RedLights 235 Posted September 21, 2014 Where can you find best Ping Pong Sex Shows in Phuket? You can also find Phuket escorts, streetwalkers, body rubs, strippers & strip bars, ts & male escorts from WikiSexGuide: http://www.wikisexguide.com/wiki/Phuket Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Guest sex show thailand Posted September 22, 2014 Even Rihanna have tweeted following: "Either I was phuck wasted lastnight, or I saw a Thai woman pull a live bird,2 turtles,razors,shoot darts and ping pong, all out of her pu$$y." So Thai Ping Pong Shows are fucked up and must see for every sex tourist! Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Guest Ricos Posted September 22, 2014 If non of you have visited Ping Pong Sex Shows in Thailand. Here is an article you should read! THE CRUEL SIDE OF A TRIP TO THAILAND February 28, 2013 · by jamesbitmead I must admit that I can plead guilty to the occasional sexist comment. I can also admit to taking advantage of the sex trade that exists in Thailand. On my second trip to the country I payed a Ladyboy prostitute to sneak into my friend’s bed as a joke. I have been to strip clubs in Bangkok and Phuket. I was then oblivious to the cruel nature of the sex trade that exists in Thailand. Yet that all changed when I attended my first Ping Pong show during my third trip to Thailand recently. Friends and family had scoffed at why I hadn’t already attended one on my previous trips, as it is the ‘thing to do’ in Thailand. In the tourist strip of Bangla Rd at Patong Beach in Phuket, workers spread right across the road yelling at you to attend one of these ping pong shows. They try and entice you by offering free entry, whilst showing you a pamphlet with photos of what to expect. One of the pamphlets shoved in my face had a photo of former Big Brother contestant, Krystal Forscutt, on it. Surely she wasn’t going to be there? Upon agreeing to go, they lead you down an alley way, past bars, night clubs, strip clubs, where you eventually enter a large dark room with a stage in the middle. Whilst entry is free, you must buy a drink, with the cheapest being a Chang beer for approximately 1000 Thai Baht, which works out to be just over $30 AUD. There were about 30 other tourists in the room. For the next hour we were entertained by Thai women who come out on to the stage and perform bewildering acts using their vagina. The role of a ping pong artist is to place an item up this part of their body and using their muscles, pop it back it out. Whilst the ping pong ball is the most popular item, they also use fish, birds, coke, eels, cigarettes, candles, amongst others. I went up on stage for one of the acts. I had to stand with a balloon in my mouth, whilst the Thai woman, about three metres away lying down, fired an arrow out of the you know what and popped the balloon. I was quite shocked to witness this, and I couldn’t believe that I had payed and contributed to such an act of atrocity to occur. The worst thing about sitting there watching it is that the Thai women performing these acts show no enthusiasm and excitement. They do what they have to do to prevent living in poverty. Obviously there are men at the top of the chain of these ping pong shows who are living a very wealthy and prosperous life, at the cost of these unfortunate women. Many of the women are traditionally from rural Thailand, or even from neighbouring countries such as Myanmar, Laos or Cambodia, where they see this trade as an opportunity to provide for their families back home. They either have the option of living in poverty, unable to send their children to school, or join the sex trade and give their family some hope. Some don’t even have an option, barely caught up in human trafficking and forced into it. The most sickening part during the show was seeing a table close by of loud obnoxious Australians, not too different from Bay 13 at the MCG, taunting and egging on the Thai women. They were obviously immune from the blatant disregard of human rights which was occurring right in front of their eyes. And I am sure that there is a new table of similar Australians who do that every night given the recent popularity of Thailand with Australian tourists. Throughout my three trips to Thailand, I have seen it all too often of Westerners seeing Thai women as purely sex instruments. A classic case is an American man I met called Jimmy, who lives in the town of Sangkhlaburi, approximately 350 kilometres North West of Bangkok on the Thai-Myanmar border. Jimmy owns his own restaurant, and being slightly overweight, is restricted to his hammock. Yet that doesn’t stop him bossing his Thai wife around, ordering her to attend to the customers, make their drinks, bring out their meals, put a movie on. And that’s when he isn’t demanding her to bring him out another pizza. But the worst part about it was when he engaged me in conversation for close to an hour, and all he had to say was how good his wife was at sex. And of course the countless times he had cheated on her whilst travelling around Thailand without her. As sick as it is, Jimmy isn’t the only westerner doing this. Thousands of westerners enjoy the cheap lifestyle, mixed with the easy accessibility of consistent sex and home cooked meals. It’s as if they see the country as purely a cheap brothel. It frustrates me when I hear people who have gone to Thailand and the only thing they come back to talk about is the Ping Pong show they went to. Whilst yes it is a bewildering experience to tell others upon returning from a holiday, but this just encourages more and more people to not only attend these shows when visiting Thailand, but also to view Thailand as purely a country of sex trade. My friend from Thailand works as a tour guide, taking foreigners to tourist destinations, such as that of Bangkok and Pattaya. She is sickened that much of her job involves waiting outside the front of Ping Pong shows for hours on end, as her clients sit inside, thinking it is a must see attraction of Thailand, and one that they can go home and tell everyone about. Ping Pong shows are not entertainment, but rather a mere exploitation of the rights of women who unfortunately have been bought up in poverty. It degrades their sense of self and dignity, and gives them little chance of gaining happiness, even if they do make a sustainable income, which many of them don’t. The Australian media rarely reports on this sex trade business which is such an obvious occurrence and which thousands of Australians make the most of every year. They would rather report on the scams, such as paying too much for a taxi fare, which Australians should be wary of when travelling overseas. Surely it is more important to inform the public that they are contributing to the abuse of human rights, rather than if they are going to get ripped off an extra couple of dollars? Whilst I do love the party scene that exists down Bangla Rd at Patong Beach and at the Full Moon parties at Koh Phangan, it is a much more meaningful experience visiting other cities such as Kanchanaburi and Surat Thani, where there isn’t such a brazen misuse of people’s lives occurring. Thailand is well known for its beautiful women, but it’s such a shame that so many of them cannot fulfil a life which would offer so much if only they were born into a different lifestyle. There has recently been a crackdown on pornographic Ping Pong shows by the local police, but they are so hard to stop as they are hidden from the public’s eye down dark alley ways, away from the world to see. But the world knows they are occurring, and in this twenty first century, surely it is time they are stopped. If you attend a Ping-Pong show, you’re only allowing the sex trade to continue, and the man at the top to remain rich. If tourists stop attending, they will not be able to survive, and hopefully Thai women will be able to find a more meaningful form of income. I love Thailand. I love the warm and friendly people, the Buddhist religion, the allegiance to the King, the delicious food, the markets, the luxurious beaches, the luscious mountains, but it is a country marred by the treatment of its people through the sex trade. Next time you visit Thailand, don’t get sucked in. It has so much more to offer than watching a measly hour of women performing sexual acts out of desperation to survive. We owe it to our fellow human beings who through no fault of their own have been caught up in this situation. Source biscuitsbite.wordpress.com Share this post Link to post Share on other sites