Women who leave sex work and then turn around to shame those still in it while framing themselves as “saved” will never not irritate me. You don’t become morally superior just because you exited the industry. And pretending everyone who stays needs rescuing is both inaccurate and harmful.
Let’s be clear: people who are coerced, trafficked, or forced into sex work are victims. Full stop. That is not sex work, that’s exploitation. Conflating the two erases actual trafficking victims and muddies the conversation in ways that help no one.
But choosing sex work because you needed money, had bills to pay, or decided it was the best option available to you at the time is still a choice. Maybe not an ideal one. Maybe not one made in a vacuum. But it is fundamentally different from being forced. Plenty of people choose sex work over minimum-wage labor that still wouldn’t cover rent, childcare, or basic survival and that doesn’t make them helpless or delusional.
You don’t get to rewrite your own story into a moral rescue narrative just because it’s more palatable to outsiders. And you don’t get to throw the rest of us under the bus to make your exit look nobler.
Empathy shouldn’t come with selective amnesia.
@BedroomBondage@ArielAnderssen Judging my some of the crazy posts from ManyVids on their feed on the site I think the CEO has either some kind or discovered religion big time.
ManyVids Creators Are Revolting — And Here’s Why 🚨
A firestorm has erupted after ManyVids CEO Bella French published a manifesto saying the adult industry “should not exist” and outlining a goal to transition one million people out of sex work — while continuing to profit from it.
Creators aren't having it.
Dozens of performers who rely on @ManyVids for their income publicly condemned the statement, calling out what they see as blatant hypocrisy from a platform built entirely on sex workers’ labor.
Some are already shutting down their accounts, while others are questioning how a company can claim to support creator autonomy while openly advocating for the industry’s elimination.
The backlash is especially intense given ManyVids’ long history of branding itself as creator-first, sex-positive, and aligned with women’s and LGBTQ rights — values many creators now say ring hollow.
No policy changes. No shutdown of new signups. No payout changes. Just a manifesto — and a revolt.
👉 Read the full story at @fleshbot ▶️
https://t.co/p68mvhXH90
@ManyVids So as of 3rd NOV free feed posts must be SFW despite anyone being able to see them would have been required to login anyway 🤔. This push to be a SFW porn site seems bizarre.
Well it seems like ManyVids have lost the plot. As of 3rd Nov all feed posts MUST be sfw - despite anyone able to see them would have needed to login in via age verification before being able to see that. No wonder so many creators are seeing a decline in @ManyVids review.
@ManyVids Of course it’s about the money. Creators post their content for sale on MV to earn money not to be part of some kind of evolution experiment or experience.
When business lose sight of their core reason to be it hardly ever ends well and usually they U-turn
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