...Right wing conservative politicians are dangerous they belong in the dark ages. They are also the ones that would ban prostitution completely. They want to see everyone attend Sunday church and only can see a nude woman that is your wife and only sex with your wife.
		
		
	 
You are forgetting the other half of the anti-prostitution coalition, which is the contemporary feminist movement.  The approach of the feminist movement and their right wing allies to abolishing prostitution is to equate it in the public mind with "sex trafficking."  This approach is embodied by an organization called Polaris that is closely allied with 
the Clinton (as in Bill and Hillary) Foundation.   Here is an excerpt from 
The War on Sex Trafficking Is the New War on Drugs (in Reason.com) that describes the role Polaris plays in trying to abolish--not control, not regulate, not discourage but outright abolish--prostitution.
I know that the fierce opposition of the contemporary feminist movement to prostitution is unsettling to people who lean to the left politically but that's too bad.  The anti-prostitution movement is made up of people and organizations from both the left wing and the right wing.  If you want to join a political movement that is neither right nor left and is in favor of decriminalizing prostitution, then vote libertarian. But please stop pretending that it just "right wing conservative politicians" who want to abolish prostitution.  Hillary Clinton and her feminist supporters wholeheartedly support abolishing prostitution.
 ...It's hard to think of a better representative of this  institutionalization than the Polaris Project, one of America's biggest  anti-trafficking groups. Founded by a man who now runs the website Everyday Feminism  and a woman who now works for the federal government, Polaris has  drafted multi-pronged model legislation for the taking. Compare Polaris'  recommendations with state trafficking laws, and you'll find near  verbatim language in some, and shared assumptions and goals in almost  all.
 How did Polaris gain such influence? One way is through state "report  cards." Advertised as a measure of states' commitment to fighting human  trafficking, it's basically a measure of how closely their laws hew to  the Polaris policy wishlist. Among the must-haves: a law requiring the  display of the national human trafficking hotline number, which Polaris  runs with funding from Health and Human Services. States that fail to  enact all of the Polaris-endorsed policies wind up with bad grades,  which the organization then publicizes extensively.
 Another driver of state trafficking policies is the Uniform Law  Commission (ULC), a nonpartisan organization that drafts model state  legislation in a variety of areas. In 2010, ULC was asked by the  American Bar Association to prepare a plan for tackling human  trafficking. The result was drafted in collaboration with Polaris,  Shared Hope International, the National Association of Attorneys  General, and the U.S. State Department, then approved by the bar  association in 2013.
 In the first half of 2015, two states enacted laws based on ULC's  model legislation and four others introduced them. Four states enacted  ULC-based trafficking laws in 2014 with 10 more attempting to. Among the  model legislation's main tenets are court-ordered forfeiture of real  and personal property for traffickers, providing "immunity to minors who  are human trafficking victims and commit prostitution or nonviolent  offenses," and imposing "felony-level punishment when the defendant  offers anything of value to engage in commercial sexual activity."
 That last bit is part of what's known as the "end-demand" strategy,  or the "Nordic model," which focuses heavier penalties on sex buyers  than sex sellers. Popularized by Nordic feminists, it's since become the  law of the land in Canada and is rapidly influencing American policy,  with many religious-based anti-trafficking groups also adopting its  rallying cry. As a result, cities and states around the country have  begun increasing penalties for prostitution clients and rebranding them  as sexual predators. In Seattle, for instance, the crime of "patronizing  a prostitute" was recently rechristened "sexual exploitation."
 The theory behind "end demand" is that if only we arrest enough  patrons or make the punishments for them severe enough, people will stop  trying to purchase sex. Voila! No more prostitution, no more sex  trafficking. If that sounds familiar, perhaps you're old enough to  remember the '80s, when a similar approach was supposed to bring down  the drug trade.
 "Ending the demand for drugs is how, in the end, we will win,"  President Ronald Reagan declared in 1988. Indeed, it was how we were already winning: "The tide of the battle has turned, and we're beginning to win the crusade for a drug-free America," Reagan claimed.
 In reality, the number of illicit drug users in America has only  risen since then, despite the billions of dollars spent and hundreds of  thousands of people locked away. In 1990, for instance, 7.1 percent of  Americans had used some sort of illegal drug in the past month,  according to the National Household Survey on Drug Abuse. By 2002 it had  risen to 8.3 percent, and by 2013 to 9.4 percent.
 The utter failure to "end demand" for drugs hasn't dented optimism  that we can accomplish the trick with prostitution. During the "National  Day of John Arrests" each year, police pose as sex workers online and  then arrest would-be clients. Each year, hundreds of men are booked in  these stings and charged with offenses ranging from public indecency and  solicitation to pimping and sex trafficking. If these anti-trafficking  efforts sound a lot like old vice policing, that's because the tactics,  and results, are nearly identical.
 In a study released last year by Shared Hope International and  Arizona State University, researchers examined end-demand efforts in  four metro areas over a four-month period. Between 50 and 60 percent of  these efforts involved police decoys pretending to be teens, and no  actual victims. A typical tactic is for police to post an ad pretending  to be a young adult sex worker, and once a man agrees to meet, the  "girl" indicates that she's actually only 16 or 17.
 Shared Hope is candid about the fact that most of the men soliciting  sex here are not pedophiles and not necessarily seeking out someone  underage. But "distinguishing between demand for commercial sex acts  with an adult and demand for commercial sex acts with a minor is often  an artificial construct," its report asserted. So to save the children,  we need to prosecute men who have no demonstrated interest in children,  because in the future they may seek sex with adults who could actually  turn out to be old-looking teens—got that?
 "One shortcoming of the reverse sting approach is that no live  victims are rescued from trafficking," Shared Hope admitted. "But it  does take intended perpetrators of child sex trafficking off the  Internet and off the streets."
 Bipartisan Paranoia
 A federal war on prostitution doesn't play well with large segments of Americans. Fighting human trafficking,  on the other hand, is a feel-good cause. At a 2012 Clinton Global  Initiative (CGI) speech, President Barack Obama insisted that we must  call human trafficking "by its true name—modern slavery." And what kind  of monster would be against ending slavery? Which brings us to another  factor driving all this trafficking action: It makes politicians look  good.
 At a time when Republicans and Democrats can barely agree on  anything, human trafficking bills have attracted huge bipartisan  support. Here is an area where enterprising legislators can attach their  names to something likely to pass. And if it doesn't pass, for whatever  reason, it's ripe for demagoguery: "My opponent voted against a bill to fight modern slavery!"  Tough-on-crime policies, particularly tough-on-drugs policies, used  this tactic for decades, until mass incarceration finally lost its  luster.
 Undoubtedly, many lawmakers do legitimately want to help trafficking  victims and hold bad guys accountable; political point-scoring is just a  happy side effect. But a less happy side effect is a slew of bad laws,  violated rights, and squandered money. The federal government has given  away scores of millions in grant dollars for this quixotic crusade.
 The resources spent on prostitution stings and public awareness  campaigns are resources diverted from mundane but more effective  strategies for helping at-risk youth, such as adding more beds at  emergency shelters. The State Department's latest Trafficking in Persons  report notes that "shelter and housing for all trafficking victims,  especially male and labor trafficking victims, continue to be  insufficient." Advocates routinely say the biggest barrier to escape for  many trafficking victims is simply a lack of places to go.