Lots of Tate topics but I thought I'd share a story of a coworker I worked with who committed suicide after being accused of human trafficking.
He met a girl on some sugar baby website. The girl offered sex for money. He agreed. The guy was some 30yo professional making $200k/yr+ and of course, like all men, had issues with dating/women so whores were a better option for him.
One day he met up with the girl to fuck at a hotel and the girl asked if he'd be willing to pay more if she brought a friend. It's extremely common for working girls to pair up with other girls and do this very thing to make more money. He agreed. Unfortunately, unbeknownst to him, the second girl was 16yo and was in fact being trafficked by the woman. The hotel staff suspected something when the two girls arrived at the hotel and called the cops. The cops came and bused him and the girls. They already had a file on the woman but the woman made a statement that blamed this guy for everything. Completely made it up about him pressuring her, asking her to find younger girls for him etc... 100% lies but she felt that was her best way to get out of it.
He was charged with human trafficking. I guess the shame got to him though and he jumped off the skyscraper he worked at. What's interesting is whenever I tell women this story, they still think the guy is a terrible person. He's really just some nerdy professional guy that wanted to have sex with hot women, that's all. Can't fault a man for wanting this, it's literally what all men want. I guess women just hate it when men get what they want, like Andrew Tate.
I agree, he likely wouldn't have been convicted but what do you think even the charge of such does to a nerdy professional guy. How will his family see him, anyone else who does? I mean, it was in the newspapers about his arrest and charge etc... The guy probably felt his life was ruined. Most people I talk to agree he likely would have won and maybe got some minor charges regarding paying for sex and potentially paying for sex with a minor (potentially) but even those charges in his profession would have meant bye-bye to his career etc... From his perspective, his life was over.
I think you underestimate how fair the justice system is. Even if he sufficiently proves it was all the girl's idea, the fact he had money on him, she was in the hotel room with him means he likely would be automatically convicted with paying to have sex with a minor even if no sex happened. The laws are not actually as fair as you think they are. They're designed to make convictions easy not for justice.
I think you underestimate how fair the justice system is.
You mean overestimate.
The laws are not actually as fair as you think they are. They're designed to make convictions easy not for justice.
That's not true. Laws are designed to maximize justice, evolved to avoid the death that happens without a justice system. Your friend jumped to conclusions. Then again, the wages of sin are death. Nothing good was ever going to happen from paying for fornication.
Lots of Tate topics but I thought I'd share a story of a coworker I worked with who committed suicide after being accused of human trafficking.
He met a girl on some sugar baby website. The girl offered sex for money. He agreed. The guy was some 30yo professional making $200k/yr+ and of course, like all men, had issues with dating/women so whores were a better option for him.
One day he met up with the girl to fuck at a hotel and the girl asked if he'd be willing to pay more if she brought a friend. It's extremely common for working girls to pair up with other girls and do this very thing to make more money. He agreed. Unfortunately, unbeknownst to him, the second girl was 16yo and was in fact being trafficked by the woman. The hotel staff suspected something when the two girls arrived at the hotel and called the cops. The cops came and bused him and the girls. They already had a file on the woman but the woman made a statement that blamed this guy for everything. Completely made it up about him pressuring her, asking her to find younger girls for him etc... 100% lies but she felt that was her best way to get out of it.
He was charged with human trafficking. I guess the shame got to him though and he jumped off the skyscraper he worked at. What's interesting is whenever I tell women this story, they still think the guy is a terrible person. He's really just some nerdy professional guy that wanted to have sex with hot women, that's all. Can't fault a man for wanting this, it's literally what all men want. I guess women just hate it when men get what they want, like Andrew Tate.
If any of this is true, there is no way the guy would actually be convicted of human trafficking.
I agree, he likely wouldn't have been convicted but what do you think even the charge of such does to a nerdy professional guy. How will his family see him, anyone else who does? I mean, it was in the newspapers about his arrest and charge etc... The guy probably felt his life was ruined. Most people I talk to agree he likely would have won and maybe got some minor charges regarding paying for sex and potentially paying for sex with a minor (potentially) but even those charges in his profession would have meant bye-bye to his career etc... From his perspective, his life was over.
I think you underestimate how fair the justice system is. Even if he sufficiently proves it was all the girl's idea, the fact he had money on him, she was in the hotel room with him means he likely would be automatically convicted with paying to have sex with a minor even if no sex happened. The laws are not actually as fair as you think they are. They're designed to make convictions easy not for justice.
You mean overestimate.
That's not true. Laws are designed to maximize justice, evolved to avoid the death that happens without a justice system. Your friend jumped to conclusions. Then again, the wages of sin are death. Nothing good was ever going to happen from paying for fornication.
Hahaha. Good one.