I had sex with Timedog the other night after he bought me dinner. Explain to me how this isn't prostitution.
In order for that to be a comparison, you would have to be engaged in an explicit contract where you exchanged dinner for sex.
I assume that is not the case?
WHY is sex in your view particularly "special" that it should be singled out in this way? Asserting that it is would seem to beg the question.
In a general sense I believe that most societies view this to be self evident. Sex is not the same thing as scratching one's nose or manual labour. This is of course a social construct, but that being the case does not make it any less real. Sex is something imbued with significance, individually, socially, politically, so it is special because of that significance.
Hence the distinction in the law, as previously argued, and not yet rebuffed, between rape and assault. Do you view this distinction as this same kind of illogical making of sex 'special'.
It seems to me that the mysticism around sex has been a HUGE problem in western society, particularly the US leading to shaming, fear mongering, and the spread of misinformation on a variety of topics. Sex is an intimate act that is special for the participants but it is no more special beyond that then anything else.
I don't know that the answer to this apparent mysticism is the turning of sex into a market commodity. I don't think that the kind of shame associated with sex in Christendom has anything in particular to do with the discussion at hand.
That's not true at all. There are women (and men) who choose, 100% voluntarily, to work in the sex industry. A broad generalization.
Not sure how to respond with this but to suggest you re-read what I said.
This may be the case for some, but not all. Coercion in general is something always tied in with sex work, illegal or otherwise.
It is right there, staring you in the face.
Not all johns are inherently evil, not by a long shot.
Who mentioned them being inherently evil? I certainly didn't. I said that in my experience, and in my research, a large amount of them... in fact, in my experience anyway, without exception, were mysogynists. Like the dog comment made somewhere earlier.
I didn't say that there are those who aren't mysogynysts.. just that from what I understand I can only assume that such men are in the minority.
This is simply not true. It turns sex, a physical act, into a service. It is no different than any other service industry in that regard.
That is my point. It becomes nothing more than any other service industry.
I ask that same question, which people seem unable to answer, are those who are for the legalisation of prostitution also for the reclassification of rape as assault or armed robbery?
If you ever had sex with anyone you're trading something. Access granted to your genitals is fine via dinner, drinks at a bar, a relationship but money? How dare you.
And you say I have an unhealthy attitude towards sex...
If there's a wind, the idealist will try to change the weather while the realist will simply adjust her sails (heavily modified William Arthur Ward quote). It's pretty clear which type of person you're arguing with here.
Sometimes I wish I had the liberty to replace cogent argument with personal jabs. Would make life much easier.