• Online “Sex Workers” Are Scrambling To Cover Their Tracks After Being Mass Repor
    436 replies, posted
Do you consider YouTube to be a job? Twitch streaming? Competitive gaming?
Okay, here's a question; Is acting not work?
can you sell photos of your body for money?
https://i.imgur.com/q7IiDqO.jpg
can you rub some braincells together for me and rethink your whole point of view on labor, on employment as a whole, for me because you're going to be needlessly unhappy if you keep thinking this way.
i don't consider myself to be unhappy though?
Then what do you gain by belittling workers that are not your definition of workers?
Why is suffering at your job a requirement for a job being a real job? This makes no sense to me. Many camgirls make very good money and spend lots of time camming every day.
how am i belittling "workers" by saying that taking photos of yourself isn't work, and that if that's your source of income, you should have to pay taxes on it like regular workers? i'm not trying to gain anything here lol, i'm stating how i feel on the topic
You still have not explained why it's not a real job. I'm still waiting.
I'm seeing at least two ways in just this sentence fragment but sure, keep acting like you aren't.
you're a pig, my dude.
You're providing a service to paying customers. For many people it's a significant portion of their income. It's work. And there's no evidence that they aren't paying their taxes.
Because at a real job, you don't get to choose what you do every day, or take whatever day off you want, you don't get to choose what you earn, you have to pay taxes and your income is automatically reported to the IRS and your taxes deducted, you get a pay stub, there are policies that you agree to and regulation of your work as well as standards. Would you consider running a lemonade stand to be a real job?
Asking again: is YouTube a job? Twitch streaming? Competitive gaming?
You literally just made all of that up. There are tons of legitimate careers where one or more of those factors do not apply. If someone is consistently running a lemonade stand as a primary source of income? Yes, that IS a real fucking job, you oaf. Get over it.
Honestly, camming is work. However, on a sliding scale of difficulty, "cam model" is less difficult physically than "Amazon warehouse worker" and less difficult mentally than "probation officer". Then again camming is probably a lot more difficult physically than "toll both attendant" and more difficult mentally than "Valve game tester". Meaning, who gives a shit if it's not a "hard" job, it's still work. They have to take care of their appearance, act like they give a shit about creepy losers who will donate to their Patreon because they said their name and winked, and manage their social media to pull in more creepy losers. Just because they're not out in the fields clearing vegetation doesn't mean they aren't working. Some people have easy, well paying jobs, some people have hard, shit paying jobs. That's how the world works, some people have natural talents, connections, or environments where they don't need to bust their ass to make a living and other people have to work at McDonalds drive-thru's on the freeway and deal with customers throwing coffee in their face because there was too much cream in it, and then have to go to their second job of scrubbing toilets at a Taco Bell.
I guess you've never heard of artists, craftsman, contactors, etc
Here's a grand idea; if I do something and that something gets me money, it's a job.
You can write entire books with jobs where one or more of those things don't apply, yet I'm pretty sure they still count as 'real jobs'. Just do us all a favor and admit you just don't like camgirls. You can't say it's not a real job while also saying you're not belittling them, not how that works.
I imagine anyone who works in an industry or makes a living through the use of your physical body would probably be stressful as fuck tbqh. Cause one. You're constantly making sure your body is up to standard with your audience. You have to follow a strict training regime to keep your body physically fit. Constantly have to make sure you have an audience, and communicate with that audience. Like it isn't just. "I'm just gonna sit naked and take pictures". Like, that's probably 5-10% of the overall effort in that job. Meanwhile most of the stuff that actually DOES take effort is off camera. And also the bit with having to take care of your physique. If anything happens like you get a cut, injury, bruise, or just some small gash. Like that's immediate "Oh fuck they're gonna hate how i look." And that's just the physical part of it. God forbid the amount of mental stress they deal with. And these motherfuckers who are harassing them under the bullshit excuse of "They're not paying taxes" are sure as hell not making it easier.
Lets be real now, it's a piss easy work and not even remotely as stressful as the shit even your average retail employee has to put up with. I've seen people throwing cash at obese 60 year olds, the amount of effort required to stay in that business is minimal at best and they make fuck loads out of it because thirsty men become cash fountains at the first sign of attention from women.
I guess if I was a freelance illustrator I don't have a real job either, according to you?
Eh. You'd be surprised how much stressful it is. Even though it doesn't appear like it. Cause currently i work as a freelancer. And my previous job was a Package Handler who worked 40-50 hours a week. And i was in charge of the heavy objects. So everything i lifted was around 150-200lbs. From an Outsider look, it'd seem that the Package Handler job was the most stressful. But to me, the Freelance work as an artist is more stressful. Given the much larger amount of mental stress it can put on you. The Package handler job is physically stressful yes, but i was able to keep a somewhat decent mental state during it. Even though i was tired as fuck all the time. Meanwhile the mental stress as a Freelancer can drive you mad. Especially when you got anxiety problems and have to deal with the fact tens/hundreds of thousands of people view your work constantly.
Except for dealing with harassment, bullying, threats, verbal abuse, and ridicule.
Lol retail is extremely mentally taxing, particularly when you have to deal with difficult customers and the such. Retail workers can't just block those customers off the app.
Also i should ask. @The Golden God Do you think the women in these gifs that you have on your profile page. Do you think they're not allowed to get payed for their job? Or do you consider what they're doing her as a "Job"? Instead of you njust expecting them to just show their bodies freely and get payed jack shit for your Hypocritical Enjoyment. https://files.facepunch.com/forum/upload/132/55bbf021-d1b0-498b-a179-32dd88bd6db2/1525806034358.gif https://files.facepunch.com/forum/upload/132/0bcdd5d6-10bf-4dbe-a0d5-f443968179b6/1525806077157.gif https://files.facepunch.com/forum/upload/132/5ad4ae7d-42a2-4c3b-8790-b6acfadc6a12/1525806122507.gif
You still have to deal with it before that
And? Mean words on the internet from anonymous people isn't going to hurt that much when you can just block them and go back to making thousands from the rest of the thirsty idiots.
Sorry, you need to Log In to post a reply to this thread.