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Should women who are arrested for prostitution have their names and addresses published in a local newspaper?

Results so far:

Yes
23% 123 votes Total: 530 votes
No
77% 407 votes

Yes

by Anncan

Created on: September 02, 2008

All we need to do is look to Africa for the evidence that this 'oldest profession' should also carry public notice as much as other sexual abuses. When/if our country comes under the same level of health threats that alone would justify the outing of 'things done in private'.

Another cavalier reason for opting that public record be maintained is to legalize it and tax it to benefit the economy. I would also lump into the mix those who avail themselves of the services. All sex partners should have health screenings and be certified as low/no risk if they are profitting from the bedroom employ. Tax the pimps too.

I don't know that newspapers are the only site for this posting. In smaller communities it would certainly claim the notice of the majority of the populace. It could also have the effect of shunning and could be a deterrent for such behavior. There is always the inherent risk of abusing innocent people and being tried by public opinion that is notorious for being misinformed. Slander and libel suits might shut down the court dockets.

Other sources of making public record would be a web site. This could also benefit the citizens who are regularly scammed by other felonies - fraud, bad checks, cleptomania, etc. This also holds true for pushers and illegal drug users.

Jails seem to be limited in the effectiveness of changing behaviors. Also, too many public dollars support the inmates while they put their heads together and figure more subtle schemems for applying their devious ways. We wouldn't allow any other body of employ to operate in such a was as to beat the system.

There is also another body of sexual offenders who seem to escape retribution. It seems to me that public elected officials who are outed for crimes of sex should get their walking papers. It could take a lot of policing to tame that animal. Much, much more could be written on the subject of those in public service who flaunt power and money to bypass these felonies.

I will admit that there is a moral compass here that is in jeopardy of abuse. As many persons as there are who betray poor choices in sexual behavior there are equal numbers of those who might slap the the red 'A' on persons who do not have access to legitmate trial. Public opinion is not a fair trial, regardless of the offense. The keepers of news media and internet must be held accountable for names splashed in headlines where families and relatives stand to be blighted by the publicity.

There will be those who abuse the power to launch a public record. Perhaps that should be the concern of those who engage in sexual affairs, though. That would be my main point that such outing NOT be limited to women. It takes two, regardless of the nature of the act. Let the ax fall on the purchasers as well as the providers. We have already seen the puritan pendulum swing against the populace without justice. That would be yet another mistake. Moral tenents are sagging in our day so some effort needs to be made to call a halt to sexual misconduct.

Yet another facet of this debate is taming the entertainment industry where much of the public attitude is fed.

What a dilemma we face. This will be a difficult animal to tame. Given its prominence in other histories and cultures, a public listing anywhere would seem to lack effectiveness.

Learn more about this author, Anncan.
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No

by Anne StClair

Created on: September 02, 2008   Last Updated: December 21, 2008

Should women who are arrested for prostitution have their names published? The idea is presumably that if the names are published then prostitutes will think twice about what they are doing, but the problem with the idea is that many prostitutes are desperate and have already thought long and hard about what they are doing. They are the real victims of prostitution.

Another kind of person that may become a prostitute is someone who is obsessed with sex. Would publishing their names discourage them from further prostitution? Possibly, but it may also become a badge of honour for such people, and might encourage them even more! If these people were likely to be embarrassed by their names being published, they would not be prostitutes in the first place.

Prostitutes either have little or no choice, or they have no qualms about how they make their money. In either case, they would not be likely to be affected by having their names published in the paper. The only people this could deter is women who are living double lives, such as women who look outwardly like happily married women with families, but who are involved secretly in prostitution, but it is usually desperation that drives them to prostitution in the first place.

Naming women prostitutes has actually been tried. See this article, for example. Naming the prostitutes meant that they were presented as criminals. It was a violation of their civil rights and it directly endangered the women and exposed them to the possibility of harassment or worse.

It is therefore unlikely that publishing the names of the women would have much effect on the prostitution rate, but it could endanger them.

Publishing the names of their customers, however, is a different story. Just imagine it: you open up your local newspaper to read as you munch on your breakfast, and there on the front page is a list of people who have paid prostitutes for sex. Included in the list could be the local bank manager, teacher, priest, doctor, policeman, politicians, the baker, butcher, and the guy next door.

Prostitution would probably die out almost immediately. If prostitution is illegal, it goes both ways, and it must surely be illegal to be a customer. Unlike the prostitutes, paying customers can hardly be considered victims, and therefore if anyone's name is published it should be their names.

If the intention of society is really to put an end to prostitution, then it makes more sense to leave the prostitutes (male as well as female) alone, and pursue the customers instead. Publishing the names and addresses of prostitutes would in many cases only serve to exacerbate their victimisation, and might actually increase prostitution, since the customers would know exactly where to go to find the prostitutes.

Prostitu tion, like any other business, operates on the principles of supply and demand. There will always be a supply of people so desperate, so drug addicted, so sex-obsessed, or with such low self-esteem, that they will offer themselves for prostitution - often because they have nothing else to sell but their bodies, and see no other way to make money. It is the demand end of the equation that should be tackled. The customers are rarely desperate, and would usually care a great deal if their names were published in the local newspapers.

The only way that prostitution will ever be wiped out is if the customers are named and shamed. They should be made to suffer the consequences of their actions. There will always be a supply of women who see no choice but to turn to prostitution, but they are the victims. If there were no customers, then prostitution would disappear.

Learn more about this author, Anne StClair.
Click here to send this author comments or questions.


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