Can we stop prostitution in Chicago? Yes, we can. Here’s how:
Eliminate advertising.
In March 2009, our Cook County Sheriff sued Craig’s list to shut down its exotic services listing. Why is such a listing even legal? The sheriff shouldn’t have to sue to get it off the Internet. And what about the billboards for gentlemen’s clubs all over the city? Take them down.
Educate clients.
The prevalence of multimedia pornography has created a fantasy sex life in the minds of thousands of American men. When these men seek out prostitutes, they are looking to fulfill those fantasies in the flesh.
They are not thinking the woman on the street has been kidnapped, forcibly raped and beaten, coerced into sex from as early as age twelve, infected with AIDS or STDs, addicted to alcohol and drugs, made a witness to the murder of her friends, and forced to give whatever money she earns to her pimp, keeping little or nothing for herself, in exchange for trying to get her basic needs for food, clothes, and shelter met. Yet this is the reality on the streets, not the pornographic fantasy.
When former prostitutes teach court-ordered classes that educate the men who have been arrested for paying for sex on the streets, the recidivism rate drops.
Arrest and prosecute clients, pimps, and club owners to the full extent of the law.
Currently, prostitution is illegal in most states. However, most arrests are of prostitutes, not clients, pimps, or club owners. The supply of impoverished, abused girls who can be coerced into prostitution is practically endless in America as well as overseas. The law needs to concentrate on the demand — the clients — as well as the delivery mechanism: pimps and clubs.
Penalties must become more severe: raise solicitation from a misdemeanor to a felony, increase fines from $500 to $1500 for a first solicitation offense ($3000 for a second offense), and include mandatory education and service projects to which jail time is the only alternative.
When the cost of the crime goes up, the rate of the crime goes down.
Offer faith-based rehabilitation programs in prisons.
Often criminals go into prison bad and come out worse. Prison ends up being the social network for prostitutes, pimps, and others involved in the sex trade and other criminal activities. So prison has to do more than punish. It has to offer restorative justice that includes education and rehabilitation.
Studies show that faith-based rehabilitation programs like Prison Fellowship make the greatest impact on the recidivism rate because they encourage prisoners to willingly commit to change and give them hope in the love and the power of God to help them live a different life.
Create affordable, accessible, widely available rehabilitation programs for prostitutes.
Women coerced into the sex trade as teenagers, who have experienced the trauma of sexual assault and drug addiction, need food, clothes, housing, medical attention, counseling, education, job training, and child care. They need provision until they can become strong and independent enough to provide for themselves in healthy ways. Without the support structure, women will reenter the sex trade just to survive.
Intervention requires partnerships between government and nonprofit agencies, including dedicated faith communities, who will coordinate resources to change our culture.
Educate the public.
I’ve heard many people say we ought to legalize prostitution, regulate it, and tax it. Few people seem to understand how ineffective this approach truly is. With the legalization of prostitution comes a whole culture of crime that costs taxpayers paying for the resulting police, prison, court, and medical costs.
Worse still, legalization makes the government the biggest pimp on the block. This paves our streets and funds our schools with the bodies of human beings. It legalizes slavery. We once fought a war to eliminate slavery in America, but now it is back in the form of prostitution and sex trafficking. Is this the kind of culture we want to live in?
I’ve never met a little boy who said, “When I grow up, I want to be a pimp.” I’ve never met a little girl who said, “When I grow up, I want to be a prostitute.” What loving parents would want their children devastated by this kind of horror? Children and teenagers wind up in the sex trade because we, as citizens, have not taken a stand against this evil.
It’s time to stop prostitution. Let’s use the strategies that work to do it.
Dr. Jane Beal
JSASSN International