Quote from: SourCandy on June 23, 2012, 10:11:10 PM
I agree, and I know... Like I get that at some point people have to do what they have to do, but it's just my nativity that says this could all just end if everyone decided to become better people, if all the money that went to the porn industry was used to build and maintain shelters and help people, this problem wouldn't exist. But at the core I'm expecting everyone to give of themselves. And really, if problems could be solved that way, we'd live in a perfect utopia of fairies and rainbow dash. XDDD
And yeah, I don't think anyone who chooses to do something out of necessity is a bad person, becasue I know if I was in their shoes, I would probably do the same. But at the same time I look at the world black and white sometimes, Even if it's what they have to do, it's still not right. And I want to place some blame on them for that, becasue it's still wrong even if right and wrong doesn't really apply to them at the time. But I will admit it's not my place to pass judgement, and honestly I don't know. I'm pretty sheltered and naive.
But yeah I agree with everything you said, I think the solution isn't found in placing blame.
I admire the honesty in your post.
It pretty much boils down to being that sometimes the wrong thing to do is the only thing you see that you can do.
I only consider something truly wrong when it both does harm to others and can realistically be avoided.
If you're desperate for money, and you need it because you NEED the drugs you're on, the drugs you started long ago but just can't stop, and if you haven't been there you probably can't understand the depths of human desperation in addiction, then prostituting yourself or stealing suddenly become the only 'realistic' options in your mind apart from suicide.
And it doesn't always have to be drugs, I say drugs (including alcohol) because it's one of the most common causes of this kind of sheer desperation, but it's not the only one. Maybe you have an addiction to something else that needs money (gambling addiction is a very real thing for example), maybe you don't have an addiction at all but you feel you NEED the money NOW for some other reason.
Does that make it right? Of course not, but things are the way they are. The most constructive line of discussion is of course what to do about it.
What's not constructive is simple right and wrong, black and white, ban this, ban that lines of thinking.
It's easy if you've either never been there and/or never been in close contact with people who have, to not see it close up, to not see just how hopeless some peoples situations can seem and overwhelming.
Common simplistic arguments include:
Ban drugs/war on drugs: Doesn't work, has just made the problem a whole lot worse, provides a black market for criminal profiteering, and people still get drugs anyway.
They should just get a job: How? The war on drugs has made criminals out of addicts, and people don't want criminals working for them, even without a record, they don't want an addict working for them regardless.
They shouldn't have gotten in that situation in the first place: Easy to say, but life isn't that simple. Not everyone reacts the same way to the same environmental influences, we already know that genetics play a huge role in addictive behavour. Regardless, unless you've never made a mistake, don't judge. A lot of people first start their addictions in their early to mid teens. Can you say you're the same person now you were then?
So to get back to the topic at hand, I talk about addiction because I'm talking about desperation, and I'm talking about desperation because that's why most criminals end up criminals, most sex workers end up sex workers.
Is this true 100% across the board? No, some people are criminals because they have serious mental disorders that cause them to not think or feel like the rest of us and have no regard for anyone by themselves, there's some people in sex work who do it because they feel they want to be there (even that is still a complex issue, regarding why they want to be there, studies have consistently shown women in sex work have a significantly higher rate of experience of childhood sexual abuse than the general population).
But these are generalizations of the majority and explanations for why these phenomena continue.
And specifically why blaming the desperate is not constructive and only serves to hurt people.
We all tend to agree that something needs to be done, but unfortunately most people don't want to really take the effort to see the morally gray in our world, and just end up making things worse.