So you speak for the entire Bay Area? So I’m supposed to believe a guy who isn’t White or Asian is giggling at the fact he thinks Black people arent allowed in AAMPS. Since you think you know it all what “race” could he possibly be then. Don’t say Latino because that isn’t a race.
Did I deny your personal experience? Are you trying to deny mine?
You are entitled to defend your personal experience when someone else is denying yours, but don't try to redirect on me when I'm not denying yours. My response to you was to point out where you are going beyond facts and personal anecdotes and well into personal attacks territory that has nothing to do with your points of dispute.
Like Aznlooker said, social justice and reality are two separate things. My sharing of my personal experience, information that I directly hear from sex workers, see from PO responses, Org websites, Reddit, Quora, and more formal Q&A with sexworkers through social media and in my experience it is pretty consistent there is inherent preference against AA's and Indians by sexworkers.
The fact that I observed this reality does not reflect my personal values. As a matter of fact I'm fairly liberal and progressive and I've ended relationshps with women I was interested in when she made racists remarks against black neighborhoods because she couldn't be arsed to educate herself about redlining and other social issues. Just because I am personally not racist and believe in social justice doesn't suddenly make racial issues disappear, nor is it my job to to deny a sexworker's bad experience and concern for their ability to do their job. Racism and stereotypes are far more nuanced and pretending to not see it under some social justice flag doesn't actually serve to help any one. Stereotypes are built on correlations, but those of us who are educated do understand that correlation != causation. Bad social and environmental factors are what created the conditions for a lot of things that lead to racist perception, but unfortunately historical causes led to greater racial correlation and thus observed statistics, perceived or otherwise.