
Human trafficking is one of the fastest growing criminal enterprises in the world and it involves thousands of innocent individuals getting swept up into the victimization.
These are victims that are forced into the market, they have not decided to enter it willingly and they do not make the choice to engage in this behavior on their own.
Supporting someone's right to engage in that industry does not equate to supporting the market demand itself.
All adults who wish to work in that industry should have every right to, and if they did and there weren't such a stigma against it then it would be safer for them and it would take power away from true criminals and predators in the market that exist.
Do you only support freedom that aligns with your prejudice?
You can be against human trafficking and in favor of adults making their own decision to willingly and freely enter the sex industry market. They aren't the same thing.
Trying to impose your own rigid and hypocritically subjective morality onto others, by banning sex work because you are against human trafficking for example, doesn't make any sense. Banning this service is giving the government power to senselessly and unjustly infringe upon the right of other people to choose to enter into a peaceful and willing exchange.
It makes a difference, learning to engage in critical thinking to the point that you don't make the mistake of conflating the actions of consenting adults who are offering a service willingly, with children and other victims that have been kidnapped and forced against their will to enter an industry they want nothing to do with. It isn't the same thing. Criminalizing this industry only makes it more dangerous for those working within, it doesn't prevent the demand whatsoever which is glaringly obvious by the fact that this is still for thousands of years now one of the oldest professions.
Just like with any other industry in the market, if you're looking to foster freedom, prosperity, and better results or conditions, then the government needs to get their coercion out of it.
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