clitrex:

radicallyimpatient:

@liberal feminists

If prostitution is a job then is 16 year old boys asking the girls in their class for blow jobs for cash as much of a job offer as working in Mcdonalds?

are those instagram DMs from old men wanting booty pics for fifty bucks just as valid as a startup offering you the same amount to promo them? would a man approaching you in a cafe because he saw your tits and wanted to fuck them be just as fine as him approaching you because he saw the picture you were drawing and wanted you to illustrate a poster for him? if you get rejected for an office job, it would be just as reasonable for the boss to offer to employ you under his desk as in a different office job he thinks you’re better suited to? is it equally okay to ask an editorial intern to carry a chair or to suck your dick?

If “sex work is work” then how do you differentiate sexual harassment from ‘sex work’?

If ‘sex work’ is work then haven’t you set a dangerous precedent for women in the workforce?

thesinisterspinster:

lez0mbie:

“sex work doesn’t equal sex trafficking”

stop trying to separate sex “work” and sex trafficking. without sex trafficking, the sex industry wouldn’t be the multi-billion dollar industry it is today.

And without trafficking there would not be supply. Places with legal prostitution have higher trafficking rates not lower. Stop listening to pimps start listening to women.

thesinisterspinster:

lez0mbie:

“sex work doesn’t equal sex trafficking”

stop trying to separate sex “work” and sex trafficking. without sex trafficking, the sex industry wouldn’t be the multi-billion dollar industry it is today.

And without trafficking there would not be supply. Places with legal prostitution have higher trafficking rates not lower. Stop listening to pimps start listening to women.

Inside New York’s silent sex trafficking epidemic

facts-before-ideology:

Inside a handsome brick building on a tree-lined street near Brooklyn’s Prospect Park lay one of the city’s dirtiest secrets.

As people strolled past the Prospect Heights home on their way to the
park, the Brooklyn Museum or a bar where celebrated authors give
readings for The New Yorker crowd, two 16-year-old girls were allegedly
being kept inside as sex slaves.

For one harrowing month last year, the teens’ captors forced them to
strip to their underwear, pose for Backpage.com ads and have sex with up
to 10 johns a day, prosecutors charge.

The girls were saved when one of them escaped in July and ran to
police. But they are just two of the thousands of sex slaves being
trafficked under the noses of New York City residents every day, part of
a silent epidemic that law enforcement is struggling to contain.

“This is going on everywhere. Down the street, in the rich
neighborhood, the poor — whether you’re white, yellow, green, blue. It
cuts across different ethnicities, religious backgrounds, economic
backgrounds,” Laura Riso, an FBI victims specialist in New York City,
tells The Post.

“It’s enormous.”

Last year, the NYPD rescued one person a week from sex slavery and
busted 228 pimps while working 265 sex trafficking cases — more than
double the number in 2016.

But officials know they’re just scraping the surface.

“Trafficking is a bigger problem” than what the numbers show, says
Inspector Jim Klein, commander of the NYPD’s Vice Enforcement Unit and a
36-year department veteran.

“I have 200-and-however-many pimps I’ve locked up. On average, a pimp
is going to have at least four or five women, girls, that he’s going to
be working. [And] I haven’t locked up every pimp
.

“It’s modern-day slavery.”

Through interviews with top law enforcement officials, prosecutors,
advocates and victims from around the five boroughs, The Post has pieced
together a picture of New York’s sex-slavery underbelly — and the
struggle to end it.

“People are shocked to hear that it actually exists in New York City,” says Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance Jr.

“This is not a case where you have super-high-priced, fancy sex
businesses — this is really disgusting, forced, cruel, cold. Taking kids
who are in need of help, preying upon that need, developing a
relationship and then turning against them and turning them into kids
who are making money for them on the street — those are the cases that
we get.”

Thanks to Hollywood films such as “Taken,” people who hear the term
“sex trafficking” often think of a sorority girl kidnapped and chained
to a radiator by men with foreign accents.

But the average victim is a vulnerable girl from a troubled home who
has already been sexually abused and is first sold for sex as young as
12.

The girls often aren’t detained at gunpoint — not at first, anyway —
but are instead manipulated into “the life” by smooth-talking pimps
promising a better life.

Some are even dazzled by glamorized portrayals of prostitutes in
songs, movies and books — like a 14-year-old girl who told Queens
prosecutors she had been inspired to turn tricks by the 2005 Snoop Dogg
film “Boss’n Up.”

“Her aspiration was for [her pimp] to fall in love with her if she
made enough money,” says Queens Assistant District Attorney Jessica
Melton, chief of the Human Trafficking Unit.

Many local victims come from in or around the city, but others are
bused into the Big Apple from upstate or nearby states such as
Pennsylvania and Connecticut.

There also are the women and girls brought here from overseas and
forced to work in an estimated 700 illicit “massage” parlors across the
city.

Of course, there are adults who choose to become escorts. But police say they’re the minority.

“I can confidently say the majority — the overwhelming majority — of
people engaging in sex for money are doing it against their will,” says
Klein, who has run the vice unit for the last two years.

“There’s no cookie-cutter pimp,” Klein says.

Some are gang members or drug dealers hunting new revenue streams.
Others are just teenagers themselves and from a family of traffickers.
They’re men and women, white, black, Asian and Hispanic.

But all traffickers have made the same sick calculation.

“You can sell a gun once, right? You could sell a kilo of coke once
. . . But once it’s gone, it’s gone,” Klein says. “But a woman or a
person, that’s 15 times a day every day . . . for as many years as you
possibly get out of that person. That’s a never-ending cycle.”

Interior of a homeless shelter were the sex trafficking enterprise operated in Harlem.

The pimps often sweet-talk the girls into joining them, but once
their victims realize the glamorous life they were promised is anything
but, that’s when things turn violent.

“One guy kept [a girl] in a dog cage because she wasn’t cooperating,” Klein says.

A 17-year-old girl trafficked by convicted Queens pimp Ricardi
“Dirty” Dumervil escaped only to be kidnapped again, burned with
cigarettes and bashed with a gun before being dragged to Atlantic City
to keep working, according to Melton.

And the 14-year-old who watched the Snoop Dogg film? She was found locked in a closet surrounded by pots of urine.

These thugs aren’t just operating out of decrepit buildings in the
worst parts of town, and their victims aren’t necessarily kept locked
up
.

“It happens right under our noses . . . This is something that could
be happening right in our neighborhoods,” says Juanito Vargas, vice
president of the victim-assistance nonprofit Safe Horizon.

“You go to the deli in your neighborhood and are served your morning
coffee by someone, and you don’t know if that person is being
trafficked,” he says.

There was the Prospect Heights apartment where those two 16-year-olds
were allegedly forced to turn tricks in fear for their lives by a trio
of 20-somethings.

There was a Bronx homeless shelter just blocks from Yankee Stadium
where convicted sex trafficker Maria Soly Almonte repeatedly prostituted
out three of her sisters and a 13-year-old girl.

When she wasn’t turning tricks, the 13-year-old attended eighth grade
at PS 29 — where the school nurse figured out what was going on when
the girl came in weekly requesting STD and pregnancy tests.

At a Howard Johnson hotel in Brownsville, Brooklyn, a couple
allegedly forced two 14-year-old runaways to have sex with man after man
and give up all their earnings.

And at a Manhattan youth shelter, kids escaping broken homes were
lured into a life of prostitution with offers of booze, cash and a warm
bed — lured by ads posted openly on Craigslist.

“Are you a female that wants to stop living in Covenant House?” it read, alongside photos of tequila and hundred-dollar bills.

When the 14-year-old Snoop Dogg fan was rescued from the closet, she
first told police and prosecutors that she wanted to be in there
, Melton
says.

It’s a prime example of why it’s so hard for police to catch and
convict traffickers: The women and girls often don’t see themselves as
victims.

Making matters worse, antiquated state laws don’t recognize underage
prostitutes as victims of trafficking, either, unless there is clear
force or coercion, so their cooperation is often crucial.

With limited resources for survivors, it’s a tough sell.

“We’ve had girls say, ‘At least I have a place to sleep — yeah, he
beats me, but at least . . . I’m not sleeping in the gutter,’ ” says
David Weiss, a senior assistant district attorney in Brooklyn.

Meanwhile, immigrants working in massage parlors often also fear
deportation and are typically trafficked by members of their own
communities.

“They are so hard to crack,” says Assistant District Attorney Laura
Edidin, head of the Brooklyn prosecutor’s Human Trafficking Unit. “Both
because the way in which money is moved out of massage parlors is
sophisticated and because women who are being exploited in those massage
parlors are very unlikely to come forward.”

And most NYPD cops simply aren’t trained to deal with the survivors, critics say.

“I had to stand in a hospital with a rape victim and nearly got
myself arrested with these huge cops towering over her, demanding
answers,” says Rachel Lloyd, founder of the anti-trafficking
organization GEMS and a survivor of trafficking herself.

Just recently, glaring staffing and training issues with the NYPD’s
Special Victims Division — whose cops sometimes have first contact with
trafficking victims — were exposed in a scathing report by the city
Department of Investigation.

Still, police and prosecutors say they’ve made huge strides in recent years against sex trafficking.

District attorneys now have dedicated units for tackling trafficking,
more citizens are calling the NYPD tip line, and law enforcement is
actively working with nonprofits to find and help the victims.

Last year, the NYPD announced that it had added 25 detectives to the vice unit and formed a joint task force with the FBI.

The department has also shifted its focus to busting pimps and johns rather than prostitutes.

“It is an overwhelming problem; it can feel that way,” says Manhattan
Assistant District Attorney Carolina Holderness, chief of the borough’s
Human Trafficking Response Unit. “We’re just trying to hit it with
everything we have.”

Lloyd adds, “When you take a long view, there’s been significant progress.”

Still, she says, “when you take the immediate view, good grief, there
are so many gaps and so many ways we are failing our kids.”

Inside New York’s silent sex trafficking epidemic

Inside New York’s silent sex trafficking epidemic

facts-before-ideology:

Inside a handsome brick building on a tree-lined street near Brooklyn’s Prospect Park lay one of the city’s dirtiest secrets.

As people strolled past the Prospect Heights home on their way to the
park, the Brooklyn Museum or a bar where celebrated authors give
readings for The New Yorker crowd, two 16-year-old girls were allegedly
being kept inside as sex slaves.

For one harrowing month last year, the teens’ captors forced them to
strip to their underwear, pose for Backpage.com ads and have sex with up
to 10 johns a day, prosecutors charge.

The girls were saved when one of them escaped in July and ran to
police. But they are just two of the thousands of sex slaves being
trafficked under the noses of New York City residents every day, part of
a silent epidemic that law enforcement is struggling to contain.

“This is going on everywhere. Down the street, in the rich
neighborhood, the poor — whether you’re white, yellow, green, blue. It
cuts across different ethnicities, religious backgrounds, economic
backgrounds,” Laura Riso, an FBI victims specialist in New York City,
tells The Post.

“It’s enormous.”

Last year, the NYPD rescued one person a week from sex slavery and
busted 228 pimps while working 265 sex trafficking cases — more than
double the number in 2016.

But officials know they’re just scraping the surface.

“Trafficking is a bigger problem” than what the numbers show, says
Inspector Jim Klein, commander of the NYPD’s Vice Enforcement Unit and a
36-year department veteran.

“I have 200-and-however-many pimps I’ve locked up. On average, a pimp
is going to have at least four or five women, girls, that he’s going to
be working. [And] I haven’t locked up every pimp
.

“It’s modern-day slavery.”

Through interviews with top law enforcement officials, prosecutors,
advocates and victims from around the five boroughs, The Post has pieced
together a picture of New York’s sex-slavery underbelly — and the
struggle to end it.

“People are shocked to hear that it actually exists in New York City,” says Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance Jr.

“This is not a case where you have super-high-priced, fancy sex
businesses — this is really disgusting, forced, cruel, cold. Taking kids
who are in need of help, preying upon that need, developing a
relationship and then turning against them and turning them into kids
who are making money for them on the street — those are the cases that
we get.”

Thanks to Hollywood films such as “Taken,” people who hear the term
“sex trafficking” often think of a sorority girl kidnapped and chained
to a radiator by men with foreign accents.

But the average victim is a vulnerable girl from a troubled home who
has already been sexually abused and is first sold for sex as young as
12.

The girls often aren’t detained at gunpoint — not at first, anyway —
but are instead manipulated into “the life” by smooth-talking pimps
promising a better life.

Some are even dazzled by glamorized portrayals of prostitutes in
songs, movies and books — like a 14-year-old girl who told Queens
prosecutors she had been inspired to turn tricks by the 2005 Snoop Dogg
film “Boss’n Up.”

“Her aspiration was for [her pimp] to fall in love with her if she
made enough money,” says Queens Assistant District Attorney Jessica
Melton, chief of the Human Trafficking Unit.

Many local victims come from in or around the city, but others are
bused into the Big Apple from upstate or nearby states such as
Pennsylvania and Connecticut.

There also are the women and girls brought here from overseas and
forced to work in an estimated 700 illicit “massage” parlors across the
city.

Of course, there are adults who choose to become escorts. But police say they’re the minority.

“I can confidently say the majority — the overwhelming majority — of
people engaging in sex for money are doing it against their will,” says
Klein, who has run the vice unit for the last two years.

“There’s no cookie-cutter pimp,” Klein says.

Some are gang members or drug dealers hunting new revenue streams.
Others are just teenagers themselves and from a family of traffickers.
They’re men and women, white, black, Asian and Hispanic.

But all traffickers have made the same sick calculation.

“You can sell a gun once, right? You could sell a kilo of coke once
. . . But once it’s gone, it’s gone,” Klein says. “But a woman or a
person, that’s 15 times a day every day . . . for as many years as you
possibly get out of that person. That’s a never-ending cycle.”

Interior of a homeless shelter were the sex trafficking enterprise operated in Harlem.

The pimps often sweet-talk the girls into joining them, but once
their victims realize the glamorous life they were promised is anything
but, that’s when things turn violent.

“One guy kept [a girl] in a dog cage because she wasn’t cooperating,” Klein says.

A 17-year-old girl trafficked by convicted Queens pimp Ricardi
“Dirty” Dumervil escaped only to be kidnapped again, burned with
cigarettes and bashed with a gun before being dragged to Atlantic City
to keep working, according to Melton.

And the 14-year-old who watched the Snoop Dogg film? She was found locked in a closet surrounded by pots of urine.

These thugs aren’t just operating out of decrepit buildings in the
worst parts of town, and their victims aren’t necessarily kept locked
up
.

“It happens right under our noses . . . This is something that could
be happening right in our neighborhoods,” says Juanito Vargas, vice
president of the victim-assistance nonprofit Safe Horizon.

“You go to the deli in your neighborhood and are served your morning
coffee by someone, and you don’t know if that person is being
trafficked,” he says.

There was the Prospect Heights apartment where those two 16-year-olds
were allegedly forced to turn tricks in fear for their lives by a trio
of 20-somethings.

There was a Bronx homeless shelter just blocks from Yankee Stadium
where convicted sex trafficker Maria Soly Almonte repeatedly prostituted
out three of her sisters and a 13-year-old girl.

When she wasn’t turning tricks, the 13-year-old attended eighth grade
at PS 29 — where the school nurse figured out what was going on when
the girl came in weekly requesting STD and pregnancy tests.

At a Howard Johnson hotel in Brownsville, Brooklyn, a couple
allegedly forced two 14-year-old runaways to have sex with man after man
and give up all their earnings.

And at a Manhattan youth shelter, kids escaping broken homes were
lured into a life of prostitution with offers of booze, cash and a warm
bed — lured by ads posted openly on Craigslist.

“Are you a female that wants to stop living in Covenant House?” it read, alongside photos of tequila and hundred-dollar bills.

When the 14-year-old Snoop Dogg fan was rescued from the closet, she
first told police and prosecutors that she wanted to be in there
, Melton
says.

It’s a prime example of why it’s so hard for police to catch and
convict traffickers: The women and girls often don’t see themselves as
victims.

Making matters worse, antiquated state laws don’t recognize underage
prostitutes as victims of trafficking, either, unless there is clear
force or coercion, so their cooperation is often crucial.

With limited resources for survivors, it’s a tough sell.

“We’ve had girls say, ‘At least I have a place to sleep — yeah, he
beats me, but at least . . . I’m not sleeping in the gutter,’ ” says
David Weiss, a senior assistant district attorney in Brooklyn.

Meanwhile, immigrants working in massage parlors often also fear
deportation and are typically trafficked by members of their own
communities.

“They are so hard to crack,” says Assistant District Attorney Laura
Edidin, head of the Brooklyn prosecutor’s Human Trafficking Unit. “Both
because the way in which money is moved out of massage parlors is
sophisticated and because women who are being exploited in those massage
parlors are very unlikely to come forward.”

And most NYPD cops simply aren’t trained to deal with the survivors, critics say.

“I had to stand in a hospital with a rape victim and nearly got
myself arrested with these huge cops towering over her, demanding
answers,” says Rachel Lloyd, founder of the anti-trafficking
organization GEMS and a survivor of trafficking herself.

Just recently, glaring staffing and training issues with the NYPD’s
Special Victims Division — whose cops sometimes have first contact with
trafficking victims — were exposed in a scathing report by the city
Department of Investigation.

Still, police and prosecutors say they’ve made huge strides in recent years against sex trafficking.

District attorneys now have dedicated units for tackling trafficking,
more citizens are calling the NYPD tip line, and law enforcement is
actively working with nonprofits to find and help the victims.

Last year, the NYPD announced that it had added 25 detectives to the vice unit and formed a joint task force with the FBI.

The department has also shifted its focus to busting pimps and johns rather than prostitutes.

“It is an overwhelming problem; it can feel that way,” says Manhattan
Assistant District Attorney Carolina Holderness, chief of the borough’s
Human Trafficking Response Unit. “We’re just trying to hit it with
everything we have.”

Lloyd adds, “When you take a long view, there’s been significant progress.”

Still, she says, “when you take the immediate view, good grief, there
are so many gaps and so many ways we are failing our kids.”

Inside New York’s silent sex trafficking epidemic

Prostitution resources masterpost

ihateyourkink:

(Sources from x)

Decriminalization of Prostitution: The Soros Effect

South Africa Prostitution 2018 Preliminary Findings

Screening for Traumatic Brain Injury in Prostituted Women

Germany: Homicides and Attempted Homicides of Prostituted Persons Since the Complete Decriminalization of Prostitution in 2002

Risks of Prostitution: When the Person Is the Product

Sex Trade Survivors Support City’s Proposal to Move Strip Clubs


Sex Robot Matters: Slavery, the Prostituted, and the Rights of Machines

Second Thoughts: Should US Physicians Support the Decriminalization of Commercial Sex?

A National Overview of Prostitution and Sex Trafficking Demand Reduction Efforts, Final Report

Very inconvenient truths: sex buyers, sexual coercion, and prostitution-harm-denial

Prostitution: Exploitation, Persecution, Repression

Prostcost: An estimate of the social and economic cost of prostitution in France

Honoring the “Comfort Women”

Murders and attempted murders of women in legal German prostitution


Pornography, Prostitution, & Trafficking: Making the Connections


My 25 years as a Prostitute

Online Prostitution and Trafficking

Assessing Evidence, Arguments, and Inequality in Bedford v. Canada

Shifting the Burden: Inquiry to Assess the Operation of the Current Legal Settlement on Prostitution in England and Wales

Sexual Exploitation and Prostitution and its Impact on Gender Equality

Prostitution, Liberalism, and Slavery

Abolishing Prostitution: A Feminist Human Rights Treaty

Ontario Disempowers Prostituted Persons: Assessing Evidence, Arguments, & Substantive Equality in Bedford v. Canada

Garden of Truth: The Prostitution and Trafficking of Native Women in Minnesota


Comparing Sex Buyers and Non-Sex Buyers

Statement of Asia-Pacific Meeting of Sex Trafficking and Prostitution Survivors


Trafficking, Prostitution, and Inequality

Prohibiting Sex Purchasing and Ending Trafficking: The Swedish Prostitution Law (2011)

Trafficking, Prostitution and the Sex Industry: The Nordic Legal Model

Indoor Versus Outdoor Prostitution in Rhode Island

Myths & Facts about Legalized Prostitution


Trafficking: Theory vs Reality (2009) Women’s Studies International Forum

Is Paying for Sex Really Worth It? No, Prostitution Exploits Many Women’s Deep Pain


Prostitution’s Hierarchy of Control and Coercion

Aboriginal Women’s Statement on Legal Prostitution, Canada

Prostitution: Consent or Men’s Violence Against Women? 

Ex-Prostitutes Against Legislated Sexual Servitude

Prostitution, Trafficking, and Cultural Amnesia: What We Must Not Know in Order To Keep the Business of Sexual Exploitation Running Smoothly

‘Bad for the Body, Bad for the Heart’: Prostitution Harms Women Even if Legalized or Decriminalized

Streets Apart

How Prostitution Works

Prostitution As Violence Against Women

Prostitution: A Violation of Women’s Human Rights

Prostitution: Where Racism and Sexism Intersect

Prostitution and Male Supremacy

Prostitution resources masterpost

ihateyourkink:

(Sources from x)

Decriminalization of Prostitution: The Soros Effect

South Africa Prostitution 2018 Preliminary Findings

Screening for Traumatic Brain Injury in Prostituted Women

Germany: Homicides and Attempted Homicides of Prostituted Persons Since the Complete Decriminalization of Prostitution in 2002

Risks of Prostitution: When the Person Is the Product

Sex Trade Survivors Support City’s Proposal to Move Strip Clubs


Sex Robot Matters: Slavery, the Prostituted, and the Rights of Machines

Second Thoughts: Should US Physicians Support the Decriminalization of Commercial Sex?

A National Overview of Prostitution and Sex Trafficking Demand Reduction Efforts, Final Report

Very inconvenient truths: sex buyers, sexual coercion, and prostitution-harm-denial

Prostitution: Exploitation, Persecution, Repression

Prostcost: An estimate of the social and economic cost of prostitution in France

Honoring the “Comfort Women”

Murders and attempted murders of women in legal German prostitution


Pornography, Prostitution, & Trafficking: Making the Connections


My 25 years as a Prostitute

Online Prostitution and Trafficking

Assessing Evidence, Arguments, and Inequality in Bedford v. Canada

Shifting the Burden: Inquiry to Assess the Operation of the Current Legal Settlement on Prostitution in England and Wales

Sexual Exploitation and Prostitution and its Impact on Gender Equality

Prostitution, Liberalism, and Slavery

Abolishing Prostitution: A Feminist Human Rights Treaty

Ontario Disempowers Prostituted Persons: Assessing Evidence, Arguments, & Substantive Equality in Bedford v. Canada

Garden of Truth: The Prostitution and Trafficking of Native Women in Minnesota


Comparing Sex Buyers and Non-Sex Buyers

Statement of Asia-Pacific Meeting of Sex Trafficking and Prostitution Survivors


Trafficking, Prostitution, and Inequality

Prohibiting Sex Purchasing and Ending Trafficking: The Swedish Prostitution Law (2011)

Trafficking, Prostitution and the Sex Industry: The Nordic Legal Model

Indoor Versus Outdoor Prostitution in Rhode Island

Myths & Facts about Legalized Prostitution


Trafficking: Theory vs Reality (2009) Women’s Studies International Forum

Is Paying for Sex Really Worth It? No, Prostitution Exploits Many Women’s Deep Pain


Prostitution’s Hierarchy of Control and Coercion

Aboriginal Women’s Statement on Legal Prostitution, Canada

Prostitution: Consent or Men’s Violence Against Women? 

Ex-Prostitutes Against Legislated Sexual Servitude

Prostitution, Trafficking, and Cultural Amnesia: What We Must Not Know in Order To Keep the Business of Sexual Exploitation Running Smoothly

‘Bad for the Body, Bad for the Heart’: Prostitution Harms Women Even if Legalized or Decriminalized

Streets Apart

How Prostitution Works

Prostitution As Violence Against Women

Prostitution: A Violation of Women’s Human Rights

Prostitution: Where Racism and Sexism Intersect

Prostitution and Male Supremacy

radfemman4womenslib:

It is 2025. Prostution is legal. Thousands of women who can’t pay their student loans or cant pay their medical expenses or maybe just can’t pay bills working at Walmart are now working in brothels, though they have some newspeak name.

Now, radical feminists on this site have a tendency to ask hard questions and this is mine: Are women allowed to refuse service to customers? And for what reasons?

How many fast food employees are allowed to refuse to make their ex a burger? How many manicurists can turn away their grouchy neighbors? We are in a tizzy about bakers not making wedding cakes for gay couples recently so if prostitution is supposed to be like any other job then when can you reasonably refuse service at other jobs?

Your ex comes in and wants to have sex with you and the manager says you’ll lose your job if you don’t. Your dad’s friend who has been giving you creepy looks since you were 13 is now here for you at 18. We can really go on and on because these places could start making you roleplay or be flogged for BDSM or a million other things.

And another swerf post on this website recently mentioned OSHA standards for bodily fluids. According to the “regular job” propaganda, we would have to have no skin to skin contact if we really wanted it to operate like any other job.

Answer me, you human trafficking enabling cowards.

I actually want answers from prostitution supporters