Quote:
Originally Posted by TheLegacy
apparently its not just beauty thats in the eye of the beholder - its also the imagined 2257 records.
anyone can check and find out shes of legal age - but that is never good enough for webmasters and whoever looks at her. She is going to be judged simply because she has a young looking face... thats it. Alot of self righteous people out there that even when presented with facts - they still go ape-shit then start pointing fingers and call everyone 'pedo'. Companies such as this are not going to be stupid enough to promote someone underage
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Agree it is exactly the case Robert that Lupe, least in these circumstances, is going to be judged because she "looks young" - plus the many other obvious "styling" elements which must have happened by accident to make her look even younger
Doubt the issue is over whether she is of age. Of course Lupe is 20 whatever and it is assumed the US domestic law records are in order. (Tho the legal standards of the US do not neccessary apply in other prime wired countries where they may have more stringent laws.)
Totally agree with you in that the attention these kinds of sites get in the adult industry is not usually over whether she is legal in the US or not, but because she is young looking - plus the blantantly obvious scenario overall and the undesireable appeal this may have.
There never was a law which stated - "You shalt publish anything which is termed legal". Webmasters are no different to media editors - we are all responsible for published content and, ultimately, this is a matter of judgement. Sure, that judgement may involve legal issues, but it extends further than that - and always has.
WorldSex are using their judgement in this instance. They know the usual legal formalities are probably in order, but elected not to publish under the "looks young" test. Several other established websites/sponsors use exactly the same test. This is not new or connected with "hypocrisy".
The fact that these type of sites even create any kind of contraversy within the adult industry - forget any "public opinion" - may be a clue something may be wrong.