Blac Chyna Quits OnlyFan After Baptism, Dedicates Life To Christ
By Movieguide® Contributor
Former reality star and model Blac Chyna has turned away from the sexual social media site OnlyFans and dedicated her life to Christ.
The star, who now goes by her birth name of Angela White, was baptized in May of last year. This event is what led to her quitting OnlyFans.
“With me being baptized, that’s just not what God will want me to do. It’s kind of degrading,” White explained.
She also opened up about her baptism, turning towards faith in an effort to feel “whole.”
“If you don’t like it, then you just don’t like it. But I will tell you this, there is a God,” White told skeptics. “Nobody can tell you what to do with your religion or your faith or this or that. I hope that me coming out will enlighten a lot of people and inspire a lot of people.”
She is also working on removing and reversing many of the cosmetic procedures she has had done over the years, wanting to lead a more authentic life.
“I think my baptism on my birthday played a big part,” White said. “Everything has been kind of trickling down for me and lining up perfectly. Now I’m just going by faith. I’m not even really going by like the Blac Chyna way or the Angela way. Let me just let God lead me.”
Movieguide® previously reported on social media sites that center around sexual exploitation:
In a letter submitted to Congress, over 700 survivors of sexual exploitation and victims’ advocates called for a criminal investigation into MindGeek, the leading information technology firm behind the adult site Pornhub.
Over recent months, Pornhub and its parent company have come under fire for enabling sexual exploitation of minors, abuse, human trafficking, and the violation of privacy rights. The letter continues to note the lack of legal consequences for the companies despite Pornhub’s continued publication and even monetization of non-consensual sexual content.
“MindGeek, which owns Pornhub and at least 160 other hardcore pornography websites, serves as a case study of corporate indifference regarding harm caused to women and children on its platform. It has received widespread international condemnation for facilitating and profiting from criminal acts including sex trafficking, filmed sexual abuse of children, and nonconsensually recorded and distributed pornography,” the letter reads.
“Additionally, because MindGeek intentionally placed a download button on every video distributed on Pornhub until December 2020, after being exposed by The New York Times, the company has violated federal age verification and record-keeping laws under 18 USC Section 2257 for over a decade. This is because the download button caused the direct transfer of pornography from MindGeek servers to individuals’ devices around the globe.”
Dawn Hawkins, the CEO of the Washington-based National Center on Sexual Exploitation, said that MindGeek and Pornhub actively turn a blind eye to their facilitation of sexual exploitation and trafficking.
“MindGeek has profited from illegal material for far too long, and it must be held to account. Even now, Canada has opened an investigation into MindGeek for violations of federal privacy laws. U.S. authorities must take action as well,” Hawkins told The Christian Post. “MindGeek cannot continue to operate with impunity. Congress must step up to bring justice for survivors, and to put an end to the pornography industry’s penchant for preying on vulnerable people.”
The letter comes after a number of civil lawsuits and a virtual congressional briefing where survivors shared how the porn industry exploited and harmed them by refusing to take down non-consensual and abusive content.