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As a youth of today, I am in between the line of agreeing on this claim and opposing it as well.

My take
on this is that sex work can empower both men and women, but there are things to consider. As we all
know, sex work can never be just eradicated. The field of sex work is usually seen as a depraved act of
sexual attraction for both women and their clients. In terms of one's personality versus their jobs, this
encourages them not only to consider sex work as an occupation in its own right but also helps them to
question their clients based on their sexual preferences.

Empowerment is more about having a better view of one's options, which increases one's ability to effect
substantive social change. Some feminists agreed that some women sell sex and that other countries
permitted this sort of world, but we cannot insist on extending it to anything that is simply natural for
them. I believe that sex work will still be a form of pleasure. However, as Maccarro (2020) suggested, sex
workers are not pure victims and they create their jobs as well as their work produces them, and
considering this as a mode of work on par with other types of work would discourage the
misinterpretation of sexual objectification as a mechanism for women's inequality in our modern culture.

Through this, we must agree that human nature is inconsistent, and we must look further into what is
causing such conflict in the collective discourse about feminine sexuality. On the other hand, as
technology advances, it is becoming easier for women around the world to voice opposition that does not
wish to use sex's influence for personal advantage, but rather to prevent its use to have a larger social
impact. This empowers not only sex workers but also those who have been affected by the norms created
by the power systems inherent in sexuality as defined by the dominant patriarchal society, to challenge
these norms.

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