Critical Thinking Paper Final Draft
Critical Thinking Paper Final Draft
Critical Thinking Paper Final Draft
Ms. Russell
CAP 10 Interdisciplinary
3 June 2019
Introduction
something that allows a woman to take a hold of her sexuality and use it to support herself
financially. However, is it really all it is made out to be? Prostitution as a career is objectifying,
degrading; and dangerous, and does more harm than good to those seeking to enter the so called
profession, along with women around the world. Legalization efforts around the world have
gained much ground, with Amnesty International publishing its policy which “makes several
calls on governments for them to ensure protection from harm, exploitation and coercion; the
participation of sex workers in the development of laws that affect their lives and safety”
(Amnesty International). However, this is not where the solution to protecting women lies; it lies
in the strengthening of the illegalization of prostitution. Sex work must remain illegal in the state
of Maryland because it degrades, objectifies, and endangers women by calcifying a toxic culture.
In relation to that toxic culture, it perpetuates false notions of consent, and almost like a cherry
glitzy, pampered lifestyle, something one might see in Pretty Woman. However, this couldnt be
farther from the truth. Rachel Moran, a former sex worker and the founder of Space
International, an advocacy group for abolition of the sex trade, wrote an opinion piece in the
New York Times, writing “I cringe when I hear the words ‘sex work.’ Selling my body wasn’t a
strangers’ using my body to satiate their urges. I was doubly exploited — by those who pimped
me and those who bought me” (Moran). Not only are prostitutes exploited, but they are reduced
to be viewed as mere objects, almost like dolls and nothing more, as if they don’t have the same
value as someone who is not a sex worker. Women in the sex trade are viewed as “intrinsically
different from other women and as morally deficient. Sex buyers justify prostitution by telling us
that she’s getting rich or that she’s simply doing an unpleasant but necessary job like factory
work” (Farley). This alone should be cause enough to ensure that prostitution remains illegal.
Germany serves as prime example of the conditions sex workers face. From twelve-story
mega-brothels, to road side ‘sex stops’, to virtual prostitution, there’s quite an assortment
present. Herbert Krauleidis, the owner of Gesext.de (also known as EBay for sex) was featured
in an article in the Telegraph. He describes his new plan for “ a new mobile app... called Touch
& Sex. ‘So you check into a hotel and look at your smart phone, you choose a woman,’ – ‘like a
pizza,’ Krauleidis interrupts, absent-mindedly scrolling through his emails” (Liu). Under no
circumstances should a woman’s body be compared to or viewed the same way as a piece of
pizza. They are not prizes to be won or commodities to be bought, they are human beings, and
Endangerment of Women
As if it wasn’t enough for sex workers to be treated with the same amount of respect as a
Happy Meal, they are also put at risk of great physical danger. In an auto-biographic piece in
BBC, a former unwilling sex worker named Brenda Myers-Powell remarks “the johns - the
clients - are violent. I've been shot five times, stabbed 13 times. I don't know why those men
attacked me, all I know is that society made it comfortable for them to do so” (Myers-Powell). It
is quite difficult to comprehend that there is a way for this violence to be put to a stop, all that is
needed is a firmer stance against sex work, and countless assault cases could be prevented. The
case of Brenda Myers-Powell is not an isolated incident. A mid-1990s study on 130 prostitutes
located in San-Francisco found that “of those who had been physically assualted… 88% had
been physically threatened while in prostitution, and 83% had been physically threatened with a
weapon. 68% reported having been raped since entering prostitution, 48% had been raped more
than five times” (Lowen). The physical and mental trauma that sex workers endure far outweighs
All of the aforementioned facts and statistics are alike in the sense that every single one
of these acts performed against the prostitutes is permissible. Brenda Myers-Powell wrote: “I
don’t know why these men attacked me, all I know is that society made it comfortable for them
to do so.” If prostitution was legalized, this type of ‘permission’ would be set into law. Citizens
of Maryland would be plunged into a society where women are viewed as nothing more than
objects who can be bought and sold, where physical and sexual abuse of these women is not only
normalized but not frowned upon. Men and women alike must ask themselves the question: is
this really worth it? Is paying for a physical act that in itself is meant to be a respectful, intimate
interaction between a man and a woman worth the degredation, the abuse, and the
objectification? No, it is not. Hypothetically, one could argue that legalization would allow room
for regulation, which would in turn put a stop to the acts of violence. That’s all fine and dandy,
but that doesn’t mean that women want to be looked at like a bag of Cheetos. And even with the
prospect of regulation, sex workers are still in danger of being attacked, no law will stop that.
The now widely spread sentiment is that “This harmful cultural practice is one aspect of the
oppression of women and a form of men’s violence that has to be brought to an end” (Jeffreys).
According to Boston University, proponents of legalization assume that most paid sexual
encounters are entirely consensual, and in association with that, they problematically accept the
argument that people in dire poverty who sell sex with no other option have given their full
consent (“Decriminalizing Prostitution Won’t Solve Social, Ethical Problems”). The issue of
consent plays a crucial role in the sex work debate, but unfortunately, the term has been falsely
interpreted on an incredibly wide scale, in turn incorrectly contributing to the argument that
prostitution should be legalized. Under this argument, it is assumed that the sex worker gives
their full consent when engaging with a client. However, it must be realized that “Prostitution
occurs because the person being consumed as product would not consent to sex with the buyer
unless he paid for it” (Farley). In her paper outlining the risks of prostitution, Melissa Farley says
that “... It’s like someone jumping from a burning building- you could say they made their choice
to jump, but you could also say they had no choice.” (Farley) By this more accurate standard, it’s
easy to see just how deadly prositution is to the concept of consent, and that “consent to violation
between sex workers and a childhood history of sex abuse. Brenda Myers-Powell serves as an
example. Starting at the age of 4, Myers-Powell was molested, and by the age of 14 she had had
two daughters. She said that “I became the kind of girl that didn’t know how to say no- if the
little boys in the community said that they liked me or treated me nice, they could basically have
their way with me…” When talking about the first time she learned what a prostitute was,
Myers-Powell remarked that “One day I asked my grandmother what the women were doing and
she said, ‘Those women take their panties off and men give them money.’ And I remember
saying to myself, ‘I'll probably do that’ because men had already been taking my panties off.”
This is only one example of how women who are sexually abused as children, in time, drift into
the sex work industry, because they never learned what consent really looks like as a result of
their trauma. Referring back to the study conducted on the San Francisco prostitutes, 57%
reported a childhood history of sexual abuse, and 49% reported that they had been hit or beaten
by a caregiver until they had bruises or were injured in some way. To the question regarding
childhood sexual abuse, one woman (whose history was known to one of the interviewers) said
“Because there was no force, and besides, I didn’t even know what it was then- I didn’t know it
was sex” (Lowen). Based on this statistic, more than half of women in the prostitution industry
faced sexual abuse as a child, and then went on to have sex work as a career. The linkage is as
clear as it is damaging. To legalize the sex work industry would be to acknowledge and affirm
the influx of sexually abused women into the industry, which is immoral and destructive.
Victims of sexual abuse have already been through trauma, and for the trauma then to continue
in a different form of endangerment and objectification is inhumane. Briefly going back to Ms.
Myers-Powell, this section will end in a question, which is “Under what circumstances would a
woman turn to prostitution? What ideas does a woman have to have about her body and her
Human Trafficking
The final outstanding reason as to why prostitution should remain illegal in the state of
Maryland is its contribution to human trafficking, “the problem of trafficking of women into debt
bondage, a modern form of slavery, segues seamlessly into prostitution” (Jeffreys). Trafficking is
more likely and more prominent in countries where prostitution is legal, since “for a trafficker
it’s much easier to go to a country where it’s legal to have brothels and it’s legal to manage
people in prostitution. It’s just a more attractive environment” (Dilia). To legalize prostitution
would be to make it easier for traffickers to sneak their victims in under the radar, since selling
and buying sex would be legal. The argument has been made that by legalizing prostitution, a
crackdown could be issued on human trafficking through regulations and bylaws. However, in a
development studies, “Countries with legalized prostitution are associated with higher human
trafficking inflows than countries where prostitution is prohibited. The scale effect of legalizing
prostitution, i.e. expansion of the market, outweighs the substitution effect, where legal sex
workers are favored over illegal workers. On average, countries with legalized prostitution report
a greater incidence of human trafficking inflows” and “The effect of legal prostitution on human
trafficking for the purpose of sexual exploitation requires that clients in a potential destination
country have sufficient purchasing power, domestic supply acts as a constraint” (Harvard Law
School). The United States is a wealthy country, and according to Business Insider, Maryland is
well within the top ten for the U.S.’s wealthiest states (Kiersz). Combining the knowledge of
Maryland’s wealth with the information provided by Harvard Law School, it is clear that if
prostitution was made legal here in this particular state, the effects on human trafficking would
be dastardly, especially in places like Baltimore, or even D.C., which lies right next to Maryland.
Going back to the issue of human trafficking, Denmark and Spain are prime examples of
why prostitution should remain illegal. 90% of the 50,000 prostituted women in Madrid alone are
immigrants, and 70% of those women are trafficked (Dilia). That is 31,500 women, taken from
the comfort and security of their homes and forced into violent, nonconsensual sexual
“the same year Sweden made the purchase of sex illegal- [and now] has four times the number of
trafficking victims than [Sweden] having around half the population” (Dilia). In addition to
amplifying human trafficking, legalizing prostitution in other countries has also brought down
the value of areas where prostitution becomes common. “Amsterdam (who legalized prostitution
in 2000) is now shutting down much of its red light district in an attempt to make working
conditions better for those who aren’t sex workers, who are being abused and ‘gawped’ by
tourists, and to change the face of the city, which is now infamous for it’s cannabis distribution
and sex industry… ‘legal attracts illegal’” (Moran). Maryland does not the same reputation as the
red light district. Said reputation lead to the deterioration of a once famous area, now rotted away
because of prostitution.
prostitution, lawmakers have the chance to regulate it, making it safer for the workers. However,
there are multiple reasons why this argument is incorrect. First and foremost, in this scenario,
objectification cannot be regulated. In Germany, there is an app b eing made which allows men to
choose women “like a pizza” (Dilia). The only reason that things like this are happening are
because in places like Germany have made it legal. The United States has a long, in depth history
with gender inequity, and to legalize prostitution would be to take a major step backwards in
reversing all the damage and violence that has occurred against women. Lawmakers must not let
Maryland policy allow the state’s social standards to slide back into the 1950’s. Women are not
property. On the topic of property, it will be reiterated for a final time: legalizing prostitution
strengthens the human trafficking industry, which is currently worth $32 billion, second only to
illicit drugs, and currently has a span of 27 million victims. The issue is large enough as it is, and
Maryland should not play any role in aggrandizing it. It is also assured that no one (besides
Nothing about gender-based violence and degredation is empowering. Saying that sex
work empowers women is nothing more than a facade, the truth lying beyond its guilded
appearance. From a glance, it would seem that prostitution is all about a woman’s right to choose
what she would like to do with her body, and that she should have the power to make that
decision for herself. In a perfect world, this would be the case. But unfortunately, that isn’t even
near the truth. Sex work runs so much deeper than that, it is irreversibly tied to so many harmful
issues that to legalize it would bring all those other issues to the surface, allowing them to take a
Conclusion
Because the legalization and decriminalization of sex work would provide a new form of
objectification and endangerment for women, perpetuate a toxic culture, and amplify human
trafficking, prostitution laws in Maryland should remain as they are and be enforced with a
higher degree of strictness. Because prostitution already goes on illegally, there needs to be a
stricter enforcement of anti-sex work laws, targeting the pimps and the clients instead of the
prostitutes, which is not where the problem lies. Such vile acts against women cannot be allowed
to proceed, and it is in the best interest of men and women alike to keep it illegal. If one stands
for the rights of a woman, if one truly believes that women do not deserve to be degraded or
looked down upon as nothing more than an object, one cannot stand in favor of prostitution.
Works Cited
"Amnesty International Publishes Policy and Research on Protection of Sex Workers' Rights."
www.amnesty.org/en/latest/news/2016/05/amnesty-international-publishes-policy-and-re
"Decriminalizing Prostitution Won't Solve Social, Ethical Problems." Boston University School
Garsd, Jasmine. "Should Sex Work Be Decriminalized? Some Activists Say It's Time." NPR,
www.npr.org/2019/03/22/705354179/should-sex-work-be-decriminalized-some-activists-
Harvard Law School. "Does Legalized Prostitution Increase Human Trafficking?" Harvard Law
orgs.law.harvard.edu/lids/2014/06/12/does-legalized-prostitution-increase-human-traffick
Jeffreys, Sheila. The Idea of Prostitution. Spinifex Press, 2008. Google Scholar,
books.google.com/books?hl=en&lr=&id=JRrU0uZerX4C&oi=fnd&pg=PR7&dq=prostit
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Kiersz, Andy. "Every US State Economy from Worst to Best." Business Insider, 15 Mar. 2018,
www.businessinsider.com/state-economy-ranking-q1-2018-2#11-oregon-41. Accessed 28
May 2019.
Liu, Nisha Dilia. "Welcome to Paradise: Inside the World of Legalized Prostitution." The
14 May 2019.
www.thoughtco.com/prostitution-statistics-rape-physical-abuse-3534139. Accessed 15
May 2019.
Moran, Rachel. "Buying Sex Should Not Be Legal." New York Times [New York], 28 Aug.
2015, www.nytimes.com/2015/08/29/opinion/buying-sex-should-not-be-legal.html.