Hello everyone welcome back to my blog! Hope everyone is staying safe and healthy with the coronavirus going around. Please remember to wash your hands. Yesterday, after I got home from school, I sat in my living room with my cats and had a cup of some Earl Gray Tea, when I stumbled across “Should Sex Work Be Allowed in Canada?” by my favorite blogger, William Martin (click on the link to access his post. You should really check out his blog if you haven’t already, I write about it alot. Anyways, I read this post and I’ve been thinking about sex work and sex education a lot because of it, I am an educator, after all.
I personally believe that sex is a special and sacred thing that should only be shared between two people who love eachother and are married. However, I do recognize that not everyone has this belief, and I am, by no means, saying that everyone has to. I am just saying that I would never be comfortable selling my body, but if other people want to I think that they should be allowed to. Anti-prostitution laws are just another attempt to control women’s bodies, much like abortion laws, and are therefore oppressive against women. I think it is totally fine if two adults consent to and have sex, even if there is money involved. However, I find it hard to believe that prostitution is always consentual when there is a business involved, like the one in the article. Business always exploit their workers, and in this case that would mean the sex maybe is not always consentual. I think it is important to move away from an abstinence-based sex education curriculum and move towards a more diverse and inclusive curriculum, one that includes a conversation about consent. It is important to teach children consent so that they know when they are being exploited. I think this will help eliminate sex trafficking as well, having more nuanced conversations about sex. I just care about my students so much I don’t ever want anything bad like this ever happening to them.
One of my students went to Japan on a scholarship over the summer to study abroad. I asked them about their experience, and I learned a lot of interesting things about relationships in Japan. Apparently, over there, there is a large gender imbalance. There are far more men than women, meaning that there are a lot of single lonely men in the country. To combat this loneliness, there are services in Japan where you can “rent a girlfriend”. Immediately I thought that this was a euphemism for prostitution. However, there is no sex involved. You can rent somebody to pretend to be your girlfriend for however long. You can go on dates with her, take her to a party or as a plus one to a formal event or anything else. In fact, clients are forbidden from having sex with these girls. They are just to pretend that you have a girlfriend. How crazy is that!
Well, thanks again for stopping by. If you enjoyed this post be sure to subscribe and leave a comment below. Let me know what you think about the legality and morality of prostitution and sex education in the United States, as well as of the psuedo-prostitution that occurs of Japan. Have you heard of anything like it before? Would you ever elicit such services? Why or why not?

