Thursday, July 10, 2014

Margaret Wente Weighs In on the "Quaint" Idea That Renting Out One's Orifices Has Anything to Do With Morality (Or the Absence Thereof)

Wente writes re the overheated reaction to the Conservative government's prostitution legislation (which she concedes is flawed, but which she says at least endeavors to do something constructive):
Many sassy young progressive commentators (including women) assume that prostitution is like marijuana – that the moral issues are as outdated as hoop skirts, and anyone who thinks otherwise is an uptight reactionary old prude. After all, women should have a right to do whatever they want with their own bodies, and what happens between two consenting adults is nobody else’s business. Prostitutes are no different from piano teachers, so get over it! They sound like Hugh Hefner circa 1962. Personally, I eagerly await the day when these women’s husbands come home and say, “Sorry I’m late, honey, I stopped off on the way for a blow job.” I am sure they’ll think nothing of it.
The "consenting adults" trope fails to pass muster when one of the "adults" (the one renting out her orifices) is a drug addict, or is being trafficked by a member of an organized crime syndicate, or isn't an adult but is a runaway teenager.

2 comments:

Carlos Perera said...

Many--perhaps most--prostitutes around the world are slaves of their pimps. And it is an unbelievably degrading form of slavery, with horrible long-term consequences for the unfortunate girls and women (and sometimes boys) who are caught up in its web. (I know from having had to rehabilitate--physically--several such unfortunates who had to be hospitalized in the advanced stages of AIDS). As the father of two daughters, I can say that the notion that one of them might end up enslaved by a pimp provided the theme of my worst nightmares.

Sadly, many television shows and movies have, over the past forty-five years or so, promoted the narrative of the "Happy Hooker," who revels in her trade (and seems to be having way too much fun to be charging for her services). I believe that the fiction, not the reality, of a prostitute's life, is what has created the accepting attitude of the trade now held by a large portion of the public.

scaramouche said...

Selling your sexual services being sold as just another career choice--like, say, becoming a realtor or a dental hygienist? Sorry, I don't buy it.