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2020-05-27 Β |Β β±οΈ 8:38 Β |Β ποΈ 132.2K views Β |Β π 9.2K likes Β |Β π¬ 2.4K comments
Pea redefines the term "sexpat" on her own terms, arguing the standard definition of a foreign sex tourist doesn't go far enough. She draws a hard moral line not at casual sex or age-gap relationships, but specifically at deception β building a case that the only thing that makes a man a sexpat is lying to vulnerable women about who he is and what he wants.
Pea's redefinition of "sexpat"
- The standard definition β simply being a sex tourist β is insufficient in her view because it doesn't make a critical distinction
- Her definition: a sexpat is a foreigner who comes to the Philippines with a desire for sex AND with the intention of deceiving women about his motives and situation
- The deception is what crosses the line, not the sex itself
Casual sex between consenting adults is not Pea's concern
- If a man is honest about wanting sex, she has no problem with him
- Many Filipinas would be happy to spend time with him even knowing the truth β trading a weekend getaway, fancy meals, and new experiences for sex is a "win-win" for many women
- Whether that makes those women "sluts" is addressed in a previous video, but Pea's attitude is: "So what if it does? Do you care? You're just here for sex in the first place β and what do you think that makes you?"
- Her position: what two consenting adults agree to do is nobody else's business
Where the line gets crossed β the specific deceptions she condemns
- Representing yourself as single or divorced when you have a wife at home
- Claiming to want a long-term relationship when you're just screwing around
- Presenting yourself as eagerly searching for "one true love" to attract as many marriage-minded women as possible, then trading the promise of a relationship for sex
- Pea frames these tactics as predatory: "You fancy yourself a hunter coming to the Philippines on safari with the intention of bagging some sweet young game and maybe even making a few sex tapes to bring home as trophies instead of mounted heads on the wall"
Why the deception is especially harmful in the Philippines
- Many Filipino women are "very innocent and very young"
- When they look into a man's eyes and hear his lies, they believe him β it's not a game for them
- They may think they're falling in love for the first time
- The relationship the man fabricated is fake, but the woman's feelings are real
- She may give herself to him hoping he sees in her what she thinks she sees in him β and then he destroys her hopes, dreams, and heart just to get laid
- Pea calls this "the behavior of a monster" and says "we expect better than that from our friends to the West"
- Her direct warning: "Don't come into my country and trample on my sisters or you're trampling on me"
Single guys aren't off the hook either
- Even a single man who honestly might be open to a relationship becomes a sexpat if he exaggerates his interest in commitment to attract women
- However, if a man is upfront about his plans and a woman sleeps with him hoping to change his mind, "that's on her" β it's fundamentally different from deception
Trivial deceptions don't count
- Shaving years off your age on a dating profile or adding a couple inches to your height β both sexes do this
- Pea doesn't like it and doesn't think it helps, but she explicitly says she's not talking about this kind of low-level dishonesty
Age-gap relationships and the "dirty old man" double standard
- Pea pushes back on the tendency to label older men as sexpats more readily than younger men engaging in exactly the same behavior
- She rejects the idea that older men should suppress their attraction to younger women or stick to their own age group
- Men are typically sexually active or interested in sex until they die, while some women of the same age may not be β why should men be shamed for that?
- Pea states she has personally been in age-gap relationships, prefers older mature men (sometimes "quite a few years my senior"), and maintains these relationships can be perfectly healthy as long as neither party takes advantage of the other
Pea's stated mission
- She promotes positive relationships bringing people together across East and West
- She exposes cultural differences and smooths the path while poking fun at both sides
- The test she applies: "Does your Filipina know why you're really here?" β if the answer is yes, she won't call you a sexpat regardless of the popular definition
No comedic end clip
- Pea deliberately omits her usual funny end segment, saying the topic was "just too important to lighten with humor"
- She promises to make it up to viewers in the next video