PROGRESS DOESN’T THINK ABOUT YOU, IT THINKS ABOUT THOSE WHO COME AFTERIf it were up to you, everything would stay the same. You’ve already spent enough time getting used to how things work—why change them now? After all, if it took you effort to adapt, why would you want to start over? But progress doesn’t ask for permission—it moves forward. And it doesn’t do it for those of us who are already here, but for those who will come next.
If we had clung to the idea of "keeping things as they are," we’d still be throwing garbage out the window, lighting our homes with candles, and painting books with pigments made from odd, outdated mixtures. Every advancement that seems normal today was once questioned. Every innovation we enjoy now had its critics in the past.
New things always unsettle those who have lived long enough to prefer what’s familiar. It’s natural. The unknown creates resistance, but progress doesn’t wait for approval. It moves forward—with or without us.
What feels strange today will be normal tomorrow. What sparks debate now will be the standard in the future. And in a few years, others will be saying the same thing: "After all the effort it took me to adapt, now they come and change everything again." That’s history, that’s progress. And that’s how it will always be, whether you like it or not.
In case you’re struggling to read between the lines, this is about those who resist AI-generated adult content. I’m not saying you have to accept it, or that you have to like it—not at all. But just because you don’t like it doesn’t mean it won’t become a reality.
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AMATEUR FLESH: FAIRYJULIAWe live in a society that doesn’t know what to do with sex. It praises it, consumes it, exploits it, yet at the same time, punishes, demonizes, and shrouds it in taboos. No matter which way you look, there will always be someone dictating what’s right and what’s wrong, what is freedom and what is submission, what is empowerment and what is degradation.
If you show it, you’re objectifying yourself. If you hide it, you’re repressed. If you enjoy it, you’re promiscuous. If you sell it, you’re being exploited. But if you give it away, you’ll still be judged. And while some say sex should be free and without constraints, others warn that being too free means falling into the patriarchy’s trap, that you must protect yourself from yourself, that there’s a point where your freedom stops being freedom and becomes a problem.
The truth is that sex shapes itself depending on the perspective from which it’s viewed. For some, showcasing it and monetizing it through social media is simply making use of one’s own resources—an act of autonomy. For others, it’s humiliation, a surrender of dignity. It all depends on who’s looking, what prejudices they hold, and what values they’ve inherited.
But in the end, the contradiction is clear: the world consumes sex in industrial quantities. It watches it, seeks it out, buys it. And yet, it continues to judge those who provide it. Hypocrisy? Double standards? Perhaps just a society that still hasn’t learned to live with its own nature.
Fairyjulia knows exactly where she stands. She has no guilt, no second thoughts. She lives how she wants—and she’s living very well.
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