--- In [email protected], "curtisdeltablues" <curtisdeltabl...@...> 
wrote:
>
> --- In [email protected], TurquoiseB <no_reply@> wrote:
> 
> An ancient practice based on tribal superstition and the over 
> valuing of virginity. "Cherry girls" are a world wide brothel 
> scam.  The last chick I would want to be with is a virgin. Talk 
> about overrated hype! Whatever dweeb goes for this deserves to 
> pay a ton for the low quality sex. 

Actually, my "intro" below was just to get a rise 
from the prudes in our midst. :-) I've never had 
sex with a virgin and never wanted to. I agree 
with you completely...sounds overrated and more
related to some guy's power or possession 
fantasies than anything else.


> > I'm kinda hoping that this trend doesn't go worldwide, or set either a
> > legal precedent or a "price point," because if they make this practice
> > retroactive I owe more money than I have.
> > 
> > New Zealand Virgin Auctions Herself For Tuition Money
> > 
> > WELLINGTON, New Zealand — A New Zealand teenager who says she
> > auctioned her virginity online for $32,000 to raise tuition money did
> > not break any laws but it might be risky for her to follow through on
> > the deal, police warned Wednesday.
> > 
> > The anonymous 19-year-old student offered her virginity to the highest
> > bidder on the Web site under the name "Unigirl," saying she would use
> > the money to pay for her tuition. She said in a post that more than
> > 30,000 people had viewed her ad and more than 1,200 had made bids before
> > she accepted an offer of more than New Zealand dollars 45,000 ($32,000).
> > http://www.ineed.co.nz <http://www.ineed.co.nz/>
> > 
> > Unlike similar New Zealand Web sites, bidding and correspondence between
> > buyers and sellers on the ineed site is private so it is not known what
> > bids Unigirl's offer received.
> > 
> > Web site owner Ross McKenzie said the site's policy was that as long as
> > an ad was legal and did not offend the general standards of society, "it
> > was OK." He confirmed Unigirl was a member on the site.
> > 
> > Prostitution is legal in New Zealand under laws considered more liberal
> > than many countries. Prostitution among consenting adults is allowed in
> > brothels and on the streets, and offering sexual services in print ads
> > and online is also legal.
> > 
> > National police spokesman Jon Neilson said no law appeared to have been
> > breached.
> > 
> > But "we would suggest it's not a safe practice," Neilson told The
> > Associated Press. "There are definitely issues of personal safety" in
> > using chat rooms, social dating networks and other Internet sites that
> > can be used to arrange meetings between strangers.
> > 
> > Unigirl, in her initial post, described herself as attractive, fit and
> > healthy. She did not post a photograph of herself, and bidders did not
> > appear to have a way of confirming any of the details of her posts.
> > Unigirl said she was desperate for money to pay university fees.
> > "I am offering my virginity by tender to the highest bidder as long as
> > all personal safety aspects are observed," her ad said. "This is my
> > decision made with full awareness of the circumstances and possible
> > consequences."
> > 
> > The internet has increasingly been used for offering and arranging sex
> > services, and security concerns have quickly followed.
> > 
> > In the United States, 23-year-old former medical student Philip Markoff
> > has pleaded not guilty to killing a masseuse he met on the Craigslist
> > classified advertising site, and raping a stripper and robbing another
> > woman he met in the same way.
> > 
> > Virginity has also been offered for sale online. British newspapers
> > reported last week that a 16-year-old girl in Ireland had offered to
> > sell her virginity on an online classified advertising site but recanted
> > after a reporter posing as a bidder identified himself as from the
> > media. A 22-year-old student in San Diego says she has received bids of
> > up to $3.7 million for her virginity, which is being offered for sale
> > through a brothel in Nevada, CNN reported.
> > 
> > Last year, a Philadelphia woman was charged with promoting prostitution
> > after posting an ad online offering sex for tickets to a World Series
> > baseball game.
> > 
> > Catherine Healy of the New Zealand Prostitutes' Collective, a group that
> > represents sex workers on health and rights issues, said the New Zealand
> > teenager had entered into sex work by offering herself online.
> > 
> > "The amount of money is absolutely huge – and that puts her under
> > enormous pressure to perform all sorts of acts," she said.
> > 
> > But Healy said it was also possible that the successful bidder wanted to
> > "save" the teenager and would not ask her to have sex.
> > 
> > She said the teenager would still have the right to refuse to have sex
> > with the bidder if she changed her mind, and that the bidder could claim
> > his money back.
> >
>


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