I Don't Know You


"But, I don’t know you.”

It doesn’t matter online. We are not scared of strangers, what they might do to us and get away with it. In fact we are drawn to them, especially those that pay for our attention and bodies. This piece was prompted by Ralph Barbosa, a stand-up comedian on Netflix that ends up in this machine I’m using.

He likes to talk about something called a cash-app, women have online. Apparently, they provide some service or online companionship and get paid. In one skit, Barbosa said his friend made about $800 one day without taking off her clothes. She just listened to the male caller.

“I don’t know you,” is an advantage online I guess. Both parties don’t know each other, so they can re-invent themselves as they text back and forth. Then comes the assessment. If one party got value for their dollar, they pay the woman, using the cash-app.

Does it matter? Do I have to know you? It matters in business. That’s why competitors buy each other out. Heinz makes baked beans. Kraft also makes them. In 2015 Kraft bought Heinz and cans you buy are the product of the Kraft Heinz Company.

Looking for a job? The second page of your C.V. has REFERENCES. These are people employers call to vouch for you, to confirm they know you, your character, your work ethic. Knowing somebody might not matter online where bodies meet cash-apps, but it does, in the real world.

“But, I don’t know you.”

Nonqaba waka Msimang

Executive Blogger

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