Gabriella Laurence 301887 Report post Posted April 30, 2012 ...and if they wanted to it would be fairly easy to find reviews on her services as well. This is where the rest of the disclaimer comes in. "and whatever else that may occur is a matter of choice made between consenting adults of legal age. By contacting me you agree to this & understand this is not an offer of prostitution." Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
SamanthaEvans 166766 Report post Posted April 30, 2012 I have one of those disclaimers on my website. I've had a few men contact me because they really did want company, but not sex, and said that, to them, the disclaimer meant that they could just ask me for a date, period, without me expecting to have or provide sexual contact. That was fine with me. I went to a company picnic, a wedding and a convention dinner party. All very nice evenings. No sex. 1 Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
backrubman 64800 Report post Posted April 30, 2012 I have one of those disclaimers on my website. I've had a few men contact me because they really did want company, but not sex, and said that, to them, the disclaimer meant that they could just ask me for a date, period, without me expecting to have or provide sexual contact. That was fine with me. I went to a company picnic, a wedding and a convention dinner party. All very nice evenings. No sex. Yes I think we all know the ladies make great dates for social only situations (without the disclaimer), but of course it doesn't matter if you are a paid companion for a social only occasion or flipping burgers at McDonalds in Dust Bowl, Oklahoma, gainful employment of any kind in the US is still prohibited unless you have a work visa or green card. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Guest Ou**or**n Report post Posted April 30, 2012 The disclaimers won't change a thing when it comes to getting into the US. If a customs official suspects a women is a prostitute they will bar entry. They use a completely different set of standards when it comes to their decision making and they are granted a high degree of latitude. They are not use the same standards of proof that a court system would use. The US (like Canada) is a sovereign country and admission to it is not a right. I have known ladies with a travel history to Vegas, LA and NY get banned entry when an agent suspected such trips were for prostitution. I simply cannot see a lady pointing to her escort website (matched I assume got flagged by some magic facial recognition system that matches people in lines in real time against a database of the worlds escort sites that include facial shots) and saying "see the disclaimer...". In real life the agent would laugh, tell her everyone knows they're simple covers and send her back to Canada. As has been pointed out, if pushed to some sort of appeal or formal application the customs officials would only need to search for reviews or online discussions such as this one to easily find evidence. The only way to guard against this as much as possible would be to never participate in forums and to have a comprehensive DNR policy. I have known some ladies with DNRs for just this reason. Of course if you're a porn star and get paid to have sex with the cameras rolling then come on in! Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites