bogleech:prismatic-bell:sirfrogsworth:I’m always amazed at the double standard. The customer shamed
bogleech:prismatic-bell:sirfrogsworth:I’m always amazed at the double standard. The customer shamed her for being in porn… but… how exactly did that customer *find* her videos in the first place?These people are perfectly happy to consume the content but refuse to respect those that make it. Also?Just in case anybody tries to make a case that sex work is illegal:I work at Taco Bell.We are a felon-friendly company. One of the best workers on my team is on parole for transporting drugs and we literally had a party for him when he graduated from his halfway house. (Well, “party.” Because of COVID it was more like “we brought you a cake and you can control the aux cord tonight,” but the thought was there.) I’ve worked with multiple addicts and trained a former gang member to become a shift leader. We don’t give a shit if you have a less-than-pure-as-the-driven-snow past. Porn is hardly a blip on the radar.There is no reason that “this is illegal/legally gray work” should count against her. This is ENTIRELY about optics and “the customer is always right” gone insane.Reason #35675324678 sex work needs to be made unequivocally legal.Okay everybody else who ever read this story immediately realized that there’s no possibility the angry customer found out after the fact, right? Nobody is ever going to think “hey I wonder if that random taco bell worker is a porn star, perhaps I’ll google it” and the odds they accidentally found out days later about a random taco bell worker they interacted with are impossibly astronomical.That was an anonymous complaint from an ex, a stalker, a judgmental neighbor, someone who already knew who she was and had a personal problem with her. Her employer should be ashamed of falling for disingenuous bullshit that stupidly fucking obvious. -- source link