Originally posted by Hand of HecateSurely prostitutes should be granted union recognition, worker's rights, a better deal from their earnings than that they now get and equally surely, shouldn't they be paying taxes?
Come on now, surely a little in and out ain't nothin' to get excited about.
So, I agree with you, legalise it!
Originally posted by kmax87How can even Dutch people think Amsterdam is boring?
I suppose for a foreigner to the place it must be like being a kid in a candy shop. All I am going on is people Ive met from Holland.
I bet 10 to a penny (whatever the hell that means) that they've never visited the small gallaries in the Jordaan then.
Originally posted by der schwarze RitterOnly child ---- says it all then ,your parents after having you certainly didn't want to take the risk of having another who turned out like you .
Three false assumptions: I don't work as a farmer, Texas is not considered part of the "Deep South," and I don’t date my sister because I was born an only child. Here are three things I know for certain about you: You're a very disagreeable person, you have a real hard-on for me because you keep cyberstalking me, and you believe the sky is falling, you schmuck.
It was recently legalised here. The women working in the industry are safer, the conditions are improved, the authorities have been able to crack down on people working outside of the regulations (worker's rights, underage girls etc.) easier and our daughters, wives, sisters and mothers haven't all run out to start walking the streets.
So you believe that government license makes the world’s oldest profession better? Perhaps, but I’d wager that they still live broken, chaotic and desperate lives. And there’s a price to be paid by the community, for when we debase and objectify women by allowing them to enter this line of work, then the higher values of civilization -- love, friendship and trust are lost. None of these values are found in objects, only in human beings.
Originally posted by der schwarze RitterI haven't seen a shred of evidence of any of that.
So you believe that government license makes the world’s oldest profession better? Perhaps, but I’d wager that they still live broken, chaotic and desperate lives. And there’s a price to be paid by the community, for when we debase and objectify women by allowing them to enter this line of work, then the higher values of civilization -- love, friendship and trust are lost. None of these values are found in objects, only in human beings.
Originally posted by der schwarze RitterI think it debases women far more when we deny them their freedom simply because we don't like the choices they make.
So you believe that government license makes the world’s oldest profession better? Perhaps, but I’d wager that they still live broken, chaotic and desperate lives. And there’s a price to be paid by the community, for when we debase and objectify women by allowing them to enter this line of work, then the higher values of civilization -- love, friendship and trust are lost. None of these values are found in objects, only in human beings.
Originally posted by XanthosNZMakes sense. Also reminds me of the Jewish pawnbroker who said to a prostitute aquaintance " Vot a business you haf. You sell it and you still got it"
It was recently legalised here. The women working in the industry are safer, the conditions are improved, the authorities have been able to crack down on people working outside of the regulations (worker's rights, underage girls etc.) easier and our daughters, wives, sisters and mothers haven't all run out to start walking the streets.