She's being forced into it because if she doesn't benefits she needs are going to be vanishing. When the choices are go with out vital necessities or become a prostitute then that's forced. She can and did turn down the job, it's just she might loose necessary benefits.Steven Snyder wrote:Please explain how she is forced to do it?
There is absolutely nothing preventing her from not taking the job, or quitting if she has the job.
And if she took the job she would still have been forced into it even if she quits later. It's a rather binary choice.
Where does it say she could do with out the benefits? And surely a government assistance program is not so hard up that it's required to force people into prostitution just to keep afloat?Steven Snyder wrote:If she can make it on her own, the obviously she doesn't need government assistance. If she can't then the term "Beggars can't be Choosers" applies.
The simple fact is she apparently needs the benefits, I doubt a waitress can manage with out some help. And I would consider it morally bankrupt of any state to so violate any persons basic human rights so badly as to force some one into prostitution.
The addage only goes so far, in a society that has the financial means to support it's citizens there's no need what so ever to resort to such methods. She should be expected to work, and she is willing, just not to sell her body.