|
So
while checking out some videos the past couple days I came across one where a
black pornstar, Megan Vaughn, was being interviewed. Paraphrasing, she was
asked "What does a guy need to do to get with you?" and she replied
"Have a white cock." I saw a bunch a comments going on about how she
was racist. This randomly led me to finding a list of white pornstars who have
never done interracial, while I was trying to find black pornstars who only did
white guys. The random things you find when you're curious. The interesting
thing I found from the first list (I couldn't find anything on the second) was
the vast majority of people were calling those girls racist because they didn't
want to do a scene with a black guy.
The
whole thing got me philosophical because our attraction is one of the few
things in the world we can say is ours, for good or bad, whatever it may be. If
I say I will only have sex with an Asian, and I'm white, does that make me a
racist against every other race? Should I have to feel obligated and shamed
into having sex with someone I am not attracted to? Isn't it racism to say you
have to have sex with someone of a particular race? The same people calling
someone like Carmella Bing for not wanting to have sex with a black man as
racist, I didn’t see call out how maybe 1% of US pornstars do scenes with
Asians/Indians/Muslim as being equally as racist.
I
remember reading an interview with a pornstar (Sydnee Steele I think) from many
years ago about how she felt pressured into doing an IR black scene because she
would have been labeled racist otherwise. It makes me wonder how many
pornstars, male and female, feel pressured/coerced/shamed into having sex with
someone they have no interest in, in the name of political correctness or fear
of career damage/blacklisting.
Personally,
I don’t think it is racism. It is just attraction. Even if someone were to
argue it is a job, so why does it matter who they have sex with, I would say
just because you’re getting paid to do something doesn’t automatically take
away the individual’s right to choose.
|