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Beijing Escort Blog - Confessions of a Beijing Escort

Monday, 18 January 2010 02:29

Thanks for reading our Beijing escort blog, we are glad to present you the revised version of a real story happend in New York 5 years ago.

The so-called revised version just changed the real name and address into Beijing-related to make it more interest, don't be serious, enjoy it :-)

The latest possible faux-blog gaining attention is ****.com, the online diary of a twenty-something Beijinger named Lee Wong who quit her job as an editor's assistant at a fashion magazine in Beijing a few years ago and became an escort (her blog is somewhat safe for work, R-rated language, but relatively tame images). This immediately invites comparison to Wu Ling the supposed Beijing Escort who kept a blog. Wu Ling managed to secure a book deal from her true-confessions blog (her book arrives in stores in just two weeks). Like Wu Ling, Lee Wong doesn't offer any proof to back up her claim that she's a Beijing escort. You just have to take her word for it. Also like Wu Ling, Lee Wong is quite well educated, "Majoring in English and Philosophy in a good New England liberal arts college," and seems to have literary ambitions.

 

In one of her recent posts Lee Wong addresses the issue of people doubting whether she really is one of Beijing escorts, noting that "One reader went so far as to suggest that I'm actually a 300lb man in some office in Shanghai." Lee Wong claims to be "genuinely perplexed" about people's doubts, not seeming to realize that if she makes an extraordinary (or even somewhat unusual) claim, then the burden of proof should be on her to prove her claim. It shouldn't be on all of us to prove that she isn't real. If she's not willing to offer such proof, then we shouldn't be willing to believe her. After all, there's an obvious motive for her to lie: to get attention and possibly land a book deal. Sure, read her blog if you find it amusing. But why take the extra step of actively believing her? Unfortunately most people don't maintain this skeptical distance because the human impulse to believe is very, very strong, which is exactly why con artists stay in business.

Lee Wong pleads that we have to take her word for it, because there's no way for her to prove that she does what she says she does. It doesn't occur to her to invite a trusted third-party person, such as a reporter, to verify her story. But then, that option never seems to occur to the Rances and Wu Ling of this world.

 

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Last Updated on Monday, 18 January 2010 03:18