Jolly, I suspected you found the same data site that I did because you came up with a similar or maybe the same figure for average annual earnings for prostitutes that my link contained.
I don't recall presenting any figure for average annual earnings of prostitutes. I may just be failing to recall that I did and I'm not up for reading through the whole thread, but I really don't think I did, since I can't generate such a number to any great accuracy off hand even now. I don't know what the average prostitute makes. That was never my point. My point was that many of them make quite a lot; enough to put themselves through schooling and I have met a number of them. I am gym friends with one who consistently makes $600 on Friday and Saturday nights merely as a stripper who does no "extras" (sex stuff). The "extras girls" make far in excess of that. Mind you, these are all young hot women and not ragged old women living in the street, so that may be a biased sampling - but the point is that they DO exist (and who are you to tell them they can't do this?).
I also now note that my impression is from Canada (and from those we interviewed in bringing the court challenge, which may not be representative) and yours is from the USA (and I am guessing tilted towards the abused or trafficked ones). I suspect that's the case with your experience since you have the impression that such a high number were sexually abused and that such a high number started so young. I really don't think that's true. Many yes, but not THAT many. If it were that many I wouldn't have met and interviewed so many who don't match that.
It’s a shame that you are unwilling or unable to consider that your sample pool of prostitutes you interviewed is also quite small or to consider whether everything they told you was factual.
May I suggest that rather than telling me what I'm willing or unwilling to do, you ask me? I am totally in agreement that my sample size was small and may not be very representative, but the disparity in what I have encountered with these women and what you have claimed is so vast that I know you can't be correct in the above, at least not here in Canada. Your point about if they were telling me the truth would be a better one regarding what they tell Derec as a customer than what they tell me as a court officer (lawyer) taking a sworn statement to be used at the highest court in the nation.
And lets agree that ANY number of sex trafficking victims and/or underage prostitutes isn't acceptable. Nobody should be sex trafficked or abused. Any number of farm workers or garment workers being trafficked or enslaved is also not acceptable though, and that's no reason to ban legal agriculture or fashion.
Then there is the evidence we looked at regarding safety of women and men who work as sex workers. If they are going to work the job whether it is legal or not (and they will), can we agree that their safety matters? Can you see how cutting off or reducing their means of screening clients, pushing them out on the streets instead of working out of brothels with protection and/or regulation, etc will put them in more danger?
And then there remains the freedom of choice argument, as strong or as weak as it may be. At the end of the day an anti-prostitution law is a law telling a woman what she may and may not do with her body. I don't see why that should be any less potent here than in the abortion arguments, especially since here there is no unborn being killed.