have you seen it?
maxx50 said:
I don't know is it just me . or is this just another self rietchious film maker taking a look at prositusion.and tring to explain about people that sell sex and those that buy sex . to the general publice .. who want to condem others for wanting sex as part of there life.. or just having some injoyable moments with another .
Let face it we live in a sexually repressed society..,and so meny people think sex is dirty.. so it is not openly talked about.. even when I aguy sees an escort ..how often do we talk about sex how we like it w, why we like ..what others like and don't like Or even or what others do .. it sould be part of life and easily talked about .just like a macenice talks a bout cars ..or a carpenter about biulding houses.
I addmite i have not always thought this way .. i am one of the sexually repressed. myself. But these documentries .are allways coming from the wrong angle. they are note partakers of the services...and if they have they won't addmite it ..,so how can they convaiy any sence of the reallity of life.. with out the hiped up drama. It is the age old problem with medea ,itcan
t show the true with one minut clips and out of contex comments.. or show reality of life witch is a 24/7 on going prosses.
It may be informitive to the laymen . but most eople are not even interested... or about as inteested as they are in having sex.. and what is goverment going to do .. Well they wil just have more studies on the subjuct .. and claim / "I did not have sexual relations with that women" Right as if they do not Fuck like the rest of use.
I think you're way off on this one..
You may want to watch it before you choose
your angle!
Or you could just read up on it... that's why I posted the links...
If you had followed the 1st link, this is what you would have read:
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A
SAFER SEX TRADE
Tuesday January 23, 2007 & Saturday January 27, 2007 at 10pm ET/PT on CBC Newsworld
"The sex trade is a valid career option today if managed properly", - Scarlett Lake, Vancouver madam
Scarlett is a highly successful madam with 30 years under her belt in the sex trade business; Simone is a high-class sex worker who services wealthy clients in five Western Canadian cities; and Jennifer is a former drug addicted prostitute who now works tirelessly to offer support to sex trade workers on the streets. These women have had different experiences in the sex trade business, but they're united by one concern-
the safety of women in their stigmatized industry.
Jennifer exposes the ugly side of Vancouver's streets, where
Canada's current laws have led to the increasing marginalization of street walkers and have made the women at the front lines of the notorious Downtown Eastside particularly vulnerable. It's a danger that made international headlines last year with the arrest of Robert Willie Pickton, charged with the murder of 26 women, many of them Vancouver sex trade workers.
On the other side are high-priced sex workers like Simone, who are not at such risk. Their expensive services are advertised in the yellow pages as escort agencies, and are taxed and operated under tacit approval of the police.
"The sex trade is a valid career option today if managed properly," says Scarlett, who now speaks publicly about her work as a madam and her belief that prostitution should be legalized.
A Safer Sex Trade explores this double standard at work by putting faces to the women who represent both perspectives: life in the high rise and on the street.
A Safer Sex Trade was produced and directed by Carolyn Allain and co-written with David Ray. The documentary is produced by Cheap and Dirty Productions Inc., in association with CBC Newsworld.
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Yup. Way off.
