Okay, grab a cup of tea and let’s talk about this OnlyFans thing.
Recently, I came across a post where a girl had just turned 18 — and the first thing she did was create an OF account exactly at 12:01 AM. Wild, right? She announced it proudly and mentioned how she had already earned $1M within 3 hours.
Okay, that’s one thing. The more disturbing part was the comments. Folks (mostly men) yelling, “You go girl! Millionaire! Freedom!”
But man, it actually made me pause. Not in a judgy, “How dare she?” manner — more like a deep and kinda worried, “What the actual heck are we doing?”
Think about it: the literal second the law allows her to sell that kind of access, she does — and society cheers. Let’s be practical, is it even legal? It is highly possible that she had already created a video. I mean she just turned 18 and already set to go.
Then come those who paid for that specific content. Humans are you for real? Lost so much in lust? Is it even lust? Millions — for what?
It seems like we’ve gotten so drunk on this particular idea of personal freedom that we’ve forgotten what freedom is even for. Yeah, you can do something. But should you? And what happens when everyone starts chasing that same quick and easy way?
It’s like we’re watching society crumble — but still, we’re calling it progress.
We are decaying. Basic human decency? Morals? Ethics? Dignity?
Dignity used to mean something inherent. People used to live and die for it. But it’s been rewritten. This version is getting out of hand. Now it’s all about money — and money only.
The message is loud and clear: Sell thyself!
Present yourself as a commodity. And when successful, sell it as a means to live. Many will follow the lead, and this cancer will spread more.
All this in the name of freedom? Freedom needs guardrails. It, too, needs a social contract — like: “Hey, maybe some things are just sacred? Or should not be for sale?” Not everything is liberation.
That’s not a healthy society. It’s a circus — where the freakiest act wins.
Now, I know what you may or may not be thinking: “That sounds kinda conservative. Prudish even. Why do you even care? Just ignore. Let her live! It’s her body and her choices!”
And you’re right. Absolutely right. She has the legal right. This legalization makes everything sound perfect.
But my worry isn’t about this one specific case. It’s about the growing culture. It’s about the applause. It’s about the fact that this is what we — as a society — reward most lavishly and instantly. It’s about the industrial-scale commodification of young people and intimacy.
It feels like we’re selling our collective soul — piece by piece — in the name of “empowerment.” It makes you wonder where the line is. Or if we even remember there was a line.
Cheers.