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Re: FKK clubs in Germany rocks
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Re: FKK clubs in Germany rocks
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Re: FKK clubs in Germany rocks
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Re: FKK clubs in Germany rocks
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Re: FKK clubs in Germany rocks
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Re: FKK clubs in Germany rocks
Hello Bro, any recommendation for Fkk in hamburg? Thank u.
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Re: FKK clubs in Germany rocks
Goldentime - In Bruggen, which is at the border to the Netherlands.
www.goldentime.de If you happen to be in Amsterdam, this club can be reached by train. I took a train from Amsterdam to Venlo which I think cost around 50+ Euros. Took me close to 3 hours to get there. Then grab a cab at the train station and ask for Golden Time. They all know it. Entrance: 50 euros There are many very hot girls walking around in bras/panties. Some are completely nude. Take your time and see the entire scene before making your choice. It will be 50 Euros more to the girl that you choose for 30 minutes. BBBJ, sex, etc. They have girls of all shapes. Well worth it. |
Re: FKK clubs in Germany rocks
Any updates of the big5 FKK clubs near Frankfurt?
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Re: FKK clubs in Germany rocks
Will be in Frankfurt first week of dec. Let me know if wanna hit a FKK club together. Never been there before. Thanks.
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Re: FKK clubs in Germany rocks
Nice fr Bro Nazojin.
Reminded me of my 1st trip to FKK too. Got to stay composed and pick slowly. After bonking, grab a beer and bite to recharge then full battle order again hahaha. :D |
Re: FKK clubs in Germany rocks
Anyone in Hanover wanna hit a FKK please pm me.
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Re: FKK clubs in Germany rocks
Anyone wanna go fkk in frankfurt on monday or tuesday please pm me. Come on.
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Re: FKK clubs in Germany rocks
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would you recommend just paying EUR60 for 30 mins or EUR120 for an hour? |
Re: FKK clubs in Germany rocks
In today's Sydney Morning Herald..
http://www.smh.com.au/travel/travel-...024-2w380.html Germany is now the 'bordello of Europe' Date: January 14 2014 Bordellos with flat rates, package deals, everyone-at-once gangbangs and airport quickies. This is just a tiny sampling of the erotic specialties on offer these days in Germany, where prostitution has boomed so dramatically since its legalisation in 2002 that opponents - ranging from radical feminists to Christian conservatives - carp that it's now the "bordello of Europe". In the past two decades, the number of (overwhelmingly female) sex workers has more than doubled to 400,000, according to some estimates. And you don't have to go to Hamburg's notorious Reeperbahn street to find them. Berlin alone has some 500 brothels; Osnabruck, a small university city, has 70; and another 3000 or so exist across the rest of the country. Their neon-red lights and windowless facades dot even picturesque little towns known primarily for their cuckoo clocks and gingerbread. The Pascha brothel in Cologne, for example, services an estimated 800 men every day. The 12-storey building, open 24 hours a day, is the biggest whorehouse in Germany, with 126 rooms as well as a restaurant, beauty salon, boutique, launderette, tanning studio and several bistros. About 150 women work there, supported by 90 other staff. An entire floor is dedicated to transsexual services. Every day, more than a million men in Germany visit sex workers - most of whom hail from poorer neighbouring countries such as Romania and Ukraine. The country has become a prime destination for male sex tourists looking for cheap, legal and relatively hygienic pleasures of the flesh. Busloads of pleasure seekers from nearby countries - even, now, from the Netherlands, a country once known for its lax attitude towards prostitution - simply cross the border into Germany instead of travelling to faraway sex-tourism destinations such as Thailand... |
Re: FKK clubs in Germany rocks
All told, the German sex industry rakes in some $US17.7 billion ($19.5 billion) a year.
The battle lines on commercial sex services confound the usual political fronts, pitting feminist against feminist, and putting human rights activists and church officials on one side of the barricades and social workers on the other. The incoming German government - a centrist coalition led by Angela Merkel's Christian Democrats - dared to broach the subject during coalition negotiations, only to drop it again pretty quickly in light of the ensuing brouhaha: There simply isn't a consensus within either party about what to do about it. Prostitution, it turns out, is a tricky problem to get right, and a decade after instituting one of Europe's most liberal laws governing the industry, Germany is no closer to being there. At the centre of the storm are the "progressive" prostitution laws that Germany's Social Democrat-Green administration passed in 2002. The idea was to bring sex workers in from the murky underworld of red light milieus and give them rights and social benefits that would improve their working conditions. In theory, this should have prised them loose from pimps and mafia structures, even if it legalised the "promotional" activities of middlemen in the process. Under current law, sex workers can sue for wages, pay into social security and demand that employers help pay for health insurance. The sex industry, never strictly illegal, had long paid taxes, but prostitution was not considered legitimate work. The goal was to make prostitution a job like any other. This way, the liberal politicos thought, women could be rescued from evils such as human trafficking. The legislation was meant to set in motion full-scale legalisation and aboveboard regulation of the industry, making sex workers as legit as bakers or physical therapists. |
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