No, I couldn't, unfortunately, but here is an interesting read:Can you paraphrase Violet Blue's views on Pornography and women for us?
https://medium.com/@pandorablake/can-porn-empower-women-4d1f3086206f
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
No, I couldn't, unfortunately, but here is an interesting read:Can you paraphrase Violet Blue's views on Pornography and women for us?
It's often sex workers who push the most for social change, and who most often have something to lose, plain for the views you advocate are 'natural and unchangeable' - which designate sex workers as easy targets - and which is optics I disagree is inevitable, because to make it so is a choice of a person.The premise of my argument is that in the final analysis, when you tally the pros and cons, doing sex work is always, categorically a negative thing. I also contend that most if not all people who consume sex work wouldn't want anything to do with the providers in real life.
And what is the rule. I am feeling like I either missed it or it was left out. I do want to hear you Dana.But if you jump into something expecting the exception, prepare to be slapped in the face with the rule--in other words, I would strongly discourage anyone getting into sex work knowing what the rule is.
I wouldn't disagree with that at all. Over time, the nature of the challenges change. Over time, the skill set that best deals with the challenges changes too.The gray matter you're referring to evolved because it conferred a reproductive advantage in challenging environments.
Are we tallying pros and cons for all of humanity, or for individuals as individuals? In other words, if, for 60% of the people involved in "sex work" it's "always a negative thing" then it meets your premise? And the 40% aren't relevant? Or are you saying it's negative for 100% of the people involved? "Sex work" covers a huge range of things, unless you want to give it a narrow definition (and then you should give the definition).. "Categorically a negative thing" is actually a bit vague. How negative does something have to be to be a , "categorically negative thing"? I shoe horses for a living. Like most things, it has pluses and minuses. Does the fact that it has minuses make it a "negative thing"? If something is the "least positive thing" available, does that make it negative? What exactly IS a "categorically negative thing"?when you tally the pros and cons, doing sex work is always,
And nature made man.That negativity you speak of is man made.
...delaying gratification, all evolved because they conferred a reproductive advantage.
Humans are individuals with different, subjective likes, dislikes and abilities. Humans are not a homogeneous aggregated whole.It's not the society, it's the species. There's hypocrisy because people are hypocrites. There's injustice because people are unjust.
If you can use biology and natural science to predict the migration patterns of seagulls, why not the behavior of humans?You cannot look at all of humanity from one theory or model or school of thought alone. Mistake #1, 2, 3 and 17.
Got it! Thank you Dana. I did miss it.not fit for relationships