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[QUOTE=Jmioffe;2220664]I've met a few too. It's surprising when they reveal that part of themselves -- but sometimes you can just tell when a person is smarter, has that spark in their eyes. It's a mixed bag though. One of them rightfully pointed out she'd done all this schooling, but was competing (and sometimes outcompeted) by dumb girls with zero education. I can see how that might be frustrating.[/QUOTE]Well many girls speak several languages, so it is clear that they are smart. Cheyenne for example. Question is just how they use their smartness, and if it is to our advantage or disadvantage. Sometimes the girls who think they are smart, and are educated in one field of study, might not be the brightest in other fields, such as sales psychology etc.
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[QUOTE=XXL;2220713]That's just as well because I need girls more in FKKs than I need them polishing their arses in some school.
All the same it gets me thinking about how cushy life can be as a female. Putting in time in a club for good money to get themselves through college instead of pushing shopping carts or flipping burgers.[/QUOTE]Well put. Besides the current educational paradigm is outdated and highly useless anyway:
[URL]https://youtu.be/zDZFcDGpL4U[/URL]
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Pistons. Well summarised. Yes, everything you say is correct so far as I can tell from the girls I have known. With of course some exceptions.
RN was making a more specific point and I was reacting with sadness that any girl at college should be "encouraged" into prostitution and then subsequently just be second fiddle to the "lover boy", losing all chance of a second career. I am happy that the very tiny number of girls (maybe four or five) I have known very very well did not follow this pattern.
Cheers.
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XXL. Yes. Loads of girls have told me they think prostitution is a huge improvement on the other career options available to them. Just a shame that it is not a socially acceptable choice for western European girls.
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Prostitution is not a socially acceptable choice for girls in most places on this planet. It might perhaps be more tolerated (to a small degree) in some places than others but that's about it.
And prostitution is not a socially acceptable choice for most men either Western European or otherwise.
It fills a need almost universally wanted and needed, and does not impact / involve the rest of the society in anyway except the participants; but it is so broadly reviled and outlawed in so many places and the sentences given are so harsh on par or worse than those for horrendous crimes. Shows that humanity has a lot of evolution still.
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[QUOTE=Optimist;2220975]XXL. Yes. Loads of girls have told me they think prostitution is a huge improvement on the other career options available to them. Just a shame that it is not a socially acceptable choice for western European girls.[/QUOTE]What is the percentage of the prostitutes, being married, having a BF or a pimp probably over 70 percent, this are my personal figures valid only for Germany. What is the future for the big majority of the prostitutes after 5 or 10 years in the job, very poor. What are the girls learning in this job nothing except sucking and being fucked. Being a prostitute is not a normal job and is not without strong negative consequences on the mental health of the girls, may be that could be a reason why it is not acceptable for the society to be a prostitute.
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[QUOTE=DaWong949;2220753]Is there any Russian in Oase? I saw a girl called Natasha. Well build with dark hair. Not my type. Keep chatting with me though I have no interest in her.[/QUOTE]Here is a quote from a report I wrote in 2017. I session with a girl named Karina that said she was Russian:
"Session 1 Karina. Tall porn-star looking Russian blonde bombshell with fake the's and slight almond shaped eyes. Looks 9 service 5 Problem: Upcharging.
I saw Karina by the lockers getting paid by an Italiano. She was porn star attractive with a face and hair like Helen Hunt. ".
At least there are girls that say they are Russian. Maybe Sirioja kows her? I felt like I was in a cab with a meter running. The price kept going up as the date went on. This was the worst day of hobbying in Germany in my life and unlike fishing a bad day of hobbying is worse than a good day of working because I still work in part to pursuit this hobby.
I have half a mind to return next week and if any girl pulls this shit of upcharging or any other shit of bouncing up and going to the manager and say "This is the shit that ruined my favorite club. ".
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Thursday 3 pm - 8 pm
Dissappointment at once again not seeing anything of my Oase favourite Claudia. Otherwise 2 good rooms with girls known to me, Heidi and Roxana (the one with the big round lips, as I understand there are 2 girls by that name at Oase).
Not many men, 3 out of 5 being young Asians.
By the time I left the male to female ratio was superb. The girls were present in such numbers you didn't see the other men any more. Couches full of girls girls girls. That's how I like my FKKs.
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[QUOTE=Optimist;2220973]RN was making a more specific point and I was reacting with sadness that any girl at college should be "encouraged" into prostitution and then subsequently just be second fiddle to the "lover boy", losing all chance of a second career. I am happy that the very tiny number of girls (maybe four or five) I have known very very well did not follow this pattern.
Cheers.[/QUOTE]Is it plausible for a girl with the will-power and intelligence to pass medical school year after year to suddenly be chicken-minded enough to let it all go to waste at the whim of a loverboy? Wouldn't she have other better options to sell sex, like sleeping with some head surgeon or senior member of faculty? Is the loverboy so dumb as to kill the hen that lays the golden eggs instead of waiting for a few more years and having a fully-fledged doc as a hoe?
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[QUOTE=Pistons;2220825]Well put. Besides the current educational paradigm is outdated and highly useless anyway:
[URL]https://youtu.be/zDZFcDGpL4U[/URL][/QUOTE]The "crisis" in higher education is greatly exaggerated. At least it is in the US. Averaging across all 4 year college graduates, the cost of college education is returned by higher wages by age 34. After age 34 it's a lifetime of significantly higher pay.
Yes, you can find anecdotal cases that point in every direction. "I know this kid who. Blah blah blah. " But in the typical case a college degree pays for itself and returns much more pay over a lifetime.
(I believe that a college education offers much more than just increased pay. But for this discussion the money advantage alone should win the day.)
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[QUOTE=Neurosynth;2221150]The "crisis" in higher education is greatly exaggerated. At least it is in the US. Averaging across all 4 year college graduates, the cost of college education is returned by higher wages by age 34. After age 34 it's a lifetime of significantly higher pay.
Yes, you can find anecdotal cases that point in every direction. "I know this kid who. Blah blah blah. " But in the typical case a college degree pays for itself and returns much more pay over a lifetime.
[/QUOTE]I struck up a conversation with this lawyer from the USA in the clubs. He told me that lawyers of his generation got a sold ROI on their law degrees, but majority of the newly minted lawyers will not. Tuitions rose faster than inflation, while starting salaries haven't. Except for the top 15 percent of graduates (usually tier one schools). This is not just one kid, but thousands of kids each year--there is an employment crisis. Article below mentions people going $200 K in debt to obtain their law degree, but having to settle for jobs where a law degree is not even required, getting payed $19-22 per hour: [URL]https://theoutline.com/post/2943/this-is-where-all-the-unemployed-lawyers-go-to-cry[/URL].
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[QUOTE=McAdonis;2221192]. Article below mentions people going $200 K in debt to obtain their law degree, but having to settle for jobs where a law degree is not even required, getting payed $19-22 per hour: [URL]https://theoutline.com/post/2943/this-is-where-all-the-unemployed-lawyers-go-to-cry[/URL].[/QUOTE]And I say "you idiots. ".
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Neuro is absolutely right that having a college degree is still the way to go in the US.
https://www2.ed.gov/policy/highered/reg/hearulemaking/2011/collegepayoff.pdf
As he said, anyone can pick one anecdote or other and say "what about. " . And there are indeed several professions that pay very well that don't require college degree -- welders, electricians, plumbers, some machinists, rig operators, yadda yadda make pretty decent wages when times are right and employment is tight. A few years ago, reports said long haul truck drivers made north of 150 grand in Australia for example.
But the above link is a comprehensive one. It is averaging across all fields, all regions, and them are the #s.
As for lawyers -- again, one can come up with anecdotes but BLS shows lawyer comps are just fine. They are still more than 2 x national averages.
[URL]http://www.abajournal.com/news/article/lawyers_salaries_slipping_compared_to_other_professions_data_indicates/[/URL]
And even to the extent there is a compression of lawyer salaries relative to national medians, one needs to keep in mind that a mix shift makes a big difference. Which industries are they employed in (wall street or public sector for example), or regional mix (NYC or Indiana), and so on. In general, post 2008, employment on wallstreet has stagnated to shrunk, while silicon valley has boomed. So, engineers gained ground relative to lawyers in the last decade.
In any case, compression of lawyer salaries by a small amount relative to national averages does not in any way imply that college degrees are losing value. Far from it.
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[QUOTE=Neurosynth;2221150]The "crisis" in higher education is greatly exaggerated. At least it is in the US. Averaging across all 4 year college graduates, the cost of college education is returned by higher wages by age 34. After age 34 it's a lifetime of significantly higher pay.
Yes, you can find anecdotal cases that point in every direction. "I know this kid who. Blah blah blah. " But in the typical case a college degree pays for itself and returns much more pay over a lifetime.
(I believe that a college education offers much more than just increased pay. But for this discussion the money advantage alone should win the day.)[/QUOTE]The point of the video was not about which doors an education unlocks, but on how it narrows and funnels your way of thinking. Turning people into robots. And in todays world, you don't want to be a robot. We have robots for that.
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My point was still trying to extrapolate education (in any subject) onto the subject of working in an FKK. In this case I would prefer a non-robot over an educated robot. Simply because the non-educated has a higher potential for divergent thinking, and that would most likely be a bonus to a client as the tailor made approach would seem more genuine. And less taught from a paradigm standpoint of approach.