I don´t understand how this answers my point.
It answers your point by telling you that there is no reason for a sex worker in Nevada to put up with any kind of unwanted sexual attention from her employer. The law against sexual harassement applies
exactly the same way to a sex worker and her employer as it does to an office worker and her employer. So there is absolutely no irony as you state.
I got a very different impression from reading related past threads.
Links to those specific threads, please? I have to see what you read before I can comment.
One Nevada house was described as a sort of prison, and many of the workers as mentally il and abused...
Which one? Do you have a source for this story? Statistics, police reports from victims?
Show us your research then. I´d be interested to see it.
"Us?" How many people are you?
The source for the "women are kept as prisoners!" spin is simple, and quite misleading. Yes, it's true the women are not allowed to leave the house while working. Here's why.
First, no one lives year-round at a house. Instead, a worker books a shift, usually two to three weeks. She reserves a room at the house for that time period. Then she must be medically cleared by a doctor. If she is disease-free, she can go to work.
While she is at the house, the house certifies to all customers that this worker is disease-free. Condoms are required at all houses, and there has not been a single case of HIV/AIDS transmission in a legal, licensed house since 1988. The transmission rates for other STDs is extremely low; lower than that of the general population. In fact, tourist and promotional sites for the State of Nevada claim that there have been no reported cases of any STD transmission from a Nevada brothel in that time.
http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/00000891.htm
http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpa...4A15750C0A961948260&sec=&spon=&pagewanted=all
However, if the worker
were allowed to leave the house freely, there is no way the house could certify she isn't having unprotected sex outside its purview, and is still disease-free when she returns. So in order for that certification to stand, she must remain on the premises during her shift. Yes, for the whole two or three weeks, or longer if she books for longer.
But
she knows this before she ever shows up. If she doesn't want to do that, she can simply
not go. Gasp! It's true! And yet, the women still book shifts and reserve rooms, whenever they want to, on their own schedules, knowing full well that once they enter, they can't leave until the shift is up.
If a worker does want or need to leave during her shift, she
can go. No one makes her stay, or keeps her prisoner. But there are certain natural consequences to this. First, the worker who leaves must be re-certified by the doctor before coming back. Second, the worker's booked room will have been taken by another worker. There likely isn't going to be another open room for a few weeks. And third, it's an inconvenience to the house, in general. Often, your "shift" at the house has been announced, on the house website for instance, and your regulars expect you to be there. Your boss expects you to be there, like any other boss. Leaving tends to make any boss unhappy. He might not let you come back right away, as a kind of penalty. And there goes your income, yes?
So there are legitimate and sound reasons why a worker must remain on the premises for the duration of her shift.