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by Arnt
216 days ago
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It was legalised in Germany about 20 years ago. The proposal to legalise it was very thoughtful and readable, quite unlike your single-sentence assertion. Two brief examples that I remember: ① Many prostitutes were also witnesses to related crimes, which were difficult to prosecute because the key witnesses would have to admit to their own prostitution. ② The first employer of an ex-prostitute has to teach the ways of normal employment. Some employers will make that effort, but not many. The organisations that help prostitutes find regular employment stated that a criminal record made the search much more difficult. |
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On child prostitution in Germany—https://www.dw.com/en/germany-police-raise-alarm-over-spike-...
On sex trafficking in Germany—https://www.dw.com/en/germany-mulls-ban-on-buying-sex-to-fig...
Further on sex trafficking—https://mission-freedom.de/en/forced-prostitution/facts-and-...
On increase in STDs— >…significantly more STI diagnoses
https://di.aerzteblatt.de/int/archive/article/224168/Men-who...
On issues with the recent report on PPA—https://catwinternational.org/2025/08/catws-statement-on-the...
Why do you think they’re trying to do the Nordic model now? Hint: it’s not because legalizing sex work proved to be a great solution for their society.
Interesting to note, Germany ranks lower than the US on the happiness index.