After reading Janice G. Raymond’s “Ten Reasons for Not Legalizing Prostitution” it was easy for the reader to see that the author took a one-sided view of Legalized Prostitution. The author failed to recognize that the demand for sex is not just an economical or moral issue, but it is instinctual as well as hormonal. The instinctual demand for sex and procreation is as great as the demand for food and water and some members of or species have an uncontrollable urge for sex (Rapist).
The basic argument is as stated by ProsCons.Org: Proponents of legalizing prostitution believe it would reduce crime, improve public health, increase tax revenue, help people out of poverty, get prostitutes off the streets, and allow consenting adults to make their own …show more content…
The first point the author weakly discussed was the Taxation issue. The author and most governments fail to see the positive attribute of proper taxation of Legalized Prostitution. The money received from one of the most lucrative and oldest business known to men, could be used to wipe out sexually transmitted disease, socially take care of the women working in the trade, and to eliminate organized crime in the business. The profits from illegal prostitution is in the Billions of dollars, but legislator who have legalized prostitution failed to put in measurers that would eliminate the criminals from the business. A governments should not just make a blanket changes to the law by reversing it and saying to the operators you are no longer criminals, but business men, the criminal element is still present and will prevail. The government must take control of the business by ensuring that business owner are reputable and taxes are collected without impunity. The government must give law enforcement the financial and moral support to enforce the new laws and protect the employee of the