"I am shocked," the journalist wrote, publishing "Survivor VIP" about the pimp affair in women, but not for the reasons you thought • "Evil in the story - hundreds of men tremble that the woman will know"
Handsome Buki
Photo:
Gideon Markovich
Criminal reporter and graduate of "VIP Survivor" journalist Buki Nea, posted a Facebook post on Tuesday protesting how media coverage of the prostitution industry in Israel was revealed following the arrest of eight people, who were part of a women's trafficking network in Gush Dan, including a leading Israeli athlete .
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"I am stunned by the members of the criminal reporters, who stand inflated on the screen and dramatically recite the affair of bringing women from abroad to work in prostitution as a serious crime case, and those involved as a serious and dangerous crime organization," Neah began the angry post.
"What really happened here, without the public relations campaign and the background noise made by the police, is this: Many women from the CIS have been brought to Israel to make a lot of easy money in Israel in providing sex services.
"There is demand from thousands of horny men who are willing to pay. There is a supply. There is a lot of money for girls and those who bring them to Israel and arrange for them work." Nea continued his argument that the same women are not as innocent victims as the media tries to put it: "No kidnapping. No violence. No one promised to come to Israel to work as a teacher, doctor or maid. A win win deal.
"The fact that the bloated members are standing on the TV screen portraying it as a 'serious crime organization' and slave market is still not making it that way," he stated. "These ladies came to Israel to do good for the population. Don't hurt her. The only bad thing in the story is that there are hundreds of men in Israel who are trembling now that the police are calling them for testimony and their woman will know they are going to prostitutes ... That's how they also closed the strip clubs and took down the headquarters of hundreds of women We have given service to tens of thousands of men, "Neah concluded.
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The surfers were mainly divided into two camps in their responses: while some supported Nea's words and even strengthened his hands about daring to voice his opinion, many argued that his argument was unacceptable, and that it was an exploitative and ugly industry that did much harm to women who were part of it.