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yuuunikki , to asklemmy in Atheists of Lemmy, is your partner religious?

Implying the average atheist is able to get a romantic partner is being generous

TheBananaKing , to asklemmy in Do you approve sex work? Why or why not?

Sex work is work.

The people that do it deserve respect, and all the social and legal protections that attach to any other kind of work.

Your own preferred attitude to sex isn’t the point.

Funkytom467 ,
@Funkytom467@lemmy.world avatar

But should it be work?

Should we really have a society where selling your body is an opportunity to make money.

For instance, it imply that some poor women are gonna take it regardless the consequence, just because it’s the best alternative to pay the bills.

I can barely tolerate the physical straining we put on some workers. Sex work’s consequences are unacceptable to me in that same sens, sometimes worse.

So sure, no matter your opinion we should respect them, and not incriminate them!

And of course not all sex work is the same… to be acceptable it just requires better conditions. It can’t be something you choose out of need.

Subtracty ,

Regulations would help, but create their own hurdles.

Funkytom467 ,
@Funkytom467@lemmy.world avatar

True and tested.

The best help is probably indirectly having better social policies overall. Although never perfect, the best we are the lesser the problem.

TheBigBrother , (edited ) to asklemmy in Do you approve sex work? Why or why not?

It have side effects on the people who do it: yes, I don’t give a flying fuck about it: yes

xmunk , to asklemmy in Do you approve sex work? Why or why not?

Absolutely, as long as there is safety and security for all parties involved. Consent must be obeyed by clients and both the clients and employees should be required to supply current STD screens as well as having a safe location for the work.

toomanypancakes , to asklemmy in Do you approve sex work? Why or why not?
@toomanypancakes@lemmy.world avatar

I’m of the opinion that if you don’t want people performing sex work, you should be enacting measures to improve people’s quality of life to where that’s not their only option. The workers themselves should have legal protections and be permitted to perform their job like any other worker is.

I suspect some people would prefer that as a regulated option anyway, and they should be defended in their choice to do so. Sex work is work.

TheTechnician27 ,
@TheTechnician27@lemmy.world avatar

Moreover, if you don’t want people doing sex work, then you probably especially don’t want people to be forced into doing sex work. But that’s precisely what happens when you criminalize it: you make it so that the only way the demand can be satisfied is through a shady black market where trafficking is orders of magnitude more likely to take place, and you make it orders of magnitude more difficult for victims and witnesses to go to the authorities to report it.

memfree ,
@memfree@lemmy.ml avatar

I generally agree with you, but it is so complicated. I read a piece in The Nation a few years ago (written 2019) and whenever I see a question like this I have to dig it up. Sex workers in Spain applied to become a union (OTRAS, for short, full name basically means “the other women") and were approved in August 2018. Here are a few snippets:

After OTRAS was legalized, its two dozen or so members—who include women and men, both trans and cisgender—quickly found themselves engulfed in a national controversy. Prominent activists, academics, and media personalities swarmed social media under the hashtag (“I’m an Abolitionist”) to denounce what they saw as basic exploitation masquerading as the service economy. The union’s opponents argue that in a patriarchal society, women can’t be consenting parties in a paid sexual act born of financial necessity. They liken sex work to slavery, hence their name: “abolitionists.”

OTRAS calls this abolitionist opposition “the industry.” “They live really well off of their discussions, books, workshops, conferences, without ever including sex workers,” Necro says. “We’re not allowed to attend the feminist conventions.” OTRAS accuses “the industry” and the government—the two loudest arms of the abolitionist camp—of racism and classism, and is irked by their claims to feminism. “A government that refuses to guarantee the rights of the most vulnerable, poorest women with the highest number of immigrants? How is that feminist?” Borrell bristles. “We’re the feminists, the ones fighting for their rights.”

While advocates for legalization argue that it will make sex work safer, abolitionists counter that it could instead endanger women who, unlike the members of OTRAS, did not choose to enter the profession on their own. Abolitionists frame their anti-prostitution stance around the issue of human trafficking, specifically for prostitution. They argue that regulating sex work will simply allow traffickers to exploit women under legal cover.

“The trafficked women have no papers, so if police raid a club, the women have no choice but to say they’re there because they want to be,” says Rocío Nieto […] Once law enforcement is out of earshot, Nieto says, “none of the women tell you they want to be there. None of them tell you they want to do that work.”

A handful of smaller radical-left parties also back OTRAS, as well as one unlikely ally: the right-wing Ciudadanos party, known for its harsh anti-immigration stance, among other more traditionally conservative postures. “Experience shows us that when the State refuses to regulate, the mafias make the rules,” the party’s press corps wrote me in an e-mail.

mechoman444 , to showerthoughts in The human body is a watercooled biological machinery

Bioelectrical machine but yes.

LustyArgonianMana , to showerthoughts in The human body is a watercooled biological machinery
@LustyArgonianMana@lemmy.world avatar

We are more like huge societies of microorganisms that somehow work together and sometimes make mistakes like microorganisms do and confuse us.

Pilferjinx ,

When you’re super high on shrooms and attain this realization, things get a little bit close.

LustyArgonianMana ,
@LustyArgonianMana@lemmy.world avatar

That everything is just a bunch of microorganisms. That the cell REALLY is the building block of life.

fmstrat , to asklemmy in what's your favorite thing to put on fries that isn't ketchup?

Mayo

drail , to asklemmy in what's that one sandwich you can't stop thinking about? be detailed
@drail@fedia.io avatar

Former chain of vegan subs out of SoCal named Subvegan had some of the best sandwhiches I have ever tasted, vegan or otherwise. Vegan deli meat and vegan cheese quality vary, but this place had the hookup for the best of both. A 9in sub was $12, loaded so fat it barely closed and was two meals worth for any normal person.

Their italian sub, the Godfather, had (vegan) turkey, ham, salami, provalone, cheddar, pepperoncini peppers, tomato, arugula, olives, onions, mayo, and italian dressing. The bread was always the perfect ratio of crunch to fluffy, their sauce portion was always on point, and their veggies were fresh as fuck. I salivate even just typing it out.

My fiancee and I would order in advance to have a sub waiting for us whenever we visited her family in Anaheim. It was the best. We started making plans in June to move out there so she could live near her parents and they closed their doors in July. Good vegan subs are a rarity, let alone vegan subs that stand out in quality against their non-veg counterparts. I am still in mourning.

pastermil , to asklemmy in what's your favorite thing to put on fries that isn't ketchup?

Hot sauce

maxenmajs , to nostupidquestions in Why do people complain about multiple streaming platforms existing?
@maxenmajs@lemmy.world avatar

It’s a matter of convenience. If you wish to ethically watch various shows then you have to either pay for many streaming services or finish some content on one, cancel, and switch to another.

eestileib , to programmer_humor in A QA engineer walks into a bar

I still fondly remember the QA guy on the first consumer electronics project I worked on. He didn’t do scripting or test harnesses or dependency injection, he used the product and filed good bugs telling us what would fuck up our customer’s expectations.

A good QA person helps with product design too if you let them.

Andy B, I’d work with you again in a second.

badcommandorfilename ,

Andy B, - good first name for a tester

eestileib ,

He was exactly the kind of guy who doesn’t get hired any more because companies “know better”.

And stuff gets crappier every year somehow.

pyre ,

look at product testing Andy over here

DogWater ,

A or B lol

LaunchesKayaks , to patientgamers in August Recommendations Thread: What are you playing?
@LaunchesKayaks@lemmy.world avatar

I started playing warframe with friends and it’s great. I also play cyberpunk occasionally, as well as Morrowind with the openMW overhaul

emb , to asklemmy in Youtuber creators with under 1000 subs that are your favorite?

Found Row’s channel from a similar thread years ago: www.youtube.com/channel/UCo6n98yEksXx0kHT4TA8_hQ

This guy does runs of the Pokemon Stadium games blindfolded. And I don’t fully know why, but it’s just super chill and enjoyable to watch these videos casually.

He’s right at 1000 now. Though I don’t see any recent uploads, hope he’s not done.

thagoat , to asklemmy in what's your favorite thing to put ketchup on that isn't fries?

Not me, but my girlfriend’s son (7) loves it on corn on the cob.

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