Sex work is work, identical in morally relevant respects to other forms of service labor, and treating it as categorically different reflects puritanical cultural bias rather than any genuine distinction in what the work involves or what it does to the people who perform it. Convenient because it forecloses serious inquiry into whether there are features specific to sexual commerce that produce distinctive harms, dependencies, or power asymmetries that other service work does not produce, while providing a clean rhetorical position that signals the right political affiliations.
Full decriminalization is the policy position supported by the evidence and opposed only by religious conservatives, radical feminists, and people who want to control women’s bodies. Convenient because it collapses a genuinely complex empirical and normative debate into a culture war frame that discredits opposition without engaging it, while the actual evidence on what different regulatory regimes produce for workers at different positions in the industry is contested and context-dependent.
All sex workers freely choose their work and find it empowering, and claims that many enter the industry through coercion, desperation, or limited alternatives reflect a patronizing assumption that sex workers cannot make rational decisions about their own lives. Convenient because it makes the diversity of experience within the industry invisible, prevents serious examination of the structural conditions that channel people into sex work, and frames any acknowledgment of harm or constraint as an attack on agency rather than as a description of material conditions.
The harms associated with sex work, violence, exploitation, trafficking, psychological damage, are caused entirely by criminalization rather than by anything intrinsic to the commercial exchange of sexual access. Convenient because it makes decriminalization the solution to every problem while protecting the ideological position that the work itself is neutral, but the evidence from fully or partially decriminalized jurisdictions shows that many harms persist after legal status changes, suggesting the criminalization frame does not account for everything.
Sex worker advocacy organizations speak for and represent the interests of all sex workers rather than primarily representing the interests of the most visible, most organized, and most privileged segment of the industry, which tends to be indoor workers with more economic options, more education, and more ability to set their own terms. Convenient because it allows a relatively advantaged group to claim representational authority over a much more diverse population that includes street-based workers, trafficking victims, and people with far fewer options whose interests may not align with the decriminalization agenda that serves the more privileged segment best.
Clients of sex workers are ordinary people whose behavior requires no special scrutiny or accountability and whose demand for purchased sexual access has no effect on trafficking, exploitation, or the structural conditions that produce the industry’s supply. Convenient because it removes demand-side analysis from the policy conversation, protects clients from social or legal accountability, and avoids the uncomfortable question of what a genuinely consent-based market in sexual services would require on the demand side as well as the supply side.
Exiting sex work is always freely available to anyone who wants to leave and exit programs reflect a paternalistic assumption that sex workers want to do something else. Convenient because it makes structural barriers to exit invisible, protects the ideological position that the work is freely chosen, and allows advocates to oppose exit programs that might actually help people who want them while framing that opposition as respect for autonomy.
Online platforms have made sex work safer by giving workers more control over screening, pricing, and client selection, and the harms produced by platform deplatforming after FOSTA-SESTA demonstrate that the pre-FOSTA environment was working well. Convenient because it credits platforms with safety improvements while ignoring that the same platforms extracted substantial rents from workers, created dependencies that increased vulnerability when platforms changed policies, and concentrated market power in ways that reduced worker bargaining position over time.
The conflation of sex work and sex trafficking is always a bad-faith rhetorical move by prohibitionists rather than a genuine analytical problem that requires careful disaggregation of a population that includes both fully consensual workers and people being exploited, often within the same venues and sometimes by the same third parties. Convenient because it allows advocates to dismiss trafficking concerns without engaging them, while the actual overlap between voluntary sex work and trafficking in specific markets and contexts is empirically documented and analytically important.
Research that finds high rates of trauma, PTSD, and desire to exit among sex workers reflects methodological bias and sampling from the most vulnerable populations rather than anything about the industry that a better-designed study might find at representative scale. Convenient because it allows advocates to discount inconvenient findings as artifacts of research design while the studies that find more positive outcomes tend to use self-selected samples of workers who are already visible, organized, and engaged with advocacy communities, which is precisely the population whose experience is least representative of the industry as a whole.
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