Prostitution is selling one’s body for sexual relations. There is a desire from politicians to see prostitution become legalized, but this would truly be a detrimental act because prostitution is a form of slavery due to women never being able to escape the prostitution lifestyle. Prostitution violates the fundamental human rights given to every citizen in America because prostitution objectifies women. Therefore, the practice of sexually exploiting women should not be legalized because; prostitution promotes sexual inequality, violence, and is interconnected to human trafficking.
Given that, prostitution would promote sexual inequality, legalization only plays on the idea of men having the power to buy and sell women …show more content…
Prostitution is payment for being sexually abused, dominated, and assaulted. However, the pimps and prostitutes involved in the prostitution cycle do not classify this behavior as exploitation. To explain this, there are many different theories among experts suggesting a series of brainwashing and control which is forcibly fed to women who are sexually sold. Most women who become prostitutes have a complicated history of sexual abuse as a child or were physically assaulted. The pimps then prey upon these psychotically battered women and shape them into needed the prostitution lifestyle. Melissa Farley states, “Prostituted women are unrecognized victims of intimate partner violence by pimps and customers” (103). The violence that society deems as acceptable to use against prostitutes only strengthens their thoughts of worthlessness and their roles solely as prostitutes. But, not only are prostitutes physically assaulted, they are scarred psychologically as well. The verbal abuse causes immediate psychological harm to the person acting as the recipient. Prostitutes eventually become the words the pimps and customers speak and do to …show more content…
Legalizing prostitution creates a simple solution for the organized crime network of traffickers to blend in and be seen by the government’s eyes as a normal business. The legalization of prostitution would solve economical problems but would in turn created social issues across the country and help further the already present human trafficking issue. Elaine Audet addresses, “Therefore, how can we invoke and tax the free use of one’s own body as a human right when the conditions in which prostitution is practiced are such as to violate explicitly the respect and dignity of the person recognized” (82). The government views the legalization of prostitution as good for the economy, and even worse, as path of development. According to the Washington Post, “More than eighty percent of the two thousand suspected incidents of human trafficking investigated by law enforcement agencies between January 2008 and June 2010 involved adult prostitution” (Neubauer). Despite these disturbing statistics, there are still individuals who would rather throw away morals rather than put an end to one of societies current issues of human trafficking. This tragic way of thinking could corrupt the modern society and make the act of abolishing sex slavery nearly impossible for generations to come. Prostitution and sex trafficking are indistinguishable; policies should