[QUOTE=ClaraForever;6488595]I guess before someone here talked about it.
In nevada, legal brothels had a lot of "No-not by pro's choice but by law" lists. Fluid exchange was illegal so legally any can report bb action to authority.
As many east states do, strict legalization for registration give health / business authority to check license.
And I am not sure how many younger asian immigrants women will voluntarily get sex worker license when feds still ban (like immigration lawyers ask green card holders to not be involved in marijuana business till they get citizenship in case.
Still many hawaii style of AMP will be done illegally.[/QUOTE]Couple of other things to keep in mind in Nevada the house takes 50% across the top. They also charge the girls for the rooms, towels, sheets and basically nickel and dime the girls to death. There's also the cost of securing the license and the zoning restrictions as to where they can set up shop. (If you've never been to the Bunny Ranch, it's in the middle of nowhere. You'd think you're going to a junkyard.).
My thoughts on how the HF + $150 tip is detrimental to the variety of women that work in Hawaii begin with aside, if prostitution is legalized there is no way anyone is paying $210. And like the others pointed out, no BB-anything. There was a girl I knew who would work in the massage parlors here now and then who also worked in the brothels in Nevada and we had history. But she was petrified of doing anything BB or even kissing because if she turned up positive for anything, it would put her license in danger.
The current model for medical marijuana is that there's two dispensaries that have a monopoly per county, so don't expect anyone to be able to get a permit to operate a brothel in Honolulu to begun with. Youd have to have a fat bank account and be politically connected to get a brothel license, because, of course thats how it’s going to work here. There's also sure to be taxes, fees raising those prices further. With legalization, there going to be three people in that room: you, the pro and the state and the state will always have its hand out. The house isnt going to pay those taxes and fees. You are.
If anything, "legalization" would be another way to step up fines and punishment for existing massage parlors and indies for working without a brothel and sex worker license. The state would get to set the fines and punishment for two consenting adults exchanging in business. But hey, that is the Hawaii way, isn't it, and lucky we live here. / s.
The model you should work for is decriminalization. Legalization makes the state the biggest p*mp of all, but decriminalizing sex work turns it into another business transaction. But seeing as how they can't even pass a bill for a lottery here, legalization and decriminalization has no chance of passing here.
