This is all going back to the same conversation we had about brothels and legalizing prostitution.
We have a market for a product. Women who are willing to undress while dancing in public. (There really isn't much of a market for men doing the same thing; I'm not sure there's more than a handful of male strippers who can make a living doing it, although I admit to finding them wildly amusing and used to occasionally attend with a gaggle of girlfriends.)
We have people willing to supply that market.
If that marketplace is kept as out in the open as possible, and regulated like any other job (and Kimmio, you try to get a job in retail looking like me, it ain't gonna happen and it's not discrimination), then it will be a lot more free of peril to the employees than it would if it were FORCED underground. Underground is pretty well always a bad place; it's what makes illicit drug addiction so dangerous.
Unless we want to get into a "lion lies down with the lamb" conversation, in which case my earlier comment about my daughter was somewhat instructive, because it indicated that there exist genuine counter-cultural attempts to re-define beauty, utility and gender.
And I have absolutely no problem with individual emotion, work hard to figure out the million different ones of them that course through my poor beleaguered being. I simply think that public policy should be based on a logical analysis of the Common Good, with parameters and benchmarks based on measurable outcomes, the sort which can be shared in peer-reviewed journals.