Prostitution to Buy Handbags
Handbags owned by Victoria Beckham, Rihanna, Jenifer Lopez, Kimora Lee Simmons, Nigerian actress Ini Edo or Bonang Matheba a South African media personality, can be a mother’s nightmare. The internet fuels the appetite for what girls think is the good life. That is why some of them run personal prostitution rings on social media like Instagram and Facebook. Personal, because there is no pimp sending them to assignments and taking a commission. It is not called prostitution. The women are called Instagram models and some of them have a cash app to make it easier for men to pay at first “Hi.”
Young women can crave for good things but, it is suicidal if a 17 year-old thinks she can get them by twerking online or dropping her clothes. It sounds like common sense, but it is put on pause, when they want that Gucci handbag or Pharrell’s Louis Vuitton debut collection.
Well-established women like Bonang Matheba and Ini Edo, can afford them because they work. Young girls boast about their prostitution jaunts around the world to ‘get the bag.’ That is what prostitution is called, getting the bag, supposedly full of money. Most transactions are electronic, but it’s getting the bag nonetheless. Some girls are used and thrown overboard. Others are mutilated and left by the road side or park.
The bigger the bag, the more dangerous the assignment. Parents cannot believe how tables have turned. They are burying kids instead of kids burying them. Parents’ fears come from seeing such headlines. They pray it’s not their daughters, because they don’t know anything about their life: their friends and why they don’t want to work. “I’m an influencer mom. I‘ve told you countless times. That’s why I travel. Listen, leave me alone. It’s my life.”
By: Nonqaba waka Msimang.
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