Via Mark, comes this seriously disturbing video:
I fail to understand how anybody could first of all make this video in the first place and then secondly put it on YouTube for every pedophile in the world to see? Even more disturbing is the number of commenters at YouTube thinking this was a "cute" thing to do.  Â
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But lets assume, for the sake of argument that your right.
Wouldn’t the best best course of action have been calling youtube attention to the material. The video could have been quietly pulled and if the material really does rise to the level where action is warranted then the authorities would have been able to act with minimum damage to the child. But thats not happening.
With out lots of hype and free publicity this video (or any other video on any subject) can’t rise above background noise created by all the other on-line videos. At best it would have been seen by a handful of people and dropped down the memory hole. But now that you and others have thrown your weight behind it the video shall be seen by thousands of people. Rather than forgotten it shall be discussed endlessly. What is probably nothing more than stupid innocence will morph with its impact on the child and her family magnified accordingly.
But on the bright side webtraffic should spike and thats good for the advertising rates, right?
Tim in Angeles sendzzzzzzzzzzzzzz
It would be “stupid innocence” if the child was just dancing around. Nobody would have cared if the child was just dancing. The child was doing a stripe tease and was posted on YouTube for every pedophile so see is what got everyone’s attention. How you can defend posting a children doing a striptease on YouTube is beyond me.
Also what advertising rates are you talking about? I don’t auction any adds on this site. Hosting a website isn’t free. I have Google Ads that automatically pop up and I make enough from them to pay off my monthly website fees. My Amazon toolbar makes enough money to buy the prize for my Korea Finder contest.
I sure the hell picked the wrong the subject, USFK and Korea related issues if I think I’m going to get rich blogging about it. If this website was about making money I would be posting racing girl pics every day.
“Never underestimate the value of early training and proper breaking in……………”
I don’t have a feeling either way about the video-except I sure as hell would not allow my daughter to do it. I still would not like the idea of my daughter doing it now-and she is 24.
As noted earlier by posting a link you are helping promote the very thing despise. As for the constant accusations of criminality; I am not a lawyer, I don’t play one on television but I fail to see how even the most media hungry DA could get an arrest warrant issued much less a conviction based on just this video. I think the video is in questionable taste but the problem with saying that is that “good taste” is a relative thing. While it would be easy and fun to say that the nation that gave us us the “wonder girls” has set the bar pretty low, its not really an Asian or Korean phenomenon.
My father once dated a woman whose daughter was deep into the “dance competition” subculture. I’ve suffered through video tapes of several “events” in which young girls in adult makeup and outfits roboticly going through sometimes suggestive dance routines while the adoring mothers (and it was always the mother) clucked at one another while making plans on how to spend the millions of dollars that just had to roll in once the little sugar plumb broke into show business. Since every competition had enough ribbons and trophies for everyone to finish first in something I never did figure how how one would move up the ranks, but thats another story.
It wouldn’t surprise me in the least if the parents of the girl in question are under the same delusion.
even my kids i took pictures of them taking a bubble bath together 3 and 18 months all in fun and just for memories but I wouldnt post them anywhere online for fear of the same topics expressed here