Artful Revealer
Star
- Joined
- Apr 13, 2017
- Messages
- 4,574
Labour can obviously be immoral. I wouldn't necessarily call prostitution labour. It's a transaction mutually agreed upon in which the body of the prostitute is the rented commodity. No economic surplus or value is created, only wealth transfered. Labour can't be identified as such just because money is spent on one's time. Instagram models aren't labourers either.
The immorality of labour is less obvious when people see a consensual agreement, but that doesn't mean it isn't there. Drug dealing has a consensual relationship between seller and buyer. Dealing drugs is immoral and it's both the seller and the buyer that are committing criminal offense.
Because this is a moral issue, of course religions should be at the forefront of this debate. The morals of a secular society are but compromises between the subjective principles of men, ie. without objective foundation, a foundation that says there's an order to nature and there's an order to morality. That means there's a natural and moral order to sexuality. Its natural purpose is to procreate and it's moral order (a dimension that belongs to humans) is to do so in true love and devotion (Christianity sanctifies both orders with marriage). Prostitution has no reproductive purpose nor is it the product of love. To legalize prostitution is to publicly endorse the depravity of sexual relations and disrupt its natural and moral order.
Now this is obviously in the idealist sense. Privately these standards are of course met by just a small minority of people and nowhere am I implying that there should be government interference in the private lives of its civilians and like an all-seeing eye penetrate everyone's darkest secrets or supervise everyone's sins. Also, in this day and age of technology and the easy access to everything, prostitution would continue to exist in discretion no matter what government policies are implemented. But any public display of prostitution should be cracked down hard. The overall point is that society has to set the ideal and not accommodate people's urge to transgress the moral order.
The immorality of labour is less obvious when people see a consensual agreement, but that doesn't mean it isn't there. Drug dealing has a consensual relationship between seller and buyer. Dealing drugs is immoral and it's both the seller and the buyer that are committing criminal offense.
Because this is a moral issue, of course religions should be at the forefront of this debate. The morals of a secular society are but compromises between the subjective principles of men, ie. without objective foundation, a foundation that says there's an order to nature and there's an order to morality. That means there's a natural and moral order to sexuality. Its natural purpose is to procreate and it's moral order (a dimension that belongs to humans) is to do so in true love and devotion (Christianity sanctifies both orders with marriage). Prostitution has no reproductive purpose nor is it the product of love. To legalize prostitution is to publicly endorse the depravity of sexual relations and disrupt its natural and moral order.
Now this is obviously in the idealist sense. Privately these standards are of course met by just a small minority of people and nowhere am I implying that there should be government interference in the private lives of its civilians and like an all-seeing eye penetrate everyone's darkest secrets or supervise everyone's sins. Also, in this day and age of technology and the easy access to everything, prostitution would continue to exist in discretion no matter what government policies are implemented. But any public display of prostitution should be cracked down hard. The overall point is that society has to set the ideal and not accommodate people's urge to transgress the moral order.