• Prostitution has been condemned as a single form of human rights abuse, and an attack on the dignity and worth of human beings.
What human right does consensual sex between two adults abuse?
• The case for making it against the law to buy sex begins with the premise that it's base and exploitative and demeaning to sex workers.
This is the same as your first point. It's also a subjective opinion. What right do you have to say what is exploitative and demeaning for someone else? If they want to do it, why should you be allowed to enforce your beliefs on them?
Legalizing prostitution expands it, the argument goes, and also helps pimps, fails to protect women, and leads to more back-alley violence, not less.
How does legalisation of prostitution help pimps? It puts them out of business. How does legalisation of prostitution fail to protect women, when it means they're no longer going to be punished for a personal choice that harms nobody? How does it lead to more back-alley violence, when legalisation means there will be far less need for back-alley negotiations at all. You're going to have to back up these assertions with some evidence if you want them to hold any sort of value for your argument.
• Prostitution directly contributes to the modern-day slave trade (human trafficking) and is inherently demeaning.
This is the same point you've now made twice already. What you find to be demeaning is your own business. If you find it demeaning: don't do it. You finding it demeaning is no reason to stop other people from engaging in it. As for the slave trade. Slave trade is non-consensual. Prostitution is consensual. There's a huge difference between them, the difference between rape and sex. Should we make sex illegal because some people rape others? Or should we make sex legal, and rape illegal? Prostitution legal and human trafficking illegal? Which makes more sense?
• Legalizing or tolerating prostitution creates greater demand for human trafficking victims.
By this logic: Legalising or tolerating consensual sex creates a greater demand for rape victims. We must make consensual sex illegal so that we can prevent rape from happening. Do you not agree? Or is your logic completely hypocritical?
These are not the emotive reasons or arguments against the legalisation of prostitution and have no basis in personal views.
Oh, of course not. Talking about your standards of dignity, what you think makes someone a worthy human being, what you believe to be exploitative, what you think is demeaning, none of those assertions are emotive? None of those are based on your personal views? Please re-read what you've written and try to view it objectively and you'l find that you're completely wrong: you gave a list of points that you think are reasons why prostitution should be illegal and of those 5 points, 3 were the same emotional 'I don't like it so it should be banned' argument I've countered before, and the other two were the same point about consensual sex seemingly being a gateway to non-consensual sex. Which is nonsense.
Laws by their very nature operate on a "majority rules" system, therefore by the making and breaking of laws based on the constitution, everyone in society is living under the premise that these laws must be followed. Unless you question the very foundation of society's law and order, basically every law that is passed is "forcing" people to follow a particular set of values. Therefore, your argument that it is "entirely wrong" is a little skewed.
How is it skewed? As I've said before I believe laws should be made to protect people, not to enforce religious or moral beliefs on others. The majority of people don't like gay sex, the majority of people don't like tattoos: that's no reason to make these things illegal. To enforce your moral or ethical or religious beliefs on someone else is no better than enslaving them to your will. That is the real attack on their human rights.