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Twoply

Why is prostitution illegal?

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Actually if you want the real answer (the way I believe it to be)


It's because back in the day there was no way to prevent spreading disease so they tried to crack down on prostitution as a way to prevent plagues and outbreaks.
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Unless there is a camera, then it's porn.

And a signed contract of some sort, if I've been told correctly. Funny what's protected by freedom of speech, including nude dancing.:D

If I have my history right, prostitution was legal in most towns and states until the end of the 1800's. The Victorian Era mores in our country brought a call for legislation against the oldest profession.

The argument that you can't tax it is invalid. In certain counties in Nevada, prostitution is legal, and quite well taxed.

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some ugly hosewives banned together and made it illegal just like the prohibition bitches. :S They couldn't get laid when there men were drunk because they were at the whore houses. B|

I'm not the rope totin charlie Bronson wanna be that's getting us fucking lost.

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Why? And don't say "Because the law says it is."



Excerpt from the History channel web site


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Prostitution in the U.S.

Beginning about 1910, religious and civic organizations in the U.S. developed a nationwide campaign against both the immorality of prostitution and its relationship to venereal disease. On the federal level, Congress passed the White Slave Traffic Act (Mann Act, 1910) forbidding the interstate transport of women and girls for immoral purposes. On the local level, many antiprostitution laws were passed. Some laws reflected the belief that prostitutes were misguided, coerced unfortunates who needed rehabilitation and protection from procurers. Others represented the view that prostitutes were morally or mentally inferior human beings. Although both kinds of laws still exist, the latter type is enforced today.

Prostitution in the U.S. in the late 20th century takes various forms. Some prostitutes, or “call girls,” operate out of their own apartments and maintain a list of regular customers. Some follow convention circuits or work in certain resort areas, such as Las Vegas, Nev., where demand for their services is high. Others work in so-called massage parlors, a newer version of the old-time brothel. The majority are “streetwalkers,” soliciting, or being solicited by, customers on city streets. Increasing numbers are young runaways to cities who turn to the streets for survival. Because the statutes are enforced in such a way as to punish overtness and visibility rather than any specific act, almost all of the prostitutes arrested each year are streetwalkers. Customers, although legally culpable, are rarely arrested.

Many prostitutes are managed by men known as pimps, who occasionally act as procurers and who usually take much of the money earned by the women in their “stables.” For the prostitute, the pimp often takes the place of a husband or father figure. He provides some measure of protection, arranges for bail when necessary, and often forms emotional attachments with the women who work for him.

...

A Worldwide Social Problem.

Prostitution exists almost everywhere; in 1985 a revival of the practice was even noted in China, where emphasis on equality between the sexes combined with government repression seemed to have eliminated the profession. The enforced prostitution of minors has become a focus of worldwide concern. A UN report in the early 1990s estimated that India had 2 million women in prostitution, of whom about 400,000 were below 18 years of age. The World Congress Against Commercial Sexual Exploitation of Children, held in Stockholm in 1996, focused attention on the estimated 1 million children who enter the sex trade each year, many as the result of coercion.

The U.S. remains one of the few countries with laws against prostitution. In other nations, criminal laws seek instead to deal with the social problems of prostitution through control of public solicitation and restriction of those who would coerce and exploit prostitutes or force children into prostitution. The prevalence of the HIV virus, which causes ACQUIRED IMMUNE DEFICIENCY SYNDROME (q.v.), among prostitutes has caused renewed concern about the problem of prostitution in recent years. J.J., JENNIFER JAMES, Ph.D.


Tact is not my specialty.....

Dirty Sanchez #453

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Bloody hell here in melb Australia its perfectly legal in licencsed brothels. (not legal for street walkers) Yes the girls pay tax have medical checks and condoms of course. The owners have strong crimainal record checks. No one even thinks about it anymore its just a fact of life.

There are even brothels in alot of suburbs (not in
housing areas ) The local neswpaper even carries adds. $120 for 45 minutes. (never mentions sex but everyone knows what they mean.) It does society a service men go and pay for it.. the girls earn money they are consenting pretty civilised I think and NO I have not been to one but have plenty of single friends who go. Prob about time the USA went legal but I doubt whether you folks (with the strong religious right) could get the law change up. Good luck with Pres Obama I hope it goes well for him and you.
I tend to be a bit different. enjoyed my time in the sport or is it an industry these days ??

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Why? And don't say "Because the law says it is."



Excerpt from the History channel web site


Quote

Prostitution in the U.S.

Beginning about 1910, religious and civic organizations in the U.S. developed a nationwide campaign against both the immorality of prostitution and its relationship to venereal disease. On the federal level, Congress passed the White Slave Traffic Act (Mann Act, 1910) forbidding the interstate transport of women and girls for immoral purposes. On the local level, many antiprostitution laws were passed. Some laws reflected the belief that prostitutes were misguided, coerced unfortunates who needed rehabilitation and protection from procurers. Others represented the view that prostitutes were morally or mentally inferior human beings. Although both kinds of laws still exist, the latter type is enforced today.

Prostitution in the U.S. in the late 20th century takes various forms. Some prostitutes, or “call girls,” operate out of their own apartments and maintain a list of regular customers. Some follow convention circuits or work in certain resort areas, such as Las Vegas, Nev., where demand for their services is high. Others work in so-called massage parlors, a newer version of the old-time brothel. The majority are “streetwalkers,” soliciting, or being solicited by, customers on city streets. Increasing numbers are young runaways to cities who turn to the streets for survival. Because the statutes are enforced in such a way as to punish overtness and visibility rather than any specific act, almost all of the prostitutes arrested each year are streetwalkers. Customers, although legally culpable, are rarely arrested.

Many prostitutes are managed by men known as pimps, who occasionally act as procurers and who usually take much of the money earned by the women in their “stables.” For the prostitute, the pimp often takes the place of a husband or father figure. He provides some measure of protection, arranges for bail when necessary, and often forms emotional attachments with the women who work for him.

...

A Worldwide Social Problem.

Prostitution exists almost everywhere; in 1985 a revival of the practice was even noted in China, where emphasis on equality between the sexes combined with government repression seemed to have eliminated the profession. The enforced prostitution of minors has become a focus of worldwide concern. A UN report in the early 1990s estimated that India had 2 million women in prostitution, of whom about 400,000 were below 18 years of age. The World Congress Against Commercial Sexual Exploitation of Children, held in Stockholm in 1996, focused attention on the estimated 1 million children who enter the sex trade each year, many as the result of coercion.

The U.S. remains one of the few countries with laws against prostitution. In other nations, criminal laws seek instead to deal with the social problems of prostitution through control of public solicitation and restriction of those who would coerce and exploit prostitutes or force children into prostitution. The prevalence of the HIV virus, which causes ACQUIRED IMMUNE DEFICIENCY SYNDROME (q.v.), among prostitutes has caused renewed concern about the problem of prostitution in recent years. J.J., JENNIFER JAMES, Ph.D.




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blah blah blah. because women didn't like there husbands getting sex elswhere. because then they couldn't have the pussy power. :P oh and gays are spreading diseases too. and are immoral. I think we should ban that as well. [:/] by the way don't take my posts serious. :P

I'm not the rope totin charlie Bronson wanna be that's getting us fucking lost.

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Hi Nightingale,

+1 as there is no reason in my mind why it shouldn't be legal.

Works pretty good in Europe, just make sure you ask to see their health card. :S

JerryBaumchen



+2

Legalize both prostitution and drugs. In this economy we could use the new source of taxable income. Turn all of those vice cops and DEA into tax enforcers.
Stupidity if left untreated is self-correcting
If ya can't be good, look good, if that fails, make 'em laugh.

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Why? And don't say "Because the law says it is."

in my country it's not illegal. Wanna come ?


even streetworkers are not illegal. only problem is doing the job without a work-visa.. :P
“Some may never live, but the crazy never die.”
-Hunter S. Thompson
"No. Try not. Do... or do not. There is no try."
-Yoda

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