Ron_Tomkins
Satan's Helper
- Joined
- Oct 29, 2007
- Messages
- 44,024
Heeere we go....
Heeere we go....
Heeere we go....
No, no, no. Let's call those horsecorts instead. You can pay to spend your time with the corpse, and then, you might choose to have sex with it. Thank heavens we don't actually need to say that sex is part of what you pay for! Whew!
That's a great idea!! It gets around the illegalness of it and it keeps those painted up, scantily clad dead horses off the street!![]()
The point of my anecdotes is that there is no reliable statistics on prostitution (or on crime, for that matter) in Soviet Union, or in Cuba before Soviet collapse. Not only Brezhnev's and Castro's governments would never publish honest statistics on such things, it is very unlikely they ever bothered to collect it. Why would they need it? Much easier to just publish entirely fictitious very low numbers and be done with it. In fact, none of the links you provided give numbers on prostitution in Soviet times -- only post-Soviet. For very good reason -- the numbers do not exist. So all your links prove is that after Soviet collapse prostitution in USSR and Cuba came into open -- not that it suddenly exploded in numbers.I was never an advocate of the Soviet (or the Cuban, for that matter) system, so what is the point of your anecdotes? What I have been able to find on the internet seems to indicate that prostitution exploded after the market economy was introduced in the former USSR and its allied countries.
My point is that poverty was universal in USSR and even more so in Cuba, and so were ways to get around it. Including prostitution. You seem to claim otherwise. Which contradicts your line "I was never an advocate of the Soviet (or the Cuban, for that matter) system."It also seems to confirm that poverty is what forces most prostitutes to take up the profession.
Russia
Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union
http://scholar.google.dk/scholar?hl=da&lr=&q=prostitution+"Soviet+Union"&btnG=Søg