
Oleksandr Chubko
Articles
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1 week ago |
nytimes.com | Cassandra Vinograd |Oleksandr Chubko
"¿Disculpa? ¿Tu 'moral' te permite tomar el dinero de nuestros impuestos?", dijo Karina, de 30 años, que lleva cinco años creando contenidos sexualmente explícitos. Pero "¿tu moral te permite encarcelar a personas por vender fotos de su propio cuerpo?", añadió exasperada: "No tengo palabras". Karina y otros creadores que venden imágenes eróticas en OnlyFans y que fueron entrevistados para este artículo pidieron ser identificados solo por su nombre de pila, por temor a ser detenidos.
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1 week ago |
infobae.com | Cassandra Vinograd |Oleksandr Chubko
Últimas NoticiasRusia invade UcraniaDeportesVenezuelaTecnologíaESPNQué Puedo VerEntretenimientoEEUUPornographyLaw and LegislationPolitics and GovernmentRussian Invasion of Ukraine (2022)Tymoshenko, Yulia VUkraineRussiaEuropeOnlyFansUcrania obtiene ingresos fiscales de los creadores de contenidos pornográficos, pero también amenaza con procesarlos. Un proyecto de ley pretende solucionar lo que muchos consideran una contradicción.
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1 week ago |
flipboard.com | Cassandra Vinograd |Oleksandr Chubko
4 hours agoTrump Has A ‘Maximum’ Meltdown On Social Media After Hate-Watching ‘60 Minutes’The president snapped after watching a TV show he didn't like and said CBS should lose its license. President Donald Trump on Sunday called for “maximum fines and punishment” against CBS and its corporate parent, Paramount, over Sunday night’s “60 Minutes” broadcast.
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1 week ago |
nytimes.com | Cassandra Vinograd |Oleksandr Chubko
Ukraine makes tax revenue off the creators of pornographic content, but also threatens them with prosecution. A draft law aims to fix what many say is an unfair contradiction. As Ukraine contends with a war raging on its eastern front and Russian attacks on its cities, one lawmaker is working on something that he says could help the nation: legalizing pornography.
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1 month ago |
miamiherald.com | Carlotta Gall |Oleksandr Chubko
A 77-year-old former high school teacher, turned out in a neat dress and hat, has been creating a quiet revolution in the villages of the Kherson region in southern Ukraine. Standing before a group of 10 women in a tent in the center of a village in Ukraine’s south last summer, she recounted her ordeal three years ago under Russian occupation. “What I went through,” said the woman, named Liudmyla, her voice wavering.
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