It's better to say, "Idolizing a politician is like believing the stripper is in love with you." Some strippers really do like me *as a friend*. Isn't it un-libertarian to stereotype sex workers as secretly bitter about their work?
It's better to say, "Idolizing a politician is like believing the stripper is in love with you." Some strippers really do like me *as a friend*. Isn't it un-libertarian to stereotype sex workers as secretly bitter about their work?
Word choice matters. I didn't say they *love* their customers. I said they *like* some of their customers *as a friend*. To deny the latter is to suggest bitterness in their work, it seems to me.
It's better to say, "Idolizing a politician is like believing the stripper is in love with you." Some strippers really do like me *as a friend*. Isn't it un-libertarian to stereotype sex workers as secretly bitter about their work?
Nobody said they're bitter. They may very well love their job--they just don't love their customers.
Word choice matters. I didn't say they *love* their customers. I said they *like* some of their customers *as a friend*. To deny the latter is to suggest bitterness in their work, it seems to me.