[QUOTE=Tempoecorto;1850132]This is a documentary paid for by someone and to that extent, it may or may not represent reality. Based on my own ethnic experience (and of course all Indian males are fucking hypocrites, I being no exception), there would be not even an iota of a possibility of going whoring in family. I happen to have had a lot of exposure with the Asian crowd and from Japan to Korea, all the way to Malaysia, Singapore, Vietnam, Taiwan, Hong Kong and Indonesia, where I was entertained by local I. E. , ethnic Chinese business people, males do go whoring together, after work but I doubt if it would be done family style. I cannot speak of Mainland China. In my days, Mainland China was still fairly poor to get into such strange gamboling. I also went whoring with Italians, Germans, Norwegians, Dutch and French. In connection with work but again strongly doubt if any would take their children with them. Finally, my Brit, Australian and NZ experience was virginal, I. E, no whoring together at all, strictly business.
Frannie referred to an interesting angle. That of class and I cannot quite ignore it, at least in my ethnic group.[/QUOTE]Yes, good comments. In fact in the video the two middle aged women had both been married to Turkish guys, and the marriages had fallen through, so they were going out there and dating younger Turkish men. They actually took their whole families, not just adult children, and the 11 year old son of the older woman was extremely unhappy and depressed (sleeping all day) as his mother spent every night away with a Turkish waiter at another hotel, and the other woman was extremely unhappy having to take care of the kid of her friend while her own younger daughter was out dating with a young Turkish guy (not really whoring). Anyway, as the documentary showed, these women were extremely dysfunctional in a variety of ways. The one whose daughter came along was actually rather ashamed of the kind of example she was setting for her daughter. One would actually have to watch the documentary three or four times to pick up on all the nuances of the relationships.