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Julie Bindel. Whether they should be selling sex has been a long-standing debate that continues to rage today. Organizations like the Pivot Legal Society argue this is a job like any other, and that the women deserve laws that make their work safer. So, the debate continues. British author and journalist Julie Bindel is in Vancouver this week to speak about her new book, The Pimping of Prostitution.
After interviewing sex workers, pimps and others in the industry in multiple countries, Bindel argues the abolition of prostitution is the only answer. Our talk with Bindel has been edited for length.
The safety of the woman partly depends on her being decriminalized, but wholly depends on the abolition of the sex trade so that women do not end up in this heinous situation, which can never be made safe.
Q: Some activists believe that by decriminalizing prostitution, you make life safer for the women? A: Obviously the activists in Vancouver are pushing for full decriminalization, and they are using arguments about safety. But we have reams of evidence from countries where this has been experimented with. We have Germany, the Netherlands, Nevada in the U.
A: The right thing that Canada could do is to recognize that people in prostitution are not making choices. The likes of Terri-Jean Bedford and those who are a-typical of prostituted women are making the loudest noises and yet they are the least represented of any in the sex trade. I hope that Trudeau and the Liberal politicians that surround him β¦ recognize that this is a human rights violation.