(Source: smooth, via sexyscorpio)

stripperblog:

a girl at my club has these and i want to just snatch them off her feet

(via stripperblog-deactivated2011101)

Prostitution is legal in France, but soliciting customers is not. It always has been a difficult distinction to make in practice, and [on June 2, 1975] the angry prostitutes of Lyon decided that the police were trampling on their rights. As part of Interior Minister Michel Poniatowski’s general crackdown on vice, local police had been regularly pulling in Lyon’s lovelies and fining them $40 for “conduct tending to provoke debauchery.” In protest, some 200 prostitutes from the Lyon area camped with sleeping bags in the 15th century St.-Nizier church and announced that they would continue to occupy the premises until police were ordered to ease the pressure.

The group demanded support from Françoise Giroud, State Secretary for Women’s Affairs, and even from President Valéry Giscard d’Estaing. Recalling Giscard’s campaign promise to be “President of all the French,” the hookers noted logically that he was “thus President of the prostitutes.” “Why should we be considered marginal members of society?” demanded Ulla, a comely mid-20s blonde who was declared spokesperson for the group. The ladies got more support from a friendly Lyon public, in the form of free food and drink, than from the government. State Secretary Giroud referred the problem to the Minister of the Interior. “Prostitution is a masculine phenomenon,” she remarked in passing the buck. Father Antonin Béal, the parish priest, offered perhaps the most resourceful response to St.-Nizier’s unlikely occupation forces. Timidly presenting himself in front of his captive audience, he delivered a sermonette on the redemption of Mary Magdalen.

The homily did not work. At week’s end, in fact, the prostitutes’ strike spread to other cities. Emulating their sisters in Lyon, an estimated 200 girls gathered at a chapel in an office development in central Paris. A church in Marseilles was occupied by another 200 unhappy hookers. In the Riviera resorts of Cannes and Nice a number of prostitutes stayed away from their customary sidewalk beats.

The World: The Unhappy Hookers - TIME

Twenty-six years ago today, sex workers began a week-long occupation of Saint-Nizier church in Lyon, France. The above article about the protest ran in TIME magazine.

Today, June 2 is International Sex Workers Day - a day to celebrate resistance.

(via audaciaray)

(via iwatchtheworldoutside)

(via misskatehate)

sexyscorpio:

shooooooooooez <3

(Source: weheartit.com)

Too many of us still believe that “self-respect” for a woman means chastity and modesty. If she’s wearing revealing clothing, enjoys attention, and maybe even likes sex outside of a committed monogamous relationship, we call her a “slut”—and accuse her of not respecting herself. Perhaps she does respect herself, perhaps she doesn’t. (Promiscuity is not perfectly correlated with low self-esteem, despite what a lot of pop psychologists tell you.) But in the end, it doesn’t matter. Women aren’t commodities whose value is based on their own fluctuating sense of self-worth.

Hugo Schwyzer (I want my daughter to grow up in a world in which all men are safe, responsible, reliable — The Good Men Project Magazine)

(Source: goodmenproject.com, via iwatchtheworldoutside)

dr-clear-heels:

1. Yes, there are ready-made jobs in sex work, like massage studios and escort services, where all you have to do is show up. But the people who run them take a cut of your money, so you wind up paying just as much for convenience as you would to have your own business, and you sacrifice some control.
2. Greed and not thinking clearly is how most women get into trouble. Don’t work stoned or drunk, and don’t get so hungry for money that you ignore warning signals.
3. Not many people do sex work for a short while and then quit. It is very hard to give up the money and the free time.
4. Most clients are just regular guys like you’d meet anywhere. You probably aren’t going to get a call from Charlie Sheen, but you’re also statistically unlikely to meet the next Green River Killer.
5. You will not get a pension, and if you don’t pay your taxes, you won’t even be eligible for social security. You are going to get old, so either provide for yourself or plan on having a shopping cart as your retirement home.

Read More

(Source: redlightchicago.wordpress.com, via dr-clear-heels-deactivated20110)

sexyscorpio:

libraryplankton:

Off the Wall : a Collection of Feminist Graffiti /

Compiled by Rachel Bartlett.

Published: London : Proteus, 1982.

planning on vandalizing my school as a senior prank

bahaha

3? more years

almost there