29 January 2013

What to Read?

I have been writing since 2006, and if my blogs were a MS Word document (as they are, as a backup), they would take up about 350 pages.
And a whole lot of that is just little random tidbits from my life that I found interesting the day I was writing.
Mixed in among those there are a number of in-depth essays on a wide variety of topics.  There has been no way to easily sift through all the random crap to find the good stuff.

Until now!
Wondering what to read next?
Of 200+ posts, these are (in my personal opinion) the top ~50 most interesting or useful


READ THIS FIRST:

The Common Thread
(17 June 2013)

Before you read anything else here, you must read The Common Thread.

Then go on to read whatever you like...



July 2006

Chapter IV; In Which I Recommend That Everyone Get a Motorcycle



Aug 2006

Numero Ocho; In Which I Point Out That Republicans Are Not Conservative At All





Book 10; Tn Which I List My Favorite Bible Verses




Item 12; In Which Abortion is NOT a Matter of the Right to Life, & NOT a Women's Rights Issue


Heading 14; In Which Reparations Are Still Due



Sept 2006

Portion 17; In Which True Christians Stay Kosher



Feb 2007

Free Market VS. Democracy: (1-0)



Organized Protest: Civil Obedience




Jun 2007

Sexual Dimorphism, and Caveman Love




July 2007

Dr Cox on Love; Heterosexual ManLove; and Does Enjoying Performing Fellatio Make a Guy Gay?



Oct 2007

Unborn Humans and Social Conservatives; Mixing Emotion and Politics




Nov 2007


Global Warming vs. Fascism; or, Why NASA Wouldn’t Have Stopped Apophis



Jan 2008

Buying a Home as an Investment



Feb 2008

Evil Will Always Win. But its OK


Education - Now, with References!!!!



Mar 2008

Average + Ordinary = Perfection; the (not so) Secret Formula to Happiness



Sept 2008

Anarchy VS Capitalism ... Anarchy=Capitalism



Dec 2008

The Root of the Problem (On economics and the creation of value)

Sex vs. Morality (Warren Was Right)



Jan 2009

A Little Perspective


Te Quiero



Feb 2009

FemDom vs. Feminism: Power Doesn't Come From Penetration



Travel and Work. And Hubris



Apr 2009

Gay Animals, Social Sex, and a Misunderstanding of Natural and Sexual Selection




June 2009


Capitalists, Libertarians, and Anarchists; Oh My!




July 2009

Race (Whites Still Winning)





Aug 2009


Slow Down. My Philosophy for Life also Applies to the Road



Sept 2009


Spoiled: The Economic Downturn, Luxury as Necessity, and "Struggling" in the Modern Economy



Dec 2009


The Wine Barrel (Population and Parenthood)



Apr 2010

Science!

Awareness of White Privilege VS Actually Working to Change It



Jan 2011

Be Healthy, My Friend

Be Healthy, part 2 (sub-section: Fat Management)



Oct 2011

Dramatically Reduce Unemployment - with no cost to government - by Instituting a 35 Hour Work Week




Jan 2012


Buying Bikes from Craigslist




March 2012


"Mad Max" Hypermiler Questions and Comments Answered





June 2012


Please Ride Your Bike in the Street.



June 2012

“A poor person never gave me a job”





July 2012


Adding an Overdrive (BW T-19 to ZF-5 transmission swap)



Sept 2012


Advertisements That Only Work Due to Ignorance and Stupidity



Dec 2012


The Last Big Question (the evolution of consciousness itself)

Comments from MMM Economics / Philosophy / Politics threads



Jan 2013

The Oldest Profession

What Does Our Gut Reaction to the Word "Rape" Say About Our Subconscious Beliefs About Women's Agency?



Feb 2013

Workouts for the Brain




Mar 2013

Obama = Bush Jr??? (hint: the answer is no)



Jun 2013

Trespassing in the Commune

Your Actions are (part of) Causing that Traffic Jam You're Stuck in*



Jul 2013

If I Were Elected King of the Country

Cops Shooting Unarmed Black Men

"Culture" and "Race" are not interchangeable




Aug 2013

Refuting the "Big Car = Safe" Myth



Feb 2014

Wearing the Skirt


Mar 2014

All of the money stuff I sometimes talk about, condensed

Apr 2014

You trust yourself WAY too much
May 2014
Healthcare: the last mainstream superstition


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

That's all for now.

I am no longer writing as consistently as I used to, so instead of checking in occasionally, I'd recommend just subscribing to new posts with the box on the top right of the page.

What to Read?

I have been writing since 2006, and if my blogs were a MS Word document (as they are, as a backup), they would take up about 350 pages.
And a whole lot of that is just little random tidbits from my life that I found interesting the day I was writing.
Mixed in among those there are a number of in-depth essays on a wide variety of topics.  There has been no way to easily sift through all the random crap to find the good stuff.

Until now!
Wondering what to read next?
Of 200+ posts, these are (in my personal opinion) the top ~50 most interesting or useful


READ THIS FIRST:

The Common Thread
(17 June 2013)

Before you read anything else here, you must read The Common Thread.

Then go on to read whatever you like...



July 2006

Chapter IV; In Which I Recommend That Everyone Get a Motorcycle



Aug 2006

Numero Ocho; In Which I Point Out That Republicans Are Not Conservative At All





Book 10; Tn Which I List My Favorite Bible Verses




Item 12; In Which Abortion is NOT a Matter of the Right to Life, & NOT a Women's Rights Issue


Heading 14; In Which Reparations Are Still Due



Sept 2006

Portion 17; In Which True Christians Stay Kosher



Feb 2007

Free Market VS. Democracy: (1-0)



Organized Protest: Civil Obedience




Jun 2007

Sexual Dimorphism, and Caveman Love




July 2007

Dr Cox on Love; Heterosexual ManLove; and Does Enjoying Performing Fellatio Make a Guy Gay?



Oct 2007

Unborn Humans and Social Conservatives; Mixing Emotion and Politics




Nov 2007


Global Warming vs. Fascism; or, Why NASA Wouldn’t Have Stopped Apophis



Jan 2008

Buying a Home as an Investment



Feb 2008

Evil Will Always Win. But its OK


Education - Now, with References!!!!



Mar 2008

Average + Ordinary = Perfection; the (not so) Secret Formula to Happiness



Sept 2008

Anarchy VS Capitalism ... Anarchy=Capitalism



Dec 2008

The Root of the Problem (On economics and the creation of value)

Sex vs. Morality (Warren Was Right)



Jan 2009

A Little Perspective


Te Quiero



Feb 2009

FemDom vs. Feminism: Power Doesn't Come From Penetration



Travel and Work. And Hubris



Apr 2009

Gay Animals, Social Sex, and a Misunderstanding of Natural and Sexual Selection




June 2009


Capitalists, Libertarians, and Anarchists; Oh My!




July 2009

Race (Whites Still Winning)





Aug 2009


Slow Down. My Philosophy for Life also Applies to the Road



Sept 2009


Spoiled: The Economic Downturn, Luxury as Necessity, and "Struggling" in the Modern Economy



Dec 2009


The Wine Barrel (Population and Parenthood)



Apr 2010

Science!

Awareness of White Privilege VS Actually Working to Change It



Jan 2011

Be Healthy, My Friend

Be Healthy, part 2 (sub-section: Fat Management)



Oct 2011

Dramatically Reduce Unemployment - with no cost to government - by Instituting a 35 Hour Work Week




Jan 2012


Buying Bikes from Craigslist




March 2012


"Mad Max" Hypermiler Questions and Comments Answered





June 2012


Please Ride Your Bike in the Street.



June 2012

“A poor person never gave me a job”





July 2012


Adding an Overdrive (BW T-19 to ZF-5 transmission swap)



Sept 2012


Advertisements That Only Work Due to Ignorance and Stupidity



Dec 2012


The Last Big Question (the evolution of consciousness itself)

Comments from MMM Economics / Philosophy / Politics threads



Jan 2013

The Oldest Profession

What Does Our Gut Reaction to the Word "Rape" Say About Our Subconscious Beliefs About Women's Agency?



Feb 2013

Workouts for the Brain




Mar 2013

Obama = Bush Jr??? (hint: the answer is no)



Jun 2013

Trespassing in the Commune

Your Actions are (part of) Causing that Traffic Jam You're Stuck in*



Jul 2013

If I Were Elected King of the Country

Cops Shooting Unarmed Black Men

"Culture" and "Race" are not interchangeable




Aug 2013

Refuting the "Big Car = Safe" Myth



Feb 2014

Wearing the Skirt



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

That's all for now.

I am no longer writing as consistently as I used to, so instead of checking in occasionally, I'd recommend just subscribing to new posts with the box on the to right of the page.

22 January 2013

What does our gut reaction to the word "rape" say about our subconscious beliefs about women's agency?



[NOTE: This article is longer than the typical blog post.  As an MS Word document it comes to about 30 pages.  Much shorter than a book, but longer than a magazine article.  Its probably better to think of it as an internet based paper, and not expect to read the entire thing straight through in one sitting.  I have broke it into 5 parts to facilitate that.
Also, if it isn't obvious enough from the title, its a very sensitive subject.  I am definitely not trying to offend or upset, but I am deliberately trying to be real, which means not being "politically correct" or sensitive for the sake of sensitivity.]


A friend of mine sent me a link to an internet blog article recently:

http://goodmenproject.com/ethics-values/nice-guys-commit-rape-too/

I read it, it was interesting and insightful and honest and unfortunately rare in its open-mindedness and candor.  I didn’t know when I read it,  but apparently it was read by a great many people, many of whom did not share that opinion of it. 
It was reasonably infamous among feminist bloggers, and induced quite a number of responses - none of which I’ve read. 
I did, however, take several days to go back and read the comment thread in its entirety.  The comment thread was surprisingly thoughtful for an internet discussion on a topic that causes intense negative gut reactions and has generated plenty of controversy, one which people are passionate and angry about. 
So much of the discussion was so good already that I had nothing to add.  
The first three pages are almost entirely filled with reasonable, open-minded people having a back and forth conversation on really difficult topics.  From all appearances these are regulars to the site, readers and contributors.  On page three the sort of knee-jerk responses that you would expect for the topic finally begin appearing, and it appears as though few of the new commenters took the time to read the existing comments before adding their own.  Not to say that intelligent conversation does not continue, it does all the way to the end, only that the ‘TL;DR – still have an opinion’ comments start becoming more common, - no doubt as the article began to be read and popularized more and more.
If you are interested in the topic, and have a few hours to kill, I recommend reading all of the comments from the beginning.

Though much of what I would have said was addressed, some very important things weren’t, and that’s what inspired this essay that you are reading right now.


One of the most important things I got out of reading the comments was seeing how strongly and instantly so many people made absolute judgments against the protagonist of the story, without needing to know any of the untold details of the situation. 
Even those that pointed out potential mitigating factors always went of their way to say “but, obviously, it was still totally wrong”.  Then someone else would come along and say “this is cut and dry – this guy is a selfish creep, he knew what he was doing, end of story.” 
Maybe they just have very poor imaginations. 
But I don’t think that’s it.  I think its really more that we have all been socially conditioned to have certain absolute reactions to certain topics, and that those reactions aren’t based so much on logic or reality or harm to others, they are just based on drilling a message into each person at a young age, lifelong repetition, and the fact that everyone around us acts horrified at the same thing.

In fact what I found most interesting, most inspiring of a response, was not the original article at all.  The most interesting thing is the commenters themselves. 
The possibilities I’ll point out a bit later seemed fairly obvious to me, at least as possibilities, on first reading.  Yet for so very many others these possibilities did not even cross their minds.  Is it merely a lack of imagination?  Well, even among the reasonable, thoughtful, open-minded commenters who had long back and forth dialogue, only one, it seems, considered any such possibilities… and even when that person suggested it, no one, not even the people involved in a conversation with him, ever acknowledged it.  Other than that one, even though we were never told as much, everyone assumed the protagonist was fully conscious and aware of his actions, and aware of the lack of consciousness of the woman he was with.  The author, without ever confirming to us that he knew (or even that she believed he did), spoke about it as if it were a given, after having skipped over the crucial few moments preceding the event in question in the story.  And on the basis of that assumption, most felt justified in drawing absolute conclusions. 
And these were the GOOD comments.  The bad ones occurred on other blog posts written in response to this one, and they included multiple death threats against the author of the post, who was not only not there when it happened, but unambiguously condemned her friend’s actions from the moment she heard of them and without exception ever after.  She was condemned for even asking the question of why he did it, and for humanizing a person who is, in fact, a human.


------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


Most American’s eat mammals, yet most will be horrified at the thought of eating a dog or cat.  Few will change their opinion of which animals are ok to eat even after having been informed that pigs are actually more intelligent than either of our usual pets.
Most people feel incest is immoral between two fully consenting adults, even if they are careful about birth control or are of the same gender.

People find anyone interested in viewing child porn to be morally detestable, even if that person never acts on that interest, even if they do not film it, do not pay for it (thereby encouraging its production), and do not share it (thereby supposedly spreading the interest).  The mere fact that they own and view it in the privacy of their own home, which does not affect any other person in any way, is both legally, and in the minds of many, morally, a crime.
There are a great many people who find the suggestion that, in order to avoid overpopulation (which will likely cause all surviving humans to have excruciatingly horrible lives someday), we may have to find a way to limit individuals ability to reproduce at will.  Having children should be a right, most say, end of story.  
Well, any time anything seems that cut and dry to you, any time your immediate reaction is righteous indignation or moral outrage, there is a very high chance that you are at least partially wrong, that you have blinders put up. 
When you have a strong and immediate reaction, and form an opinion which is unchangeable even in the light of new information or new possibilities, that opinion is not actually coming from the situation at hand. It is coming from something in your past, be it an experience or something taught to you.

A whole lot of people see it as morally unacceptable for one person to initiate sex with the other if one is asleep even if the sleeping partner has EXPLICITLY given permission beforehand.  They feel this strongly and without any room for flexibility.  Now granted, that is most certainly not what happened in the case of the blog article.  But having this opinion makes it impossible to even talk about implied consent, and whether getting into bed naked with a person you have been verbally and physically suggestive and seductive with might constitute it. 

So the very first thing that has to be established, before a sane discussion can go any further, is what morality actually means.  If you are religious, and morality is something you get word-for-word out of a book, we will just have to agree to disagree, and that’s that.  For the rest of us, hopefully we can agree that morality is rooted in harm or help done to sentient beings.  That can get complex, but in order for something to be “wrong”, someone or something has to be getting harmed in someway.  If there are things you have accepted as wrong as a given, this may mean needing to reevaluate some long-held-but-never-questioned beliefs.




All throughout this essay you are going to notice a common theme.  We, society, have all sorts of implicit and explicit rules and beliefs and patterns of interaction, and they generally apply to similar situations even if the specifics change.  But nearly anytime the topic is sex, the things which would otherwise apply all get thrown out.  Sex is always supposed to be a special case.  No one ever says this.  They don’t have to.  It apparently goes without saying.  Everyone learns it subconsciously, implicitly, and it is so universal as to be completely invisible.

For thousands of years, sex in all but the most carefully controlled circumstances – one man, one woman, in a religiously or government sanctioned committed partnership, for the express purpose of reproduction – was considered sinful.
Fortunately, times have changed, and many now accept the legitimate (non-religious) version of morality I mentioned above, and that means that pretty much anything people choose to do is ok, so long as no one gets hurt (unless everyone involved is into BDSM, in which case even that might not apply!)

But humanities collective conscious had been convinced that sex was a Really Big Freggin Deal, and the emergence of atheism and birth control couldn’t very well change that overnight (or even in 60 years), so in order to reconcile sex not being a Sin with it still being a RBFD, in many minds it became Sacred instead. 
Even those who don’t consciouslythink it must be either Sin or Sacred, still – apparently – hold that it is a RBFD, an act for which, by virtue of its Big Deal-ness, things that apply to every other area of life don’t apply.

As one commenter pointed out, a stranger coming up and kissing you at a bus stop would be considered sexual assault.  Kissing someone you have recently starting dating while they are asleep might be a bit creepy.  Kissing a spouse while they were asleep would universally be regarded as perfectly ok.  One act which, when done in one context without consent is assault, but that same exact action, done within another context – even though one party is unable to give consent - is considered ok. 
Change the word “kiss” to “sex”, suddenly all of the rules change.




                                                                 
For this particular case, the one described in the blog post, there have been a few possibilities suggested in the comments which, if they happen to be true, would change the context of the events we do know about.  Because “rape” and “rapist” are such charged words, as soon as people hear them they have already formed an opinion.  When an opinion gets formed in advance, if details get left out, people will automatically fill in those details to fit the story they made up in advance.  And so quite a few people in the comments are able to say with absolute confidence things like ‘he knew it wasn’t ok while he was doing it, he just didn’t care’, when none of us were there, not even the author, and lots of details were left out on purpose. 


I’m not saying any of these things actually happened.  But nothing in the story suggests them to be at all unlikely either. 

  • It is entirely possible that they had begun to have sex before either passed out – and that, due to their intoxication, neither remembered it.  Or they could have woken up at some point, begun having sex, and one (or both) passed back out.  It is easy to forget things that you do in between sleeps. 
    Surely it is not uncommon to, for example, mention to your partner (or they mention to you) something about a brief conversation you had after one of you got up to use the restroom at night, and the other doesn’t remember it?  And that’s without any drugs or alcohol. Similarly, it is even entirely possible that there was verbal consent, but again, that neither remembers it, given the situation of mutual intoxication.

  • It is entirely possible that the two of them were completely naked, both aroused, and spooning, and he was in a position to get inside of her, either before or during sleep, without actively trying to. 

  • It is possible that he was not aware that she was unconscious – anyone who has slept with another person more than a few times has thought the other person was awake because of the way they turned over, or moved or breathed, and it turned out they were asleep, or thought they were asleep because they were perfectly still, but it turned out they were awake.  Again, that mistake is easy to make when you are not intoxicated.  It would be a lot easier to make when you are drunk.

We don’t know what happened right before they lost consciousness, we don’t know how physically the act began, we don’t know how long they were out in between. 
Before passing an absolute judgment, on not just what term to use to describe the act, but also on the person who committed it, there are a lot of questions that have to be asked.

What we know of the situation is one side of the story, told from someone who was drunk when it happened, possibly days, possibly weeks after the fact.  Of his side, we only know those details he shared with his friend. Then, that second hand story was deliberately filtered further by her as an author, to make a particular point in a socio-political essay. 
Not only do we not know whether any of the possibilities above might be true or partially true, we don’t even know if the author knows the answer to those questions to begin with. The author never answered the question of whether or not he may have had reason to think that she was awake.  We don’t even know if the two people involved know the details of what happened immediately before.  Both were some level of intoxicated and semi-conscious in the moments immediately preceding actual sex.



Aside from the validity (or lack there of) of the 3 possibilities raised above, before making any judgment on anyone involved, I would really like to know who took off her clothes, and ideally, when and why.  This did not take place in a nudist colony.  One could make an argument that nudity shouldn’t have anything to do with sexuality, but this is the society and culture we live in, and the reality is that it does.  If she went to sleep wearing jeans, and she was so deeply passed out that he was able to take her jeans off without that waking her, then yes, it would be a clear cut case of deliberate rape.  But if she, having basically told him she wanted to have sex with him at some point, made out with him, took off all of her clothes, got in bed with him, put herself in a position that would facilitate intercourse, that could very reasonbly be construed as implied consent. Then, say, at some point she moved and pressed herself against him - maybe she does this in her sleep, maybe she wakes up and does it but falls back asleep right after and doesn’t remember doing it.  It doesn’t matter, because she is facing away from him anyway, not to mention its probably dark and he wouldn’t be able to see if her eyes were open even if they were.  This action on her part wakes him up, and, given that this position is a potential intercourse position, he thinks this is her non-verbal way of saying she’s finally ready. It is really not a stretch to say he could have considered that non-verbal consent.  He discovers that she is already wet, and she reacts to his touch, which confirms his understanding.  This whole scenario could play out between any two people anytime, but considering he is drunk, making the mistake of assuming these actions were implied consent seems practically inevitable.

In fact, almost any living human would understand those actions – if she had in fact been awake – to be very clear non-verbal communication. Even if one has learned and chosen to apply the rule of not actingwithout explicit verbal communication to avoid misunderstandings, the meaning of those actions would still be understood.

There is NOTHING in the story, as we are told it, to make it seem an unlikely possibility.  In fact, the way I read it, it sounds like a very likely possibility.  Obviously I don’t know, I wasn’t there, just like the other commenters passing judgment, just like the author of the article.  It is absolutely realistic to think that that did happen that way.




What does it say about us, about our assumptions around gender and sexuality, that (with one exception) these possibilities did not even occur to anyone? 
What does it mean imply about society that no one even thought to ask the question?





It is possible that he intended to wake her up BY having sex with her.  One would have to be pretty far gone for something like that to not wake you up. 
In which case, if she wasn’t into it, she could tell him right at that moment to stop, which means she maintains the ability to withdraw the implicit consent given earlier at any time.  That standard is met.  There is nothing in the story to indicate that he was trying to move as slowly and quietly as possible in order to prevent waking her up. 
Not surprisingly, she did wake up, and in the original post we don’t know whether she got into it and continued or not.
In the comments the author does eventually say that the woman in the story, upon waking up, did not resist nor verbally ask him to stop.
This is relevant! 
Because if she didn’t say no even after she woke up, that means he could reasonably have believed it was confirmation of his interpretation of her implicit consent. 


Anyone who has read the comments – not to mention pretty much everyone who has had sex at least once or twice in their life – knows that the standard of "explicit verbal consent made immediately preceding each instance of escalation of physical intimacy" is fairly ridiculous and absolutely unrealistic. 
Nobody, if they stop and think about it, actually believes that this will ever happen, or even should.  There’s this thing called “non-verbal communication”.  I’m not talking about “signals” as in extended eye contact or flirtatiousness; I’m talking about making out with someone, and then taking off all of your clothes and gesturing toward the bed.  Any normal human would understand that.  At that point, if you mean anything other than the obvious, it is on youto verbalize what you don’t want to happen.

We are all adults here.  At some point it becomes a little immature to expect that you can do anything you want and rely on those around you to take responsibility for taking care of you.  
Combining the standard that it is the responsibility of the proactive partner to obtain consent, along with the standard that the person granting it may retract it at any time, taken to its logical conclusion, this would suggest that whichever person is currently “doing the work” is obligated to check in literally constantly with a question along the lines of “is this still ok?”  That is obviously ludicrous – everyone can accept that at the point where the activity has already begun, if one partner changes their mind, it is their responsibility to clearly communicate that they want to stop.  It is not their partner’s responsibility to take care of them by reading their mind; it is their own responsibility to take care of themselves.  If, and only if, the partner willfully ignored an explicit request to stop could they be accused of doing something wrong.  Why, if it is the non-consenting partner’s responsibility to communicate their desires clearly during the act, would we expect any less before hand?

That whole last paragraph was somewhat abstract.

Lets say a person is standing on the freeway off ramp with a hand made cardboard sign about being on hard times. You are the first driver in line at the red light, and you reach into your wallet, roll down your window and hold out a $5 bill.  Would you expect the homeless person to be responsible to say the words “are you intending to give me this money?” before they took it?  Would you accuse them of theft, for taking your $5?  Or is it reasonable for the person to figure out from the situational cues that your non-verbal actions constituted consent for them to take the money out of your hands? 
If you were just getting money out because you were going to pay for parking in a few blocks, and you put your hand out the window because you wanted to feel the breeze, it would have been on YOU to make a point of saying to the person that you were not offering it to them.
Why should the rules be any different if the context is sex instead of money?

Consider this story from the comments:

Honest Questions says:
… I knew this guy once, he told the following horror story: Most fucked up encounter he ever had… met a girl at a bar. They go home. Both drunk. She says clearly before they start fooling around they can do everything except intercourse, and he says yes. They start fooling around. She starts doing whatever, getting him more and more excited, still all the while saying I don’t want sex (intercourse), I don’t want sex. He says yeah, it’s all right. She’s on top. She’s got ahold of his dick, manipulating it against herself (yes, “right down there on that spot” if you know what I mean) and she’s screaming and fucked up and drunk saying “I don’t want sex!” and he’s like Well what the fuck then? And then SHE pushes it into HER. This story ends with HER bouncing up and down on HIM screaming all the while I don’t want sex, i don’t want sex!
Now is it possible he’s totally fucking lying? Yeah. I’m not friends with the dude anymore for unrelated reasons. But the story stands out. Whenever he told it, he was never braggin about it–i could see that clearly. He was fuckin disturbed by this. Scared, you know? Not terrified or anything but the kind of fear that gives you pause–what was the right move here? Fuck if he knew. Fuck if *I* know. The easy answer is stay out of bars. Let’s all pause and sit back and see how many people reading this are gonna follow THAT advice…


I’m not a betting person, but I’d put down money that not only is this a true story, but it is not entirely uncommon. 
By the standards of many of the commenters (and possibly the law) – of needing explicit verbal consent and that “no means no”, then the guy in the story above raped her.  Both this, and the outraged reactions, the willingness to condemn someone as a rapist while knowing extremely little about the details, they are both symptoms of the same cultural repression we have around sex.  As far as we have come, we still have a very, very, long way to go. 




Anytime we want to effectively make changes to anything, we have to really understand the way things are currently first, and to understand that, we need to know the history of how it came to be.  If you don’t look at what is, you won’t be able to figure out the best approach for creating what you want to be.  Sometimes that means looking at something with as little prejudice as possible, and admitting things that you would really prefer not to be true, would rather not have to admit.

Most people alive today never lived in a world without the technical innovations of effective birth control methods and safe abortion. 
This allows us to imagine that sexuality is a matter of pleasure and/or love first and foremost, which just happens to also have the side effect of reproduction.  Our culture and even language reinforce this idea.  For example, we refer to any pleasurable genital contact as forms of “sex”, when, technically, sex is a process of allowing the two complementary gamete cells a chance to come together.  Anything which could not result in pregnancy is, in the strictest, most literal sense of the word, not actually sex at all.  The entire reason sexual contact is pleasurable is because without incentive to engage in it, nobody would.  Any specie which did not have a drive toward reproduction would die out in a single generation. 
This is in no way to suggest that people “should” only have sex for reproduction.  It is just an observation of biological fact.  And its important to keep that fundamental fact in mind when considering any of the more complex areas of human sexuality. Otherwise one may come to conclusions which don’t make sense, and that can lead to action plans that are not effective in the real world.  One example of this is abstinence-only sex-ed, or a complete lack of sex-ed all together.  Some people choose to believe that the only reason teens are interested in sex is because they are told that they should be, that they wouldn’t even think of it on their own. 

On the flip side, the author of the blog post that inspired me to write actually expresses a similar opinion in suggesting that its because of “generations of training” that individuals hold “the goal of getting dressed and going out is to get the guy or get the girl and hook up or get lucky.”  Later, she implies that culture is the reason “…that we sell sex as the reason for everything—from what car to buy, to why to work out to what clothes will help us ‘get ahead’. In our world, sex is the end game. Period.” … “We need to teach people that sex, as awesome as it is, is not the goal.

All of these quotes are, of course, taken from the context of the events in the story.  But they are still illustrative of this idea that individuals are obsessed with sex because of something taught to them by peers and media. 
People aren’t obsessed with sex because of images in media, or because of cultural bias.  Pretending that means any theories or strategies for combating sexual violence are guaranteed to fail.  Men see sex as a goal, or women’s bodies as prizes, because without sex with women, the DNA which makes them who they are dies with them, and even though they may have no conscious awareness of it, ultimately everyone’s genes has the final say in their most underlying motivations. 
We can’t “teach” people that sex isn’t the goal, any more than we can teach people that eating food isn’t a goal when we are hungry.  We have come preprogrammed by nature to feel instinctively that it is a goal.  We, as a specie, would not be here to think about it and have this discussion if we weren’t preprogrammed to feel it was a goal.  And if 2000+ years of repression by the Christian church never succeeded in eliminating the human sex drive, there is really zero hope of moving in that direction in the modern world.

The belief that an interest in sex is something cultural, rather than natural, is perhaps one of the larger factors behind the almost universal (but completely wrong) view that rape is not actually about sex for the perpetrator, but purely about power, dominance and control, and that the violence accompanying it is necessarily part of the appeal.  The author gets it right on this one: “The question is, why is it happening?  In order to get to that answer we need to first abolish the idea that all rape is about power and violence. It’s not.” 
In some cases, it certainly is true that violence and dominance add something positive to the experience for a rapist. In a great many cases, probably not.  If it were actually true that it the only appeal was forcing one's will upon another, then any time a potential victim consented to sex, the potential rapist would lose all interest.  That obviously doesn't happen.  People have sex drives.  Some (especially males) have very strong sex drives.    To those whose isn’t so strong, sex may seem like just a pleasant thing to do now and then.  To others, it may feel like a necessity.  If it were easy for some people (mostly, but not exclusively, men) to take it or leave it, prostitution as an industry would barely exist, if at all.  Gathering food, protecting one’s body from harm, and having sex, are the most fundamental drives of any multicellular organism.
In order to understand rape, we first have to admit to ourselves that at some point in our lives we have felt a desire for sex.  Not just a desire for human contact, or for love or acceptance.  It’s not a desire to “express your feelings physically”.  It’s horniness.  It’s natural.  

Today almost everyone will object to that claim, they will insist both that it is about power and control, and that it isn't about sex.  If that was true, then why would sex be a part of it at all?  If one person were to assault or kidnap another, or wrestle them to the ground and hold them there for 20 minutes, or twist their arm and make them say "uncle", then they have established dominance over another human being.  That doesn't happen. 
In the vast majority of cases where a potential victim used any form of physical resistance, whether punching, kicking, or biting, or simply running away, the resistance is effective in preventing the rape from occurring.  Given that the average man is stronger than the average woman, one might expect physical resistance to make little difference.  Given the additional factors that most rapes occur by someone known to the victim, in one of their homes, there are frequently psychological reasons why women submit.  Given that in over half of all rapes the victim was intoxicated, attempts at resistance might be less effective.  However, even considering those factors, when the victim fights back, it is effective 85% of the time. If it was about really about violence and proving dominance, then you would expect that the victim fighting back would add to the appeal of the experience - a cat doesn't play with a dead mouse because its no fun if the mouse doesn't try to get away.
The rapist, however, is not looking for a fight.  They are looking for easy sex. 


Most of us would never consider raping someone, no matter how horny we got.  But that doesn’t mean you can’t imagine what it might feel like to be someone who would.  Most people would never punch someone in the face either.  Most wouldn’t break into someone else’s house or mug them at gunpoint.  But I can understand why some people do. 
When someone breaks into another person’s house and steals their TV, nobody claims that the real reason they did it is because they wanted to establish dominance over the person who lived there.  The motivation for stealing is obvious – they want the material value of something that someone else has.  They believe it will be easier to take it from someone else rather than to earn it themselves.  If, for whatever reason, a person felt like getting another person to voluntarily have sex with them was not a realistic option, that person might be tempted to try to get it by whatever means necessary, up to and including by force. 
Don’t misunderstand me.  The fact that something is rooted in nature does not make it inevitable that it be acted out.  Violence is natural, and we as a society have decided it is beneficial to everyone to take proactive steps to reduce it.  That means billions of people all individually repressing any violent instincts they may have.  And, though there are exceptions, for the most part it works.  The vast majority of humans in the modern world are not violent.  All throughout history the rates of violence have dropped, they are currently at an all time low, and are likely to continue dropping.  This isn’t something that has just happened, it’s something that we collectively have made happen.  In-group loyalty is completely natural, and when people are thinking about family or neighbors, they imagine it to be a good thing, but it is the basis for nationalistic wars, racism, anti-immigrant sentiments, all forms of thought where some people are “other”, and “other” is ok to harm.  But over time America, and (I believe(?)) the world have been on a trajectory of increased tolerance and acceptance, in direct defiance of our natural prejudices. 
To admit something is natural, or may be based on instincts, is not to condone it.  The first step is to acknowledge what is, if you want to effectively change the world into what it should be.  Sometimes that means admitting something that we really don’t want to be true – like, for example, that maybe the reason some people commit rape is the same reason a person takes anything without permission: because they really reallywant sex, right in the moment, and it isn’t being given to them willingly. 
Nobody wants to believe that because it “reduces” sex to an animalistic behavior, when we want to think of it – of ourselves as humans – as “higher”, more meaningful, more beautiful, more noble.  But to admit that sex is a basic instinctual behavior doesn’t cheapen sex or deny its ties to the feeling of love anymore than admitting we need calories to prevent dieing denies the culinary arts its place.  Sex is neither sinful nor sacred.  If we can stop pretending that it has to be at least one of those things, we can look at what the most realistic likely motivator for taking it without asking might be.  We don’t have to come up with justifications of “rape culture” or sexism or privilege, just like there is no need to invoke capitalism to try to explain why some people steal, or to point to video games and movies as the cause of violence.
These instincts are in all of us, and the only difference is some of us do a better job repressing them than others.  Aside from true sociopaths, everyone tries to repress them.  Aside from the occasional saint, nobody succeeds 100% of the time.

This seems intuitively obvious, but we don’t want to admit it to ourselves, because we have all felt horny at some point in our lives.  If that is the driving force behind rape, then that would imply that we ourselves could be a potential rapist!  That makes it much harder to divide people into distinct categories of “good” and “evil”, which is a very comforting way to look at the world.  To admit that on some level every human (including one’s self) has a physical craving for sex challenges the notion that sex is sacred, not merely a biological act, but something with a spiritual component. Something tied to love not just via oxytocin and vasopressin, but by something more meaningful.  If sex is just sex, then that reduces us to level of “mere” animals, and we want to believe that we are more important than that, more special.  And if sex is sacred, then that means that anyone who would “take” it without permission is not merely selfish and criminal, as the burglar is, but fundamentally an evil person.

Rape is almost universally considered the worst possible crime.  Only it and murder are potentially capital offenses – which means a rape like the one is the blog post could be punished more harshly than an act of assault and battery so serve that it left the victim permanently paralyzed.  I doubt any serious argument can be made that the physical or emotional trauma of the events in the blog post come remotely close to the physical and emotional trauma of being beaten to within an inch of your life and being left permanently disabled, and yet, while people will condemn both, the latter rarely generates nearly as strong of a response.
The reason the woman in the story quoted just above behaved so irrationally, and the reason why we automatically consider rapein any degree worse than any other crime, are both due to the collective sub-conscious belief that a woman’s sexual purity is her most valuable asset, both to herself, as well as being what makes her valuable to others.


On a basic primal level this is understandable.  It is not due to a history of patriarchy.  It predates patriarchy, by a whole lot. It is due to the fact that humans take 9 months to gestate, they are produced one at a time, and after birth they require an absolute minimum of one year of nursing, and then more than a dozens years of continued care before they are able to be independent.  No other animal requires as much investment for each individual off-spring.  Given how much investment human reproduction requires, in a world without birth control a fertile female needs to be extremely selective about who she mates with.  Since she only gets a few shots at reproduction, she has to make every single mating count.  Human males, while in most cultures having a tendency to stick around and help raise their off-spring, don’t necessarily have any minimum commitment to prevent their child from dying.  They can count on the mother to do that.  And from this biological fact lies the origin of the classic “double standard”.  Of almost all sex based double standards.  It also explains why the word “rape” even exists, as a very specific sub-category of assault.  It is not merely assault which in someway involves sexuality.  Rape classically refers only to a male putting his penis inside of a female’s vagina against her will.  Forcing someone to have anal sex is not rape (it’s forced sodomy).  Drugging, threatening, or tying down a male, and enveloping him with ones genitals against his will constitutes felony sexual assault, but it is not “rape”.  We are not consciously aware of it, but the historical/subconscious reason for the distinction is because having anal sex with someone, or forcing a man to have sex, will not result in the victim having to deal with 9 months of unintended pregnancy and then either abandoning the child, or raising a child whose genetics were not custom chosen.


The legal concept of rape, though, wasn't designed to protect women.  By the time of formal law, marriage as an institution had been invented.  Instead of two people choosing to stay together out of mutual affection and/or benefit, marriage means that some external authority, be it religious or government, both officially sanctions the relationship, and mandates that it continue.
This forced commitment creates a similar risk for males that exists due to biology for females – unintended pregnancy can obligate him to waste resources on raising children – only in his case, in addition to not being able to choose the timing of them, if his partner has sex with someone else, he may be duped into raising children which don’t even share his DNA.
When laws were being created, the concept of "rights" hadn't been conceived of yet, and women were not really considered to be people.  The rape laws dating back at least to the Old Testament were explicit in defining rape as a property crime against a woman's father or husband, for making his property (her) worthless (not a virgin; i.e. potentially carrying another man's child).  The only role her apparent consent or lack there of played (and this was determined by whether she screamed loud enough) was in determining whether or not she should be executed along with the rapist.  Any restitution for the crime though, was strictly to the father or husband.  Times have changed, but the special legal category which has no equivalent for any other aspect of life remains. 



These factors explain the ultimate root of much of our collective bias and beliefs, patterns and behaviors around sexuality, but understanding it does not make anything more or less right.

Because it isn’t ancient times.  It is today.  Birth control does exist.  Abortions do exist.  And having successfully decoupled sex from reproduction we can and do use it for our own pleasure – no different from how we have been able to decouple food from nutrition by inventing things like ice cream.  In addition to using it for pleasure, we use sex for various social reasons, manipulating in both ourselves and our partners the release of love-and-commitment-enhancing hormones oxytocin and vasopressin.  So long as nobody gets hurt, there is nothing wrong with any of that.

But culture progresses much more slowly than technology, and somewhere in the very back of all of our minds, we are still thinking that rape is destroying a woman’s most valuable asset – that of not being pregnant.

In order to move past that ingrained belief, we first have to acknowledge that its there, and then we have to figure out all of the other faulty beliefs that are based on it.


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(This essay is long by internet standards.  I believe that these issues are so deeply ingrained that they are invisible, and therefore exposing them requires a lot of background, a lot of examples, a lot of data, and consequently a lot of writing.  But I also feel it is extremely important. Feel free to bookmark it, and come back and read more another time.  To help make up for the length, I have broken it up into 5 separate pages.  To continue on, please click "PAGE 2", just below. Comments are allowed - encouraged!- on the final page, but only if you actually read everything up to there.)


PAGE 1     PAGE 2    PAGE 3    PAGE 4     PAGE 5

21 January 2013

The Oldest Profession




First of all, let’s make one thing clear.  A prostitute does not sell their body.  The only circumstance in which any person actually sells a body part is when someone sells a kidney.  When you sell something, the buyer takes permanent possession of it, and the seller can not get it back.  The new owner can do anything they want with their purchase, because it is now their property.  This does not describe the prostitute / client transaction at all.  Even when people accepted indentured servitude arrangements they were only offering themselves on a long-term lease, not actually selling themselves.  A prostitute normally only allows her (or his) clients limited use of a portion of their body for a short, usually designated time period, an hour perhaps, maybe a few. 
This is not just semantics.  It’s a very important distinction.   

Really, what the transaction consists of is a person agreeing to engage in a specific activity for a specified time period which they otherwise might not do, to the benefit of another person who offers compensation for the time and labor involved.
Which, if you think about it, kind of describes every job.

Why is sex a special case? 

Post- effective contraception, women’s liberation, and sexual liberation, (and beyond that to a modern world heading towards equality for homosexuals and acceptance of transsexuals), most people (at least people whose opinion is worth considering) have normalized sexuality, accepted it as a natural part of life and, frankly, not really such a big deal as people used to make of it (and some still do). 
It’s how we – and all multicellular life – reproduce, and it also happens to be enjoyable (except, not “happens to” – it is enjoyable specifically in order to get us to do it, because otherwise we wouldn’t). 

Non-reproductive sex is basically like chocolate cake with ice cream, or roller-coasters, or movies.
They are all examples of ways we have learned how to deliberately activate our own pleasure sensors - originally designed with some evolutionary function or other - but we can skip past all that survival of the specie nonsense and use our intellect to make life more pleasant for ourselves.  Sometimes there end up being negative side-effects, but plenty of times there aren’t.  When there aren’t any negative side-effects, there is no good reason why we shouldn’t.

EDIT:
My first two comments on this were both very similar.  They both addressed some commonly held ideas about the real world working conditions of prostitutes - specifically "street walkers" - currently, in the United States.  This is not an essay about what "is".  It is about what "could be" - perhaps even should be.  I believe that the REASON conditions are so bad for those women, and the reason many of them have backgrounds of addiction and/or childhood abuse is BECAUSE of both the illegality and the social stigma.  The same degree of correlation does not exist, for example, in the porn industry, which is a legal version where a person has sex in exchange for money. Some correlation still exists, but then again, the social stigma is there even if the criminality isn't.

However, given that this is what probably many people will be thinking about upon seeing the topic, I should address it early on.

Many people simply accept it as a given that the majority of prostitutes are being exploited by pimps, that they were abused as children, or that they began working as prostitutes as children. 
As is often the case, common knowledge does not fully match up to even current reality in the first place:

"a Miami study found that only 7 percent had pimps"
"studies that compare matched samples of street prostitutes and non-prostitutes [regarding childhood abuse] show mixed results; some find a statistically signific
ant difference in experience of family
abuse, while others find no difference."
"victimization is apparently not nearly as prevalent, even among street prostitutes, as the oppression model asserts."

"An estimated 20 percent of all prostitutes work on the streets in the United States."

"indoor sex workers are less likely to experience violence from customers than those who work on the streets. For example, Church found that few call girls and sauna workers had experienced violence (only 1 percent had ever been beaten, 2 percent raped"
"compared to streetwalkers, indoor workers have lower rates of childhood abuse, enter prostitution at an older age, and have more education. They are less drug dependent...Sexually transmitted diseases are fairly rare among call girls, escorts, and women who work in brothels"
"Research finds that many indoor workers made conscious decisions to enter the trade; they do not see themselves as oppressed victims and do not feel that their work is degrading. Consequently, they
express greater job satisfaction than their street level counterparts. And they may differ little from nonprostitutes: A study by psychologist Sarah Romans and colleagues comparing indoor workers
and an age-matched sample of nonprostitute women found no differences between the two groups in physical health, self-esteem, mental health, or the quality of their social networks."

 
http://www.umsl.edu/~marinap/DOCUMENTS/problemsurbancomm/mail/Prostitution-%20Facts%20and%20Fictions.pdf

Street walking is the most visible form to most people, and the form that critics always point to, but there is absolutely zero reason to assume that it represents anything inherent about prostitution.
  Understand that all through-out this essay, I am referring to prostitution philosophically, removed from the social elements in day to day practice in the United States which are largely a result of both it being illegal, and the social stigmas which are a direct result of the sort of collective beliefs we hold about sexuality that I am addressing in this essay.


Back to the question at hand.  Why is sex a special case, when really all employment involves renting yourself out?  What does it say about our assumptions about sexuality, our own lingering hang-ups and inappropriate moralizing if using ones hands to stimulate another’s back for money is ok, but using ones hands to stimulate another in certain other places is not?  Are we still going to claim that a woman’s sex parts are what make her valuable?  If not, why is it any more or less demeaning for her to use those parts to stimulate her client than it would be to use her hands?  What does it say about our own beliefs about female sexuality if any act of sex is somehow inherently degrading?

Man provides money, woman provides sex.  This describes a large part of the traditional model of home life.  If a live-in prostitute also cooks and cleans, does that somehow make it less scandalous?  How about if a man has sex with his live-in maid? What separates her from a housewife? What if the two feel a genuine affection for each other? At this point the lines get very blurry between a sugar daddy / sugar baby relationship – which is technically legal – and straight prostitution.  (link to playboy article, if available).  What separates this  arrangement from any other childless couple consisting of a breadwinner and a housewife?  One could answer that a wife need not submit on demand, but remember that for most of history, she generally was expected to.

A masseuse makes their client’s body feel good, using their own body.  The only thing differentiating massage from prostitution is sex part contact (though, of course, that is not always a difference.  It seems the two go together quite naturally.  Yet neither always implies the other). But masseuse is just most obvious analogy, how about a chiropractor?  Or any doctor for that matter. How about a model? They are renting out their body as well. Or a construction worker, who is paid to do particular things with their hands all day, which they wouldn’t be doing on their own?  Moreover, any one who does any work with their hands, is renting their body to whoever employs them.  Professional thinkers are not off the hook.  They are being paid to think about some particular topic, no matter what they might prefer to have on their minds.  They are renting out their brains to their employers or clients.  And the brain is an organ of the body, just like every other.  The temporary use of your body is what you get paid for.  If you weren’t using your body in some way that someone else wanted, no one would give you any money.  Unless you are unemployed, you rent out your body.  Most people spend the majority of their waking hours renting out their bodies to someone else.  And while there are a few fringe anarchists who think that is always immoral, most people see no problem with it, so long as it is a voluntary arrangement.

The one exception we have is for children (and perhaps people with the mental capacity of a child).
But in the case of sex, an awful lot of people don’t feel its ok even if the professional prostitute is an adult, and choose that line of work voluntarily.  What does this say about our hidden beliefs about female agency?  Can we assume that no one would ever voluntarily make that choice, therefore they must be a victim?  No other profession carries with it an assumption that the worker must be being forced or manipulated into taking the job.  I would never voluntarily work in a sewage plant, a landfill, a slaughterhouse, a coal mine, or wearing a giant advertising character suit.  Yet I don’t assume that anyone who does those jobs was traumatized in their past, is on drugs, or is being manipulated or threatened by their manager.  I just see that for the right price, different people choose to rent themselves out in different types of employment.  For unskilled or semi-skilled labor, the most unpleasant jobs tend to pay pretty well. 

As was established earlier, due to obvious evolutionary reasons, sex feels pleasurable.  It does for both genders, for the same reason.  On average males tend to have a stronger sex drive than women, but it is none-the-less pleasurable for females – if it wasn’t, they would never agree to it, and the specie would have died out millions of years ago.  Contrary to what much of society has claimed for centuries at least, women even have sexual desire of their own, independent of their partners, and most of them have orgasms at least occasionally.  So, unlike being a sanitation worker or a coal miner, the day to day (or night to night) business of being a prostitute is at least potentially pleasurable, and at the same time, the pay can be competitive with the crappiest of jobs. 

I propose that the real reason for the cultural stigma of prostitution may have actually originated from somewhere quite different – nearly opposite – than the purported reasons of today (protecting women), and it ties in with the housewife analogy I made earlier.

Our species is slightly sexually dimorphic – that is, males and females have slightly different characteristics aside from those which directly affect reproduction.  For example, males have furry faces, females do not. Males also tend to be slightly larger in stature and stronger physically than females.  Whatever the reasons this dimorphism originally evolved, as humans formed ever larger and more complex social groups, we tended to set up arrangements where males used their strength for hunting and protection.  This gave them a social advantage, since they had something to offer that females need - protein - while males were capable of gathering plant food as well if need be (and frequently did, during the long periods of waiting that hunting involves). 
Meanwhile, the long human gestation period and even longer time to parental independence means a female has reason to be much more selective in mates than other species, while for a non-monogamous prehistoric male there is still the same biological incentive towards promiscuity that there is for any creature (of either sex) which doesn’t have to take the time and resources to care for offspring.  This tends to leads to a situation in which the male human’s sex drive is much stronger than the human females – not just in terms of frequency, but, more importantly, in terms of the sensation of urgency.
And there lies the equalizer to the power dynamic caused by our sexual dimorphism.  For females sex is pleasurable, but for males sex is (or at least feels like) a necessity. 

As obsessed as our particular society is with rape, in practical terms, barring the use of weapons, bondage, or drugs (none of which had been invented yet) to force submission, it’s simply challenging to do successfully.  Imagine trying to get a key into a doorknob while someone on the inside keeps turning the handle.  Now imagine instead of just turning the knob, the other person has the knob out of the door, and they are spinning it and waving it all around, and also punching you in the face and kicking you in the crotch at the same time you try to get the key in the keyhole.  The difficulty in practical terms is reflected in how rarely rape is successful by total strangers who don’t use any sort of weapons, drugs, or other means to force submission.

This is reflected by real life statistics.  Depending which study you look at, 70-90% of rape victims knew the attacker personally, and the vast majority of these happen inside the home of one of them.  In these cases there are a myriad of social and psychological factors that affect power dynamics, so in order to determine any inherent gender based power imbalance, we have to focus on only those rapes committed by strangers.
Among all rapes, in 54% the victim was intoxicated, and while many of these coincide with the cases of known assailants, at least one study suggests that women raped by strangers are more likely to be under the influence of drugs or alcohol at the time of attack.  Of rapes committed by strangers, 20% brandish or use weapons, and 20% have more than one assailant.  These 3 factors will no doubt have some overlap, but it means somewhere between 60% and 90% of the time there is something other than just physical strength differences involved.  Of what remains, a very significant number of victims do not resist.  This is likely from a mistaken belief (one which has been actively promoted by well meaning but misinformed professionals) that resistance will increase the violence used against them, when in fact "resisting victims are less frequently and less seriously injured after taking some kind of protective action than non-resisting victims"
When a potential victim offers physical resistance before rape has occurred, it is effective 85% of the time.
Another study found violent physical resistance prevents rape up to 86% of the time it is attempted and simply running away is effective up to 85% of the time.
Apply that 85% of the time an attacker is unable to overcome resistance to the up to 90% of the time when physical strength is the only advantage the attacker has, and the reality matches up with the thought experiment - outside of modern social and technological factors, the physical power imbalance between the genders is much smaller than we commonly assume.
So that leaves female choice as the deciding factor in when, or if, a male gets to have the sex which he (feels he) needs.  This balances out the power dynamic, as females have almost total control over something males need; something that they are not realistically able to do without.

Once agriculture is invented, though, women are less dependent on men for sustenance, and the power balance shifts in their favor.  To try to compensate, men formed strict social roles that attempted to keep women dependent, all the way to the fairly recent era of housewives and breadwinners – a female may be just as capable physically and mentally as doing whatever job her husband does, but if she is capable of supporting herself, what incentive does she have to stay with him and continue providing him sex?  (Incidentally, this is perhaps reflected in that, since female employment has become normal and wide-spread, the majority of divorces are initiated by women).

Then, perhaps largely to that end, at some point in our history, cultures all over the world invented marriage. 

This is good in a way for females, as it mandates males to stay put and provide half of the time and/or resources necessary to sustain the helpless human offspring they helped to create. 
But it also takes away the one source of power that they had, as (up until about 19??), the deal also mandated that a wife satisfy her husband sexually anytime he wanted.  It allowed females themselves to be commoditized, a possession originally owned by her father, later transferred to her husband in a match the father arranged. 
Most important of all, it was good for social cohesion and society as a whole, and allowed a mechanism by which one group could form alliances with others nearby.
Prostitution bypasses that mechanism.  Societies’ leaders don’t like it, because having authority over sexual acts gives them power over individuals, and because illegitimate children are hard to fit into organized social structures. Illegitimate children confuse issues of inheritance, dowries, and kinship. 
Males don’t like it because it gives females power.  Sex is again commoditized, which means the female can demand a fair market price for it, rather than being forced to provide an unlimited amount.  She can also turn down a client she isn’t interested in. 
Non-prostitute females don’t like it because their promise of sexual availability to their male partner was supposed to be the trade off for sexual exclusivity from their partners, guarantying the male isn’t tempted to spend resources on offspring produced with some other female (like the prostitute).

Yet, despite all of the various social arrangements prostitution circumvents, it remains a worthwhile transaction for the parties involved.  What can the leaders of society – those creating the fundamental beginnings of culture, that which would continue to affect our collective consciousness for the rest of foreseeable time – do to prevent two consenting individuals from engaging in what they determine to be a mutually beneficial transaction?
Before there was any such thing as law, there was only one thing societies leaders could do.  Invoke a religious based morality, one which needs no justification or explanation, because it is claimed to come directly from the mouth of “god(s)”.  Prostitution, along with all non-procreative sex, gets condemned universally.  In a world with no technology and no law enforcement, where individuals may live any distance from anyone else, and where the majority of families are responsible for their own sustenance, there isn’t much leverage a society’s leader has over the people.  If individuals can be convinced that there is something fundamentally bad about the pleasure of sex, that it is permissible only in the context of an officially sanctioned marriage, then those who control marriage control an important aspect of individuals lives – and of course marriage is universally controlled by religious or government officials, those same entities which have attempted to maintain control over people for as long as people have lived in groups.  Every expression of sexuality outside of it then becomes expressly forbidden – per-marital, adultery (even if its consensual, including the consent and/or participation of the spouses), incest, prostitution, and even masturbation – by way of the false “morality” of religious decree. 

Of course any sane person, told that, for example, enjoying the sunshine on your face on a sunny day, or enjoying a delicious orange, or enjoying music, or laughing with friends was actually immoral and angered “god(s)”, not for any particular reason, but just because (S)He says so, would immediately disregard such utter non-sense, and probably disregard pretty much everything else the priest who made that claim said as well.  It has to go beyond just a decree.  It has to be a universal condemnation of any pleasurable aspect of sexuality which is drilled into every single individual from the moment they learn to speak, if not sooner.  Herein lies the birth of the concept of nudity and its inseparable concepts of indecent exposure, modesty, and shame.  Never allowing any person to see one’s sex parts outside of the family unit creates a subtle anti-sex message to a new human trying to make sense of the world even before they are old enough to speak. 

In a society where women are property, a young girl’s value is inherently tied up with her virginity.  No family wants to arrange a marriage for their son with a girl who is already pregnant with someone else’s child, nor does a man want to spend his resources raising a child that doesn’t have his genes.  But hundreds of thousands of years before modern technology, the only way to be absolutely sure a woman or girl isn’t already pregnant is if she is a virgin.  Therefore, from the point of view of her parents, who have her to trade, her virginity is valuable.  However, from her own point of view, any child she may get pregnant with has her genes, and more immediately relevant, any sex she has is potentially enjoyable to her.  So there is a conflict between her acting in her own interests, and what her parents want her to do.  Much like with the leaders of societies desire to control all of society by limiting who has sex with who, individual parents have incentive to prevent their daughters from having sex with anyone other than who they designate, and they have the same problem of how to actually enforce that.  The solution is the same: make sure that she feels guilty about her own sexuality from as young an age as possible, and constantly reinforce the idea that her value as a person is intrinsically tied up with who she has sex with.  Make her feel that refraining from sex makes her a virtuous person, and slander the words “slut” and “whore” as the two worst possible insult that can be given to a female.  Tie up her self-esteem with her sexuality (or rather lack-thereof), and reinforce that so persistently that she completely and fully internalizes it.  Eventually everyone is so affected and it gets reinforced by social pressure so thoroughly that many thousands of years later people still assume that if a female chooses to have sex with several different people, she must have a low sense of self-worth, and similarly sex-workers of any kind – not just prostitutes, but also escorts, porn actresses, strippers, and even nude models, are all often assumed to be victims of abuse, drugs, or desperation.

Even though, in the years between then and now, quite a few totally game-changing events have happened.  Women have regained recognition by males as people.  Women have ceased to be legally property.  Rape is no longer a crime against a woman’s father or husband, as it was in the Bible, but instead a crime against her.  Women have been included in democracy, allowed to vote and hold office. 
Another sea-change in human culture is region lost its strangle-hold on society.  It still has plenty of adamant followers, and even among non-believers its influence on world-view can be rather dramatic, but it is no longer a serious rival to secular government in making Laws which must be obeyed by all.  That leaves open for questioning all of the “moral” rules handed down by it which have no actual basis in the fundamental ethics of harming or helping sentient beings which real morality is based on, and nearly all of them have indeed been questioned by secular liberals, and occasionally even secular conservatives and religious liberals.  In dramatic contrast to the religious past, homosexuality is widely tolerated, if not accepted outright, gambling is a problem only if it leads to addiction or crime, blasphemy is just a figure of speech, and Family Guy is aired nightly on broadcast television with nothing more than a brief message of parental advisory.
The third gigantic change – one which may actually have had significant affect in helping the other two occur – was the invention of forms of contraception which actually worked.  People have been using methods to try to enjoy the pleasure of sex without the inconvenience of reproduction since before anyone thought up the wheel, but “actually worked” are the key words.  That invention completely dissolved most of the original reasons for centralized authoritarian control over individual sexuality – managing fertility and kinship in order to manipulate social relationships.  The main reason left for anyone to want to control an individual female’s sexuality is the power imbalance caused by sex being a necessity for men but a nicety for women.  Now that she can have sex without the risk of having to raise a child without paternal support, she has substantially more power.  Couple that with women’s substantially increased rights, and women, by gaining control over their own sexuality from both men and from biology, and in doing so gained a huge amount of power over men.  As religion lost strength and contraception became cheaper, easier to access, and more effective, many of the sexual morays which pretended to be morality but were really about controlling fertility and maintaining power structures began to melt away.  While it’s not exactly dinner conversation, it’s pretty much understood that most normal healthy people masturbate at least at some point in their lives.  Swinging or open relationships are seen as choices a couple makes.  Premarital sex has become the norm – who in modern society would marry someone they had never had sex with?  Homosexuality, once seen as the gravest of sins, is no longer a capital offense, no longer a mental illness, and in many places, nothing to be ashamed of at all.  All of these things which we take for granted were once considered capital offenses.  Regardless of the consent of all parties involved, the punishment for any sex outside of marriage was death.

But with all these changes, certain things – particularly those with significantly less universal appeal – have kept their status as inherently “immoral” even if they don’t actually hurt anyone.  Incest between two consenting adults is still seen as inherently immoral even by otherwise secular progressives.  There is likely a biological component to this aversion, as there are a lot of regressive genes which lead to various genetic illnesses which are only expressed if a person has the same version from both parents, and statistically speaking the more closely related the parents, the higher the chance of them both having the same problematic recessive gene. However, even siblings only have about 50% of their variable DNA in common (that which can vary and still leave a being human) and all the members of a given population (especially prior to the advent of mechanized long-distance travel) are likely to have very similar genomes.  In other words, incest is not at all a guarantee of offspring with problems, nor is avoiding it a guarantee against them.  By the logic of the recessive gene argument, people should seek partners as foreign to themselves as possible, yet people (especially females) tend to seek partners of their own race (that, or seek out white partners, regardless of their own race).  In any event, the invention of effective contraception renders the entire deformed offspring argument entirely moot.  There is no objective reason for any objection for sex between two consenting adults, who are using contraception, who happen to be siblings.  And yet this persists even in the most progressive of societies as being seen as despicable, and that speaks to just how strongly the affects of past religious based “morality” continues to have indirect influence over current culture, no matter how far removed from it any particular non-believer is.

You can still hear post-sexual-liberation women use the term “slut” and “whore” as an insult against other women.  A “slut” is just a female who chooses to have sex with multiple partners without forming relationships with them first.  A “whore” is a derogatory word for prostitute, or, anyone who receives compensation from a partner for engaging in sex.  Why should these things continue to offend women?  Certainly a part of it is the same lingering religious morays that condemn incest, but there may be another factor as well.  As previously noted, much of the reason for the original subjugation of women may have been men’s attempt at undoing the power unbalance, and with women’s liberation, the power imbalance returned, and with the advent of contraception and abortion, that influence over males could be exercised with no risk of unintended offspring.  But the power shift to the entire gender is only available to any individual to the extent that she controls the only access to sex for a given partner.  Although any given couple is unlikely to make every sexual contact a squid row quo, generally both partners are expected to contribute to the relationship, and sex is frequently seen as a negotiating point in the females favor since, as since ancient times, no matter how much she may desire and enjoy it, she can do without it, while a male can no more go without then he can without food (which is why there are so many cases of celibate priests in sexual scandals, but it is essentially unheard of among nuns). 
However, if a prostitute comes along, it diminishes that negotiating power, as her partner now has another avenue for that resource, one that comes without the explicit long-term contract of marriage or even the implicit long-term contract of a relationship.  And of course a promiscuous female is even worse, since they don’t require any form of compensation.  Obviously few if any women actually consciously think all this through when looking down on another women for their sexual choices, but I propose it may be a subconscious mechanism that explains why some people who take per-marital sex for granted and are totally ok with homosexuality still have a distaste for prostitutes and promiscuous women.

All of this history and politics, to try to look into why sex is considered a special case, any different from any other temporary renting out of ones body, why it should have any more or less to do with self-respect than any other form of labor.  The primary reasons are obsolete.  Many of our sexual morays are relics from before birth control existed, and gradually – very gradually – societies in many parts of the world are finally changing to catch up to modern technology.  Things which have been ingrained into our collective psyche for thousands of generations often have a tendency to take on an existence of their own, independent of the original reasons they developed.  But as logical intelligent individuals, we can each think about our own true core values and separate that which we believe from that which everyone around us has always told us to believe.  If we accept that there is absolutely nothing dirty or sinful about enjoying sex in any form so long as it is by the consent of everyone involved, then all of the old “goes-without-saying” type of morays should be questioned.  Not just the ones we personally would like to violate, but also the ones we have no interest in.  There is no such thing as a perversion.  There is just differing tastes. 
And once you have removed the “non-reproductive-sex is evil” non-sense from the equation, all that is left is prostitution is a job.  A job in which you temporarily rent your body to someone, and do something you wouldn’t otherwise be doing in that particular moment.  Just like every other job that exists or could possibly exist.  If you are employed, in any fashion, if you get compensated by anyone for doing or thinking anything, that makes you, essentially, a whore.  And there is absolutely nothing wrong with that.