Objective: To ensure safety, dignity, and economic empowerment for women by creating a regulated environment that reduces crime, trafficking, and health risks.
Key Benefits
Increased Safety and Autonomy for Women
Women would work independently or within licensed establishments, free from coercion, violence, or exploitation by pimps or traffickers.
Women will have control over their work conditions, ensuring a safer, more dignified environment.
Health Protection
Regular health checks will be required, significantly reducing the risk of sexually transmitted diseases for both companions and clients. Addiction support and rehabilitation services will also be available.
Economic Independence and Fair Compensation
Women will be able to earn fair wages, declare their income, and pay taxes on clean, legal earnings. This provides financial security and opens access to health insurance and retirement benefits.
Reduction in Crime and Trafficking
Revenue generated from legal companionship services will fund programs to combat human trafficking and support law enforcement efforts, helping reduce related criminal activity.
By establishing safe and legal opportunities, the bill discourages illegal operations and trafficking, empowering women to work without fear of exploitation.
Positive Economic Impact
Tax revenue from licensed companions will contribute to community welfare, fund anti-trafficking initiatives, and provide resources for addiction and rehabilitation programs.
Summary:
This proposal aims to create a legal, safe, and supportive framework for licensed companionship, empowering women, reducing disease risk, and tackling trafficking and crime. It provides financial benefits to individuals and communities while ensuring that all work is conducted safely and transparently.
You are wrong!!!
Making prostitution illegal doesn’t make it disappear (!!!)—it just forces it underground, where women face more danger, disease, and exploitation. Locking up women doesn’t solve the root problems; it punishes them for choices they often make out of necessity and leaves them trapped in a cycle of risk.
A regulated system would protect women’s safety and health, giving them real control over their work without the fear of pimps, violence, or trafficking. It would allow us to focus on targeting traffickers and criminals rather than vulnerable women, who deserve options, safety, and independence. Plus, the tax revenue generated could directly fund support programs to help those who want new opportunities, and get people off drugs without criminalizing them.
Instead of perpetuating the risks and stigma, let’s create a structure that protects both women and communities. By regulating rather than criminalizing, we’re empowering women rather than punishing them.
HELL NO! Look at how much worse our society has become from porn and more recently, sites like only fans! We do NOT need or want legal prostitutes. America, and the rest of the civilized world was doing SO much better when we stood for traditional marriage and family values.
Now people are acting like a bunch of degenerates who dont care about anything but themselves. I mean, Kamala’s WHOLE campaign was pretty much about having the right to murder their own babies and you see how many women voted for her.
Abortion needs to be banned, but if prostitution was legal we’d only end up seeing more of it happening.
16 These six things doth the Lord hate: yea, seven are an abomination unto him:
17 A proud look, a lying tongue, and hands that shed innocent blood,
18 An heart that deviseth wicked imaginations, feet that be swift in running to mischief,
19 A false witness that speaketh lies, and he that soweth discord among brethren.
I respect your values, but the reality is that criminalizing prostitution only pushes it underground, where women face greater risks of violence, disease, and exploitation. Legal regulation isn’t about promoting immorality—it’s about keeping people safe.
By making it legal and regulated, we could offer health checks, addiction support, and safer conditions, protecting vulnerable women and giving them real options. If we want fewer people in these situations, driving it underground only makes things worse.
Think about it, it’s happening already, you can’t and won’t be able to stop it by criminalizing it, mind as well help them make it right
I understand your perspective, but I disagree with the idea that legalizing prostitution would make it safer or better for society. Even in places where prostitution is legal and regulated, issues like exploitation, trafficking, and abuse persist. In fact, legalization often creates a larger demand, which fuels illegal activities and makes it harder to protect vulnerable women.
Driving an immoral act ‘underground’ doesn’t justify normalizing it. Instead, we should focus on addressing the root causes—poverty, addiction, and exploitation—and providing resources for those trapped in this cycle to escape it entirely.
Legalizing prostitution wouldn’t ‘make it right.’ It would send the message that exploitation and the commodification of human dignity are acceptable. Our laws should reflect and uphold the values of a society that prioritizes human worth and well-being over profit or convenience. Helping people shouldn’t mean compromising on what’s right.
Also, attacking someone with personal insults and hateful remarks—like what you directed at Nancy—says more about your character than about the issue being discussed. Constructive debate is possible without resorting to demeaning others. Let’s try to keep the conversation respectful.