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Would you hire your favorite SP to do house cleaning ?

thodisipagal

Active member
Oct 23, 2010
413
36
28
Surrey
I mean comparing someone who sells their body for sex to a trained medical professional when it comes to their professions is not remotely without humour. Asking your "dentist to cook you dinner" would be silly but as technically any woman on the planet could be a prostitute and can decide to do so and, voila, instant prostitute. Calling it a profession is bizarre but many do it as somehow a way to elevate what it is really about to assuage guilt I guess. See your shrink for your own reasons.
It is the world's oldest profession. Estimates place the annual revenue generated by prostitution worldwide to be close to $200 billion. Nearly 14 million women are engaged in this profession worldwide (Source:http://www.havocscope.com/prostitution-statistics/).

Also, this may open up some closed minds: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...-prostitution-stay-open-prosecutors-rule.html
 

morementum

Member
Aug 22, 2012
789
13
18
It is the world's oldest profession. Estimates place the annual revenue generated by prostitution worldwide to be close to $200 billion. Nearly 14 million women are engaged in this profession worldwide (Source:http://www.havocscope.com/prostitution-statistics/).

Also, this may open up some closed minds: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...-prostitution-stay-open-prosecutors-rule.html
Calling is a profession is fine for such purposes as the point being made is simply prostitution has been around as long as women have figured out it is a basic saleable commodity when all else fails but to stretch it to compare to actual professions when comparing the backgrounds etc. required is beyond a stretch. If it makes you feel better to call it a profession, knock yourself out. To me, a profession isn't something that one can wake up one morning and go "hey, I think I will become this today" and that evening they are in business. Further, really doubt many actual professionals are working for "handlers" and last time I looked, actual professions have governing bodies that assure professional conduct, do not allow illegal (e.g. lying) advertising etc. whereas one need just read any day's posts on a site like this to see the hallmark of prostitution is lack of consistent service and almost universal lying in advertising.
 

thodisipagal

Active member
Oct 23, 2010
413
36
28
Surrey
Calling is a profession is fine for such purposes as the point being made is simply prostitution has been around as long as women have figured out it is a basic saleable commodity when all else fails but to stretch it to compare to actual professions when comparing the backgrounds etc. required is beyond a stretch. If it makes you feel better to call it a profession, knock yourself out. To me, a profession isn't something that one can wake up one morning and go "hey, I think I will become this today" and that evening they are in business. Further, really doubt many actual professionals are working for "handlers" and last time I looked, actual professions have governing bodies that assure professional conduct, do not allow illegal (e.g. lying) advertising etc. whereas one need just read any day's posts on a site like this to see the hallmark of prostitution is lack of consistent service and almost universal lying in advertising.
Don't know what you mean by actual profession. If you do some work and it pays you, that's a profession, whether you sell your body, your mind, your conscience, your labor, your ethics is immaterial.

Only a select few professions like engineering, medicine, architecture, geologists, biologists, etc. have governing body. And for even those, lots of countries do not have one. Vast majority of professions in Canada don't have one, don't need one.

Lying? I don't like escort ads lying any more than you do, but lying is not a monopoly in escorting industry. Go to Victoria or Ottawa and see how many of your elected politicians lie to you day in and day out.

Now, another piece that should open up some closed minds: https://www.buzzfeed.com/suits/very...college-degree?utm_term=.riRRPbwX7#.qvMDxL3qB
 

UhOh

Well-known member
Dec 11, 2011
2,054
487
83
Calling is a profession is fine for such purposes as the point being made is simply prostitution has been around as long as women have figured out it is a basic saleable commodity when all else fails but to stretch it to compare to actual professions when comparing the backgrounds etc. required is beyond a stretch. If it makes you feel better to call it a profession, knock yourself out. To me, a profession isn't something that one can wake up one morning and go "hey, I think I will become this today" and that evening they are in business. Further, really doubt many actual professionals are working for "handlers" and last time I looked, actual professions have governing bodies that assure professional conduct, do not allow illegal (e.g. lying) advertising etc. whereas one need just read any day's posts on a site like this to see the hallmark of prostitution is lack of consistent service and almost universal lying in advertising.
Are you a dentist. Either way get over it.
 

morementum

Member
Aug 22, 2012
789
13
18
Don't know what you mean by actual profession. If you do some work and it pays you, that's a profession, whether you sell your body, your mind, your conscience, your labor, your ethics is immaterial.

Only a select few professions like engineering, medicine, architecture, geologists, biologists, etc. have governing body. And for even those, lots of countries do not have one. Vast majority of professions in Canada don't have one, don't need one.

Lying? I don't like escort ads lying any more than you do, but lying is not a monopoly in escorting industry. Go to Victoria or Ottawa and see how many of your elected politicians lie to you day in and day out.

Now, another piece that should open up some closed minds: https://www.buzzfeed.com/suits/very...college-degree?utm_term=.riRRPbwX7#.qvMDxL3qB
You think the general public lies more than prostitute ads? Really? Wow.
 

morementum

Member
Aug 22, 2012
789
13
18
Are you a dentist. Either way get over it.
Nope, not a dentist. Get over what? Why don't you and a few others get over trying to elevate prostitution above what it is. It is what it is and that is fine but implying that somehow something is beneath someone as they are a "professional" and then comparing prostitution to something that takes six plus years of post-secondary education is simply hilarious. Can prostitutes have education - for sure and I bet a lot do but doubt there are many with medical, law, engineering or similar degrees that such training made the selling of their bodies a better option.

Sharing reviews on this board is great. Trying to elevate prostitution to some form of elegant romanticized "Pretty Woman" fantasy is your choice. Have at it and good luck with that.
 

badbadboy

Well-known member
Nov 2, 2006
9,547
300
83
In Lust Mostly

This really is one of the silliest threads I can recall.
 

jgg

In the air again.
Apr 14, 2015
2,672
792
113
Varies now
There has been the occasional professional fiance their education as an escort. A P. doesn't always mean you are particularly good in you're field, maybe just book smart.

Back to cleaning services.
 

JonnyBoi

A dude
Apr 27, 2015
631
2
0
The 6 to the.. Other 6
I am a professional with a designation, post nominal blah blah blah.

And I can't clean for shit, you can't pay me enough to be a proficient cleaner, it's just not in my core compete emcee (nor is it worth my time).

So if anything, having this particular side skill is a huge boon to anyone's collective skills, also a great thing to their personal life as well. I've been gifted this Japanese chick's book about "life changing power of cleaning up". I haven't got past the first 2 pages lol.
 

UhOh

Well-known member
Dec 11, 2011
2,054
487
83
Nope, not a dentist. Get over what? Why don't you and a few others get over trying to elevate prostitution above what it is. It is what it is and that is fine but implying that somehow something is beneath someone as they are a "professional" and then comparing prostitution to something that takes six plus years of post-secondary education is simply hilarious. Can prostitutes have education - for sure and I bet a lot do but doubt there are many with medical, law, engineering or similar degrees that such training made the selling of their bodies a better option.

Sharing reviews on this board is great. Trying to elevate prostitution to some form of elegant romanticized "Pretty Woman" fantasy is your choice. Have at it and good luck with that.
So not a dentist, okay that was a bad guess. Since you're the only one here getting twisted over this how about political science graduate? That would a lot more sense given that self important attitude for those "professional" designations.
 

ddcanz

curmudgeon
Feb 27, 2012
2,689
19
38
right here and now
I absolutely get what morementum is putting out there- but it's easy to sit back and take shots in support of the ladies on here for whatever brown-nosing reason you choose- or just shoot back at someone that shoots from the hip and that's laying down the straight goods.
I work in an industry that deals directly with architects, engineers, lawyers etc.- those that are considered true "professionals".
I've done this gig for over 30 years now and consider myself a "pro" at what I do- but I do not equate myself with being a "professional" in the same sense.
The two are exclusive of each other, IMO, as a "professional" hockey player is also a "pro".
Used to be you needed a "professional" reference to apply for a passport- such as a doctor, dentist, architect etc.- I don't recall seeing prostitute on the list of options.
 

morementum

Member
Aug 22, 2012
789
13
18
So not a dentist, okay that was a bad guess. Since you're the only one here getting twisted over this how about political science graduate? That would a lot more sense given that self important attitude for those "professional" designations.
Not twisted at all. Finding something laughable isn't getting twisted. I find all the brown-nosing hilarious too. What you say is "twisted" I am actually loving it all the angst I cause by simply pointing out facts. This is a basic hobby with a basic industry and people who try to elevate it can do that all they wish but should ask themselves once in a while what their motivations are....assuaging guilt? Justifying selling bodies? Working for a pimp? Spending money on this versus other important things in life? The list I guess goes on for those who need to justify - just saying, good luck with that coz in the end this is prostitution and not rocket science.

Have fun. If you want to get me twisted, just tell me you think Justin Trudeau is doing a good job or that you are voting NDP in BC - now that is something to get twisted about.

Enjoy all - and good luck getting a prostitute to sign your passport application using that "profession" as the designation.
 

Peyton Alexander

West Coast Paramour
Dec 14, 2016
274
2
0
Vancouver, BC
www.PacificParamour.cc
I respect the hell out of cleaners, I barely enjoy cleaning my own house let alone dealing with the horrors of what some people live in. I only keep up with housekeeping because I'm neurotic about cleanliness and it's a necessary evil. I can only imagine the stories some cleaners have about the status of other people's homes -- there's probably no reasonable amount of money for me to deal with the extreme situations they deal with.

Hell, I've paid cleaning personnel and I've pre-cleaned my apartment first so they don't judge me.
 

JonnyBoi

A dude
Apr 27, 2015
631
2
0
The 6 to the.. Other 6
Hell, I've paid cleaning personnel and I've pre-cleaned my apartment first so they don't judge me.
I laughed, in real life. We may be messy-shame-mates.. LOL

I may have done that for my office a few times before I retire for the day (or my condo.. shush, don't judge me). I've always felt so bad because I give other people crap for not being on-time, disorganized files, incomplete project or sloppy work.. but my workspace is just..ARGH.

I like this thread, it's very therapeutic.
 

UhOh

Well-known member
Dec 11, 2011
2,054
487
83
Not twisted at all. Finding something laughable isn't getting twisted. I find all the brown-nosing hilarious too. What you say is "twisted" I am actually loving it all the angst I cause by simply pointing out facts. This is a basic hobby with a basic industry and people who try to elevate it can do that all they wish but should ask themselves once in a while what their motivations are....assuaging guilt? Justifying selling bodies? Working for a pimp? Spending money on this versus other important things in life? The list I guess goes on for those who need to justify - just saying, good luck with that coz in the end this is prostitution and not rocket science.

Have fun. If you want to get me twisted, just tell me you think Justin Trudeau is doing a good job or that you are voting NDP in BC - now that is something to get twisted about.

Enjoy all - and good luck getting a prostitute to sign your passport application using that "profession" as the designation.
You insist on being a nit wit about this. Its about price point, you're not going to hire someone at $300/hr to do a task that you can have done for $15/hr. But go ahead and continue twisting it into an academic titles issue.
Must really bother you having to pay an uneducated escort similar prices to what your dentist would charge for similar timeframes.
I don't suppose you ask for a resume before you book a girl?
 

uncleg

Well-known member
Jul 25, 2006
5,655
839
113
Hell, I've paid cleaning personnel and I've pre-cleaned my apartment first so they don't judge me.
Kind of like pooners that jerk off before going to see an SP................:whistle:
 

zigzag6984

New member
Apr 17, 2017
56
0
0
I respect the hell out of cleaners, I barely enjoy cleaning my own house let alone dealing with the horrors of what some people live in. I only keep up with housekeeping because I'm neurotic about cleanliness and it's a necessary evil. I can only imagine the stories some cleaners have about the status of other people's homes -- there's probably no reasonable amount of money for me to deal with the extreme situations they deal with.
I started up my own cleaning business to get me through my undergrad when I lived in Alberta. Despite the big money that could be made in cleaning big houses, I stopped offering that service after 2 months because you'd be shocked to see how many rich people living in new homes, have no shame.
 
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