
Let me clarify our mission.
We begin by addressing the reality of pornography. Our stance is clear: the current model of free, unregulated streaming sites like Pornhub fuels exploitation, strips performers of their agency, and normalizes harm. We seek to bring an end to these free platforms and to replace them with paywall systems where compensation is guaranteed, and where access is not built on the abuse of the vulnerable. By restructuring this industry, we not only protect adult actresses from being further exploited, but we also safeguard our children from the easy, unchecked access to explicit material that warps understanding of intimacy and consent from a young age.
Protecting children also means implementing stronger technological safeguards. We call for parental control tools—such as Bear—to be built into all children’s phones by default, not as an optional add-on but as a standard feature. With the same seriousness that seatbelts are required in cars, we believe digital protections should be required in every device a child holds. In doing so, we create barriers between young minds and the predatory reach of the pornography industry, empowering parents and guardians with real tools to protect their families.
But our mission extends beyond dismantling exploitative systems—it is also about building compassionate ones. Our main goal is to decriminalize prostitution. We know why: criminalization creates more danger, not less. It silences victims, forces workers into shadows where violence thrives, and fuels stigma that denies people their dignity. By choosing decriminalization, we choose harm reduction. We choose a world where women and men who work in sex economies have access to health, safety, and rights. And in doing so, we create a society where rape numbers fall, where exploitation loses its grip, and where the most vulnerable are protected rather than punished.

We are aware that there will be attempts to paint us, and me in particular, in a different light—to use shame, stigma, and distortion as tools to discredit this mission. But this is not about one individual’s past or image; it is about collective safety, justice, and dignity. Every effort to reduce this work to personal attacks only proves how deeply the system fears change. Our stance remains unshaken: the focus must stay on protecting women from exploitation, shielding children from harm, and creating a society where sex work is not criminalized but understood as a human reality deserving of rights, compassion, and safety.
Our mission is not about silencing pleasure or demonizing desire—it is about drawing a line between empowerment and exploitation, between choice and coercion, between protection and neglect. We believe that no child should grow up unguarded in a digital world designed to prey on them, and no adult should be criminalized for how they choose to survive or thrive.
Lucy’s Inferno stands as a flame against the darkness: to end exploitation, to safeguard our children, and to bring dignity, safety, and justice to sex workers everywhere. This is not just a mission—it is a revolution of compassion.