in the hands of contract workers who are grabbed off the street and paid per signature. Sometimes the political firms hired to do the signature collecting are themselves sources of incompetence and fraud. Low worker standards and incompetent contract employees are why we heard so much about ACORN and a dishonest firm is why several initiatives in Arizona may end up being stricken from their ballot. And yes, I chose those examples to emphasize that incompetence and dishonesty crosses the aisle just as well as sweaty handshakes and pork-grease-soaked bailout bills.As far as stupid ballot initiatives go, my point is that they're so easy to get on ballots in some places that they don't necessarily serve as proof of incompetent CURRENT officials. It does show that people who wrote laws governing these ballot initiatives lacked the language comprehension of a chipped brick. They were obviously unable to grasp that their inane sentences eventually piled up to form convoluted paragraphs that, if read in order, were absolutely stupid fucking laws.I'm trying to figure out who authored the text of the initiative, but it's really kind of muddy as far as who actually supports it. There's a decent looking hooker they seem to use as a spokesperson now and then but it seems like almost every official in SF is against this particular initiative for the problems you guys just mentioned.[Edited on October 22, 2008 at 3:15 AM. Reason : ]
10/22/2008 2:58:02 AM
10/22/2008 6:12:06 PM
I think it would be great for the police to be able to concentrate on violent crime rather than dealing with prostitution. Given that... terms like "sex worker" and "Erotic Service Providers Union" sure makes the whole endeavor sound pretty drab.
10/22/2008 10:10:02 PM
Meh
10/22/2008 11:50:04 PM
This seems like it would do more harm than good. Nevada's laws seem to make more sense in regards to prostitution.
10/23/2008 1:00:21 AM
I have mixed feelings on this. On one hand, it is between two consenting adults, so I can see the argument for legality. On the other, it does demean women, treating them as objects to be bought and sold, and countries where prostitution is completely legal, crime is still associated with it and other problems popup (sex-trafficking, underage, etc).
10/23/2008 1:11:48 AM
shit dog...we live in america...demeaning women is in our blood
10/23/2008 1:13:52 AM
I now worry my little sister will be sold as a sex slave in San Francisco. Dammit, why don't policymakers make props and laws airtight? Fuck.
10/23/2008 1:15:52 AM
10/23/2008 1:18:34 AM
and this will certainly help haha
10/23/2008 1:23:26 AM
^^ I think that's why Nevada restricts it to brothels- you can regulate and inspect brothels more easily than you can streetwalkers. Of course, it doesn't eliminate the drug/sex-slave trade that you get with the pimps, coke, and runaways. Still, it gives people who would get into that trade a way to do so in a cleaner safe environment and gives johns a place to go that doesn't rely on predatory pimps.Any legalization of prostitution has to include help for abused addicts and runaways (some of which are adolescent boys, not just women and young girls.) With legalized prostitution, it might also be wise to increase the penalties on johns and pimps since they would then have legal alternatives.
10/23/2008 1:23:47 AM
10/23/2008 1:27:20 AM
so who in san francisco does this help? i'd guess only straight women
10/23/2008 1:28:11 AM
10/23/2008 1:39:26 AM
10/23/2008 1:40:14 AM
This is actually a really tough problem.I'm gonna have to be principled. If a fully consenting adult wants to sell their sex then they should be allowed to, and if the only way to achieve that is through decriminalization then so be it.Human trafficking is a tremendous problem, and it will require massive, continuous, and cooperative international efforts to extinguish. If the article is true, and human trafficking investigations arise exclusively from prostitution arrests during raids on massage parlors, then we really fucking suck... I kinda assumed we were a little more advanced than that now.In terms of all the other issues, prositution is the world's oldest occupation profession. I think it's quite fitting it remain unregulated. It's almost poetic. Fuck at your own risk.[Edited on October 23, 2008 at 2:24 AM. Reason : ]
10/23/2008 2:17:58 AM
i hate that wording("the oldest occupation")
10/23/2008 2:20:18 AM
10/23/2008 2:24:10 AM
^^Changed it for you! ^I thought it was the only way in San Francisco cause the state won't legalize it. ?I sincerely doubt the proposition will pass any way.
10/23/2008 2:26:12 AM
Ok, if your argument is that the only way to change it in SF is through decrim, then fine. Your argument there holds.I'd still argue, though, that this is really something where the state law itself needs to change, as while this is good on principle, doesn't really solve the social problem it's designed to solve.
10/23/2008 2:27:36 AM
thanks for changing it, but i dont like profession either...i dont consider it an occupation or profession...or job...or anything like that
10/23/2008 2:28:22 AM
They perform a service for money. How is that not a job (or profession)?
10/23/2008 2:30:12 AM
lol "a service"
10/23/2008 2:33:21 AM
Oh, see I thought the use of the word "job" was funnier.
10/23/2008 3:52:38 AM
I couldnt care less about prostitution being legal or illegal...however something tells me this is going to end badly for SF if it passes. picture early-eightes Times Square on speed.
10/23/2008 10:18:36 AM
10/23/2008 4:12:58 PM
I live in SF so I actually voted on this last week. I voted yes. Mostly I agree with the idea in principle of legalizing (or 'decriminalizing' to similar effect) prostitution.As to the human trafficking arguments and such: I agree with the statements that this law changes little except to enable prostitutes to go to the police. It's nice to talk in theory about the effects this change would have on pimping; the opposition goes so far as to say SF would become a "safe haven."A safe haven? Seriously? Look, when I walk through the Tenderloin, I don't exactly see pimps and hookers cowering in fear. This is typical SF city politics. God-mayor Gavin Newsom acts like he is the source of all magnanimity in the world and without his august wisdom, everything will fall apart. The reality is that the city does a scandalously bad job of regulating anything, much less prostitution, except perhaps plastic bags and smoking in bars. Anyone can walk down Geary St at night and see the naked truth.I read a report of a homeless woman, addicted to crack, who whored herself out and when she refused to pay up the pimp burned her alive. Are the opponents of this measure arguing that the police would fail to get involved in such circumstances? And that gives me how much faith in the SFPD as an institution, much less the God-mayor?Also to those comparing us to Nevada: no dice. San Francisco is a densely populated city of about 800,000, roughly the size of Durham. Nevada is a massive desert of 110,000 sq miles with a few population centers. I'd think our enforcement capacity here somewhat different, especially given that prostitution is often localized to various bad neighborhoods and is particularly rampant among so-called 'hard-core' homeless who are famously visible.So -- I support legalized prostitution in principle, through whatever means. Effective city administration and law enforcement are surely different matters for the city to deal with.
10/26/2008 2:44:35 PM
10/26/2008 2:55:22 PM
10/26/2008 3:04:39 PM
^^Well, I think principle matters so I'm not going to say I voted 'yes' purely because of a costs/benefits analysis. I have a pretty visceral opposition to laws against prostitution -- they're only a small step better than sodomy laws in my book. Of course you can always try to justify laws against consensual sex (on whatever terms) with "public good" arguments, but as a general rule I try never to do that. It's been used to abuse people's basic rights for too long (especially gay people). And of course, we have to factor in basic freedom in the costs/benefits equation -- if we stop pimping/human trafficking/etc at the cost of basic rights, then have we really gained? But overall my point was broader than this issue. SF lacks an effective city administration; we haven't had the benefit of a Rudy Giuliani to clean the city up. The two points you put forth are fairly accurate -- I don't think decriminalizing will hurt so much, and I think if the police were run effectively, we could (and should) still crack down on pimping, trafficking, etc. For such a small city I don't think the administration has a viable excuse for failing at this basic task.Still, even if you told me trafficking would increase twofold with legalized prostitution, bar none, I'd have a hard time voting 'no'. It's an issue of values -- I just don't think the government should be in anyone's bedroom. Period.[Edited on October 26, 2008 at 3:11 PM. Reason : foo]
10/26/2008 3:09:34 PM
I feel pretty strongly that prostitution should not be allowed without any regulation. I mean lets say a hooker has AIDS, but continues to prostitute. That is pretty disgusting to think about, is it not? I saw on Cops where the seargants go out looking for prostitutes and they can tell you the ones that have AIDS and are still working. Sometimes they bust a John letting one in his truck and tell the guy while they write him a ticket and hes like. As much as I hate beaurocracy, this is an area where some would be needed. I guess it could be compared to buying booze during prohibition, since it was illegal and production was not monitored people often died from toxic liquor. Or when people buy illicit drugs off the street and end up with a fatal dose because someone fucked up making it. The vices need regulation. Maybe an outright ban on them is wrong, but allowing them outright is not going to work either.<]
10/26/2008 3:18:49 PM
on the face of it, i think this initiative is a terribly bad idea(and its why i generally hate the initiative process that is prevalent on the West Coast. any knucklehead can craft an initiative -- no matter how retarded -- get the required signatures to put it on the ballot, then it becomes up for a popular vote. ) there's obviously no consideration of the woman here. its purely about allowing some groups to profit under the increased unregulated sex trade. it's a Pimp's dream.i dont have a problem with legalizing prostitution, but decriminalizing it without oversight will only cause more problems.
10/26/2008 3:40:39 PM
^^Your point is okay, but your example betrays it. The unsuspecting johns and the AIDS-infected prostitutes were all operating illegally. That scenario was going down when it was a criminalized activity, and they were all still engaged in it.Unless the argument is that scenarios like that will increase under decriminalization, I think we can safely decriminalize it and have things remain pretty much the same. Don't get me wrong...things are fucked up, but they'd be no different than before (except, of course, the risk of arrest).Anyway, I guess what I'm saying is that your first sentence is wrong, but your last sentence is right, and if it can go either way, why not let it go the way of decriminalization?^How will it cause more problems?
10/26/2008 4:18:02 PM
^because most prostitution is not your high-end Park Avenue Hookers, who have a fantasy life like Julia Roberts in "Pretty Woman".much of the day-to-day prostitution is street-level trick pulling where the women are typically started out as young teens victimised by sexual/phyiscal abuse -- often at the hands of a family member or someone close to the family (e.g., the mother's string of boyfriends)they usually become hooked up with an abusive pimp who keeps them physically dependent through a combination of fear, assaults, and/or drug addiction.prostitution is NOT some Milton Friedman fantasy land where entrepreneur independently work within framework of market demands. attempting to deregulate it by decriminalizing it, only serves to remove the ability of law enforcement to track down the pimp and the johns, and give (at least in theory) the woman connection to services that can help her escape an abusive cycle of dependence. I am in favor of legalizing and regulating. as that would actually protect the woman. merely decriminalizing it sweeps it under the rug.[Edited on October 26, 2008 at 4:34 PM. Reason : ]
10/26/2008 4:32:39 PM
^I'm familiar with the realities of prostitution. In my perfect world, it wouldn't exist.I'm just not clear on how decriminalization will lead to more problems (in a real world way). I see it on paper. But, in the real world, I don't think prostitutes benefit in any way from the way the system is set up now. They have less access to police protection because of the criminal nature of their job. They get arrested repeatedly, go through some program, and eventually wind up in prison. And pimps have been reliably escaping the law since forever.Legalizing it and regulating it would obviously improve the life of the prostiute, but it doesn't seem to me that decriminalization would make it that much worse than it is now. And, if we're to accept your ideas about the way things work now "in theory," then we could also assume that "in theory" decriminalization would shift the focus of resources from law enforcement/prostitution to social welfare/prostitution.
10/26/2008 5:14:43 PM
10/26/2008 5:37:20 PM
I was picking (perhaps unfairly) on Friedman as icon of libertarians, becasue this is the sort of argument put forth by proponents of the initiative: that women should be free to enter into entreprenurial endeavors without goverment attempting to execute moral legislation against their bodies and their free will... and such and such and so forth. we know the drill. and okay, so Friedman would then, I presume, support legalization with regulation? um, well, probably not so much for the regulation.... right?so, then Friedman must just plain be for out-and-out legalization?my point is that legalization, without regulation, would effectively leave the weaker (women) prey to the stronger (pimps), and that decriminalization without regulation would only be a half-measure to that "goal"i have no reason to believe police enforcement of anti-violence and anti-exploitation laws would in any way be more effective under libertarian policies than current. i suspect it may be even less effective.in any event, legalization without regulation is not necessarily any better than the current policy of criminalization with the purported goal of rehabilitation, and may be worse... with decriminalization a half-measure. Although i'm still considering Bridget's argument that decriminalizing would free up resources for services. services that would definitely not exist in Friedman's "perfect world"[Edited on October 26, 2008 at 6:49 PM. Reason : ]
10/26/2008 6:42:51 PM
10/26/2008 6:48:08 PM
10/26/2008 6:50:34 PM
^^ sorry, i edited my statement while you were responding:
10/26/2008 6:50:57 PM
okay DrSteveChaos,it's apparent that you are a breed of libertarian that is thoughtful and willing to compromise on the nature of government. in my (limited) experience such libertarians are in the minority.i know a bunch of libertarians who will call you a socialist of some stripe or another.they dont wear berets but they shoot a lot of guns and talk philosophically about militias and spend a lot of time in Eastern Washington and Northern Idaho.maybe they are more anarchist than libertarian?and then there's the parent's-basement-dwelling, comic-book-store-working, beret-wearing "libertarians" who parrot everything these "patriot" or "strict constitutionalist" types posti'll have to say, that i prefer your type.
10/26/2008 6:57:24 PM
Well there's minarchists and anarchists. I'm more of the former.But the fact remains - we're quibbling over tiny details in comparison the general scope of the problem. The fact is, making prostitution illegal causes serious social harms, despite the harms it's design to solve.Which and how many regulations we place upon a hypothetically legalized industry is just tiny in comparison.It's all about priorities.
10/26/2008 7:00:36 PM
okay, i agree with that.but i still dont think decriminalizing is going to help. I think it will hurt. because the fact is, the "services" that criminalizing purports to effect for first time offenders, or rehabilitation programs for repeat offenders... we all know this doesn't work very well, marginally increasing these services as a result of freeing up already stretched resources (from decriminalizing) will not help the problem any more. the problem will still remain, but instead of fearing police intervention, the thugs and the pimps will have almost free reign.the only way to effect meaningful change is legalization and strict regulation. i guess we can agree or disagree on the type and amount of regulations.but i believe we're in agreement on the larger point, that legalization is the only solution.[Edited on October 26, 2008 at 7:10 PM. Reason : ]
10/26/2008 7:09:22 PM
I think so. Smoker4 makes a valid point about whether the current problem is so endemic as to whether it could really get any worse (i.e., whether decriminalization could really bring any further harms which cancel out the gains from freed-up police resources), but the issue remains - I think we're all in agreement that decriminalization is half-assing it, and doesn't really solve any problems other than mis-allocating police resources.Legalization is really the only way you're going to actually solve the problems associated with prostitution.
10/26/2008 7:17:11 PM
10/26/2008 7:18:46 PM
10/26/2008 7:23:30 PM
[Edited on October 26, 2008 at 7:29 PM. Reason : dp]
10/26/2008 7:28:48 PM