Question : Isn't this sort of opposition a little impractical? What are we going to do about the oversexed perverts out there who can't find anyone, and end up raping someone when they find that they can't get their needs met?



Answer : Several points come to mind ...


1. Let us note that the communities in which the laws against prostitution have been decisively enforced have scarcely become hotbeds of rape. In fact, they haven't even attained the incidences of rape common in those places in which the institution have enjoyed the sort of de facto legalisation seen in the major cities, where the law has been effectively repealed through the minimal character of its enforcement.

While it is true that one might argue that a high incidence of rape might incline law enforcement to look the other way when dealing with an illegal activity that contributes to lowering that statistic, it would be quite hard to argue that small town America has ever had a shortage of oversexed perverts. Given this, where is the bumper crop of rapes that this theory would predict?


2. Quite the contrary, by granting the potential rapist access to a woman who doesn't really want him, this institution helps get him used to the notion that he can have a woman who doesn't want him. This might lessen his reluctance to take by force, that which it might have never occured to him might be his for the taking.


3. Beyond this, we have the intensely troubling notion that it is OK to take an unfortunate individual, almost at random, it would seem, and toss her to the wolves in order to buy the other women an added margin of safety. The fact that the coercion would be economic rather than directly physical, would make the effects of the coercion no different and certainly no less real.

Even if the argument were correct in its predictions about human behavior, would it be morally permissible to reduce the probability that the typical woman would be forced into a sexual encounter which she didn't want by trading it for the certainty that a relatively few unfortunate women be forced into a lengthy string of sexual encounters that they didn't want? By taking the burden off of the shoulders of the many and dumping all of it onto those of the often unwilling few, rather than having it be borne by all equally? What of equity?


4. For that matter, once one simply accepts this sort of violation as a business transaction, what happens to the notion of crime prevention, and the protection of the possible victim, once one defines the crime away in this fashion, by disguising it as "free" trade? How does one begin to address a problem of violence, in a legal sense, once one creates a loophole of this nature? Is it the responsibility of the law to protect the defenseless, or is it adequate for it to merely create the illusion that they've been defended?