Sixty-Five - When Tristan Tells You Not To Do Something . . .

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SIXTY-FIVE

When Tristan Tells You Not To Do Something . . .

“Imagine the first time that a young man buys a woman. Maybe he picks a hot one, a woman that he wouldn’t be able to get otherwise, or, maybe any woman will do, because what matters is that, when he throws money at her, she does everything that he wants. Wow. What a sense of power and what ego stroking,” Catherine hears another female voice say.

Everything . . .

“So, he goes a second time, and a third, and a tenth, and a twentieth. And every time that he does, respecting women, being more, that fades. He much prefers to pick and choose, like maybe from a computer, where profiles of each of the working girls contain photos, a list of tricks, and package deals and prices. He much prefers to book a toy, maybe wait in a bar area for her to be done with dealing with the other men’s messes, while he watches sports on TV screens, and while pretty waitresses serve him drinks. Or, maybe the women are nude everywhere around him, in that licensed house, and he’s so hard, knowing that there are no obstacles to him getting any of them, no matter his age, how he looks, anything. So, he decides, pays, and has immediate access to the OBJECT of his lust. To everything. And soon, nothing else about all women matters. He doesn’t want to meet a woman anywhere else, because he would have to talk to her there, be more. And he wonders ‘what’s the point of that?’”

“Uh, a man talks to get a woman drunk, or to get the opportunity to slip something into her drink, or to get her in a position where he can violate her . . . ”

“And having licensed houses will actually make men do those things more, not less, due to inflated egos, and, eventually, to resenting that they always have to pay, which they will hatefully blame all women for. Or, it’ll be due to men being cut off because of a lack of money, or because of a disease, and, after being accustomed to being served and serviced, they won’t want anything mutual, so . . . ”

A man choosing and owning from a picture. My picture . . .

Catherine, youre not a non-refundable and you never were.

Tristan saw my picture, and . . .

“If there’s ever a target that absolutely has no innocents present, it’s a licensed house of bought women. It’s the only place where that’s a given.”

Tristan’s female takes a few steps back, away from the television, as unease comes over her at the thought of men organizing to do something violent about such a place. About any place.

Yes. Out, healer agrees.

“Men didn’t like seeing a homeless man paid fifty bucks to allow another man to kick him in the balls. They were shocked and complained that the man’s dignity was taken away. But women saw that story and said ‘you’re kidding, right? The buying and selling of women’s bodies is legal, but it shocks men when a man sells his body to be used by another man? It shocks their sense of male dignity? How do you think women feel, after the Supreme Court decided that it’s okay to take away all of women’s dignity by making buying women legal?’ And yes, it does that, because when men have legal access to paid women, then they have the leverage to manipulate all teen girls and women into being the perfect slaves.”

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