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Sugar Babies, Sugar Daddies And Liberation

Aug 15, 2016
by Caroline Miller
Nancy Jo Sales, prostitution as liberation, The Young and the Rentless, update on world's oldest profession, young women with older men
2 Comments

Foreigners who try to learn our language will tell you the process is confusing because so many words can mean their opposite. To screen is  to look closely at an object or it can mean to hide it.  Peer suggests equality unless you are  referring to nobility which refers to great inequality.   Cool we all know can sometimes be hot.  And, until recent times, prostitute was a term of human enslavement.  But no more.  Some young Americans see entering the sex trade as liberated choice — the natural extension of the Woman’s Movement.

dating older men

Courtesy of yourtango.com

In the words of one young women who is making her way through college working as a “sugar baby” for $700 an hour:  “I reject it when people say I’m oppressed by the patriarchy. People who work for seven dollars an hour are oppressed by the patriarchy.”   (“The Young and the Rentless,” by Nancy Jo Sales, Vanity Fair, August 2016, pg.88.)  

Though Abigail Adams, early proponent of women’s rights, (Click) never intended it, the current generation of liberated women have taken prostitution mainstream. One positive, I suppose, is that these women no longer need a pimp. All they need is a computer and enough money to sign up on a “professional” website.  Yes, prostitution sites have gone mainstream.  I won’t list them here, but the Vanity Fair article I quote above does.

What’s more these gals insist that “networking” with older men can give them insights on how to foster their careers outside prostitution.  They insist they find the work “empowering” as they chose their clients,  set the price and the hours.  Some of them have even established  “professional” social networks where they share tips on how to succeed in the sex business, including advice on how much to charge, how to avoid law enforcement and most important of all, what weapons to carry for personal safety — knives, pepper spray, box cutters. (Ibid pg. 90.)

Despite the professional gloss, what drives these young people, men and women, into the business is the is the high cost of an education, middle class parents who can no longer afford to help with tuition, loan debt and outrageous rents.  Notions of empowerment are largely imagined.  The work is as dangerous as it ever was.  Rape and violence is “51 times higher than that of the next most dangerous job, working in a liquor store.” (Ibid pg. 91).  What’s more, the thriving industry diminishes respect for every women.  It perpetuates the illusion all women are prostitutes and, though they may protest, they like being raped. (Ibid pg. 91)

Young women today may attempt to recast the age old “profession” as empowering, but any woman who is referred to as “baby” isn’t getting the respect her education deserves.  Any women who turns herself into a commodity in the bedroom isn’t likely to command respect in the board room.  I’m not talking about morality.  I’m talking about reality.  A woman who drops her Channel suit for a man who pays her well remains a prisoner of the patriarchy. (Blog 10/27/15)

 

 

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2 Comments
  1. Terry Parrish August 15, 2016 at 1:14 pm Reply
    Exactly. Its still the "Worlds Oldest Profession". What decent man down the road wants a woman who has sold herself to the highest bidder? And what would keep her from doing while married? I'm totally against this. Regardless of what these young women think, there is a better way.
    • Caroline Miller August 23, 2016 at 11:01 am Reply
      Terry, for some reason you response hit my "junk" folder. But it is no junk at all. I've corrected it, I hope. Thanks for your reply. Obviously, I agree with your comment.

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Contact Caroline at

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Portland, Oregon author Caroline Miller had distinguished careers as an educator, union president, elected official and artist/advocate.

Her play, Woman on the Scarlet Beast, was performed at the Post5 Theatre, Portland, OR, January/February 2015

Caroline published a serialized novelette, Marie Eau-Claire, on the website, The Colored Lens.  She also published the story Gustav Pavel,  a parable about ordinary lives, choice and alternate potential, on the website Fixional.co.

Caroline has published five novels

  • Getting Lost To Find Home
  • Ballet Noir
  • Trompe l’Oeil
  • Gothic Spring
  • Heart Land

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