Wendy Vitter is not a prostitute...she's a whore
Arrrrrgh! Stuff like this makes me very, very angry. First of all, let
it be know that I am a firm supporter of the sex industry in general. It
has always existed and it allows many, many women who are heads of their
household to be able to support their families. But, if you work in the sex
industry, especially as a prostitute, there is a noble code of ethics when
you become a "disposable woman for profit." One of those guidelines is that
you NEVER, EVER disclose your clients. Ever. Even when you are old and
gray and on your deathbed...your clients have paid your for your discursion,
and you accepted that gift or offering...therefore that information should
stay locked in your mind. If you must tell, embed it firmly within
fictions. Describe it in detail...with pseudonyms that can't ever be tacked
to the individual.
That is what makes the oldest profession a noble one.
So when someone comes forward and appears to play a client for third-party
gain it not only increases suffering (which is my personal gauge of whether
something is right or wrong) but it disparages the profession and those
within it. It also creates suffering between the client and the service
provider which is the opposite of what the sexual service provider is all
about!
So, in this one action, this provider has caused more damage than a whole
hoard of Baptists on parade!!! On the upside, since we're such a sexually
repressed nation with a short-attention span, the damage will be eroded by
next month and the girls can carry on, as per usual.
As for Wendy Ellis...you are no prostitute...you are wholly a *whore*.
Wednesday, Sep. 12, 2007
Prostitute Claims Link to Senator By AP
(BEVERLY HILLS, Calif.) — A former New Orleans prostitute who will be
featured in Larry Flynt's Hustler magazine appeared at his office Tuesday to
accuse Sen. David Vitter of having a sexual relationship with her in 1999.
Wendy Ellis told reporters that Vitter visited her two to three times a week
for sexual relations between July and November 1999.
Flynt produced parts of an Aug. 22 polygraph test that he said confirmed her
account, but Ellis could provide no financial records, photographs or other
evidence to support her assertion that the Louisiana Republican was a client
during that time.
Vitter has denied those claims.
"I want the truth to be known," Ellis said. "It was a pure sexual
relationship. He would come in and do his business."
Ellis declined to comment when asked if she was being paid or reimbursed for
her statement regarding Vitter, but she later said she would appear in
Hustler magazine in January.
She would not say if she is being paid for the layout.
"She looks ... good," Flynt said.
Vitter, 46, a first-term senator, apologized in July for committing a "very
serious sin" and acknowledged his phone number was among those called
several years ago by a Washington escort service run by Deborah Jeane
Palfrey. Federal prosecutors accused Palfrey of racketeering by running a
prostitution ring that netted more than $2 million over 13 years, but she
claims her escort service was a legitimate business.
Vitter's admission came after Hustler magazine told the senator that his
telephone number was linked to Palfrey's escort service.
The senator was not charged with a crime.
Vitter's office did not immediately return a phone message Tuesday.
On Monday, Vitter spokesman Joel Digrado wouldn't comment on the Flynt press
conference. In an e-mail, Digrado said, "Sen. Vitter and his wife have
addressed all of this very directly. The senator is focused on important
Louisiana priorities like the water resources bill and the Iraq debate."
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