A Washington, D.C. city councilmember has introduced a bill that would decriminalize prostitution:
D.C. Councilmember David Grosso is behind a bill that would decriminalize prostitution, arguing it's in keeping with his advocacy for human rights and marginalized communities. "We basically criminalize too many activities," Grosso argued in a recent news conference. "It is time for the District of Columbia to reconsider the framework in which we handle commercial sex work, and move from one of criminalization to a focus on human rights, health and safety."
Grosso says he worked with the Sex Worker Advocates Coalition, and followed recommendations from a variety of human rights organizations from around the world as he drafted the bill. "The bill is quite simple, really," argues Grosso. "It repeals a number of laws or parts of laws that criminalize adults for exchanging consensual sex for money or other things of value." "By removing criminal penalties for those in the sex trade, we can bring people out of the shadows, help them lead safer and healthier lives, and more easily tackle the complaints we hear from communities about trash or other nuisances."
If passed, D.C. would become the only city in the U.S. to decriminalize prostitution:
While prostitution has been legal in some parts of Nevada in the form of brothels for more than a century, what's often called "the world's oldest profession" remains criminalized in the rest of the United States. An effort to decriminalize prostitution via referendum in San Francisco failed in 2008, after heavy criticism from city officials at the time. Kamala Harris, then the city's district attorney and now a rising star senator, said the measure "would put a welcome mat out for pimps and prostitutes to come on into San Francisco."
But in the near decade since then, there's been a shift in perspective alongside a growing international movement further popularizing the policy change that sheds stigma in favor of pragmatism. The idea is that if sex workers don't fear arrest, they'll be able to access healthcare and other services. One 2014 study from The Lancet found that decriminalizing sex work could "have the largest effect on the course of the H.I.V. epidemic."
Reducing Criminalization to Improve Community Health & Safety Amendment Act of 2017
Also at Reason. Grosso press release at Scribd. HIPS.
(Score: 2) by Runaway1956 on Wednesday October 11 2017, @01:32PM (1 child)
All I see is c0lo making some wind. The post, and it's subsequent explanation are without meaning, and irrelevant to my own post. FFS, I distinguished between prostitution and real crimes. Victimless crimes, vs muggers, robbers, rapists, etc.
BTW - I haven't lived my life on this little bit of acreage. My wife has spent most of her life here, but not me. What, you thought I was just a simple farm boy? Come on, c0lo, try to keep up.
(Score: 2) by c0lo on Wednesday October 11 2017, @09:07PM
If course it was irrelevant to your post, I admitted by marking it OT
A note to myself: Runaway may be occasionally calling those with violent tendencies with the milder appellate of riffraff (the lowest of the low, in the underclass).
Next time I'll ask, just to make sure I get what the meaning the way he intended.
Nope, I actually thought that you bought that property as a quiet place to retire from the previous stressful life.
(does it make any difference, though, on the effects the riffraff in Washington DC or San Francisco have on your life?)
(does it make any difference on the fact that judging people creates division and consumes the oxygen in useless fights between "us and them"?)
(if you ask yourself these questions, that would be enough for me, I expect no answers)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aoFiw2jMy-0 https://soylentnews.org/~MichaelDavidCrawford