• 10 Posts
  • 29 Comments
Joined 11 months ago
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Cake day: April 19th, 2025

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  • You’re just being deliberately stupid here. I refuse to believe you don’t know about the massive sex tourism industry there. While every now and then there may be someone who is genuinely interested in witnessing the history and culture of Thailand/The Philippines more often than not it’s some perv looking to get his rocks off with some ladyboy. Just ask a Thai or Filipino person and they’ll tell you exactly what I’m saying.


  • While Theiland does have a rich history and culture you being deliberately naive if you’re saying that there isn’t massive prostitution industry there. I’m not saying anything bad about the country I’m just saying if you want to visit you probably don’t have the best intentions.

    “This whole concept of some places being judge worthy is racist as hell.”

    If knowing the difference between good and bad makes me racist then sign me up for racism school.













  • This isn’t just an American thing. People get stereotyped all over the world. I’ve experienced a lot of it myself as a racially ambiguous person in New Zealand, Britain, Australia and America. Anywhere where people can tell the difference between different types of people people will start stereotyping and categorising.

    As I’ve already brought up I’m pretty much an ethnic chameleon. Throughout my time I’ve been mistaken for a Latina, a black girl, an Arab, a dark skinned Asian and an Indian so I do have experience with what it’s like to be perceived as different groups. I’ve even been mistaken by other people in those groups.

    When I was perceived as Asian I was very fetishized. A lot of people assumed I was a prostitute of some sort or a mail order bride. Same as Latina. Latin people are very fetishized so I would meet a lot of guys desperate to make their Latina fantasy come true. Some even asked me to speak in a Spanish accent for them. It was cringe but I had to take what I could get. /°~°/ When people thought of me as an Arab they would ask me why I wasn’t wearing a hijab or acting like a typical Muslim. As if all Arabs are Muslims. If not that then they would give me speeches about how hard it must be to be a liberated woman. There was also a brief time I cut my hair short for a play I was in and people through I was a lesbian so they would ask me questions about ‘what was it like to be a Muslim lesbian’ and ‘if my parents still talked to me’.

    I see where you’re coming from. In America it isn’t necessarily racial hatred more just tribalism. As someone who doesn’t belong to one group this is very inconvenient to say the least. It’s better in other countries like Australia or Britian. Over there I was never singled out for having dark skin or for not being visibly white.