Sunday, August 26, 2012

Sex, prostitution, excort in the world

Escort girls and KTV hostesses are what the third tier is about. They are quite popular in metropolitan cities like Shanghai and Beijing where one can find rich businessmen ready to pay hundreds and even thousands RMB just to have a chat with sexy woman. Actually, the owners of KTVs and bars do not require from their female employees to provide sexual services to clientele. The only requirement is to make the customers order expensive drinks / snacks and keep them happy so that they would want to come back again. In many cases, however, if man is interested in sex and flashes the cash, KTV girl will go to his place.

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A prostitution racket is running illegal brothels out of at least three inner-city hotels under the nose of a new police taskforce set up to crack down on Victoria's multi-million dollar unlicensed sex industry.
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Prostitution is actually legal in many parts of Europe, but nowhere in the world is prostitution a major tourist attraction like it is in Amsterdam.

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The difference is that modern China has embraced social media, and this technological innovation is fueling a sexual revolution the government is unable to stifle. Like their Western counterparts, Chinese are using microblogs and GPS-based apps to learn about sexuality, talk about sex and, yes, hook up.

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On the other hand, Vietnamese sex workers were found to be less choosy, so long as their clients were willing to pay between RM100 and RM200.


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Since the 20th century, capitalism has been shaped by large corporations, and the social organization of modern sexuality reflects this development of capitalism, according to Steven Seidman (State University of New York), The Social Construction of Sexuality, 2nd ed., W.W. Norton & Company (2009): “In a market economy, therefore, a repressed personality type is prominent… performance-and-success-oriented and exercises tight internal controls over emotions and sensual desires. To this type of person, sexual impulses and desires are potentially disruptive of discipline; sexuality needs to be rigidly controlled. Accordingly, in market economies the pressures of industrial production and discipline shape a sexual culture that values self-control and the avoidance of sensual pleasure. Erotic play and pleasure are viewed as dangerous.” Think of the 1950s.


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