By Professor Doom
I’ve covered
before how many college graduates now become
prostitutes to help pay off their student debt, but that’s only
addressing what happens after a student graduates and realizes her degree is
worthless and has no choice.
A far larger
share of students become prostitutes, or semi-prostitutes (at the risk of
splitting hairs) while still in college. There are entire sites devoted to
them, for older gentlemen seeking “the girlfriend experience” with a college
student, in exchange for paying off ever more exorbitant tuition.
This has been
going on in the US for some time, but the UK has been copying our higher
education system. It’s only natural for their students to become prostitutes as
well, but at least the UK higher ed system helps them out:
Ah, orientation,
I remember it well. “Here’s the library, here’s the food court, here’s the rec
room, here’s where you’ll be taking classes….” I hail from far more prosaic
times, indeed. What kind of advice are the UK students getting at orientation
nowadays?
The Sex Workers’ Outreach Project (SWOP),
Sussex set up shop at Brighton University and Sussex University during
their annual September “freshers’ fairs,” offering condoms and sexual health
advice to potential sex workers among the students.
Ok, so I guess I played a bit of a
“gotcha” with the title, since clearly this isn’t part of the official
orientation materials. Still, there must be some sort of market here, and the
university didn’t shut it down. Are they really expecting that many
prostitute/students?
Now, I’m not one to cast judgement on
people, but perhaps we should ask some questions about an “education” system
where 1/6 of the students are considering “sex work” to pay for the system. To
clarify, about 60% of students are female, and, realistically, most prostitutes
are female, so we’re looking at around a quarter of the females are prostitutes,
or are at least considering it.
At Brighton University, the SWOP stall, which
featured a colorful “wheel of sexual well-being” for students to play with,
stood beside another advertising careers in finance.
Now, I’m thinking that perhaps a college
degree would be helpful in finance, but does anyone else think these two
“careers” belong side by side? Honest, you don’t need a college degree to be a
prostitute.
As I finally start to recover from the first round of treatments, a question comes to mind:
Just how proud should the United States
be of shipping this new brand of higher education to the rest of the western
world?
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