I was talking about the strong emphasis on family name and social responsibility, and the ways in which that emphasis restricts "free" individual choice.
But you don't have to appeal to that. Most men wouldn't want to marry a prostitute in the first place
anywhere in the world because it was largely considered shameful regardless of culture, religion, or even permissibility. And this guy? He had to "find out" that she was a prostitute.
All plant- & animal-based food (the word used in the narration) is arguably "rotting" from the moment of harvest/slaughter.
That's a tortured word game, saying that freshly slaughtered meat, or freshly harvested crops, are "rotting". Applying your insistence, the narration has to be read as asserting that a prostitute is no worse off than any non-prostitute (since meat that's perfectly fit for preparation and consumption is in the same class as a slimy and malodorous meat largely claimed by bacteria and fungi)-- which is obviously not its point and is never considered to be true in normal conversation.
The problem isn't "the institution". That's a misleading euphemism. The problem is that largely male demand outstrips largely female supply.
...yeah, that's probably going to happen whenever you make prostitution readily accessible. It increasingly became the case that the prostitutes of Ancient Rome were already slaves, or-- worse-- poached orphans raised with the expectation of becoming a prostitute.
In my view, it's to legalize and closely regulate prostitution.
As we've both acknowledged, the Netherlands-- which has legal prostitution--
still struggles with human sex trafficking. People from other countries around the globe are importing victims into the Netherlands (and other countries, as well, whether they have gaping loopholes that could only be intentional-- like Japan-- or outright ban it like the United States). Victims are being recruited
within the Netherlands, despite whatever legality and regulations exist.
This will[...] free up resources both to fight human traffickers and assist trafficked victims.
Giving the government more money won't enable it to make better spending decisions, and given that prostitution became heavily scrutinized in the past few centuries
because of its propensity to spread disease I highly doubt that its legalization will mitigate that. Recognizing prostitutes as human beings is able to be accomplished without legitimizing the institution in which they operate.
All that said, "free up resources both to fight human traffickers and assist trafficked victims"? How many more times are we going to evade the already mutually-agreed-upon fact that legalizing prostitution
demonstrably doesn't make human trafficking easier to combat?
I'd opine that a legal prostitution institution amounts to a front for human trafficking.
I got curious at whats To come & saw the Raws then I found out
THIS MANGA WAS A .1 CHAPTER FIASCO AND THE SCANLATION TEAM COMPILED THE .1 CHAPTERS INTO FULL CHAPTERS FOR US!!
I’AM DEEPLY MOVED BY THIS CONSIDERATION
To be fair, I think that's emerging as an anti-karōshi practice.
...but I can't be sure, because places like Comikey and MangaUp break apart chapters (with at the least the latter service only allowing you to RENT the individual parts).