Girls Spread
20 Gili: Hard-Wood Whore
Photography by Matti Klatt
42 Helene and Camilla: Slit-Tickling Rivalry
Photography by Clive McLean
62 Dawn: Flavor of the Muff
Centerfold Photography by Matti Klatt
78 Ingrid and Dan: Strokes of Art
Photography by Clive McLean
90 Christi: Fur Trap
Photography by James Baes
126 Melora's Tool of the Trade
Photography by Denys Defrancesco
Monthly Features
50 Sex Play
Sex In The 21st Century
52 Porn Flakes
Examine the Bizarre and Somewhat Sordid Past of our Favorite Breakfast Food-Cereal
88 From the Editor's Desk
Wake Me in 2002
By M. Blackburn
103 Boner Bouquet
Pierre Elliot Trudeau
The Issue's Standards
8 Bits & Pieces
Asshole of the Year: Meteorologists
11 Feedback
Bulletins From the Field
19 Dear Slut
XXX Star Marly Peters Tells the Fucking Truth
30 Hot Letters
Room Service
35 Erotic Entertainment
Rammin' Holiday: Lovette's Weekend-Long Return to Smut
Edited by Gus Masirapa
72 HUSTLER Humor
106 Beaver Hunt
Revealing America's Pussies—Together
A NOTE FROM OUR PUBLISHER
The year 2000 has finally come to an end. It came in with a bang and out with
a wimper. Many feared the worst; computer systems crashing, city infrastructures
collapsing, a great paucity of food, gas shortages and the list went on. Some
even predicted the end of the world. Yet the armageddon never did materialize.
In fact, other than the odd inconvenience, the Y2K thing turned out to be a total
yawn.
Our worst fears were never realized, the calendar flipped over one more time,
and the year 2000 began remarkably the same as it, did every other year.
This year will present many of the same challenges as every year. Each year many
of us set goals and make resolutions - some we keep, some we don't.
This will likely be an election year when we must choose a new Federal Government.
We have witnessed the birth of a supposed new political party, 'The Canadian Alliance'.
Their leader, Stockwell Day, has proclaimed the new version of the Reform Party
as the only choice on the political right. Joe Clark and his beleaguered 'Federal
Progressive Conservative Party' disagree. And Mr. Chrétien and his Liberal
Party profess themselves to be the only real choice for Canadians. The other parties
don't even seem to figure into the equation anymore.
In spite of the grandiose proclamations and the plethora of political choices
it seems Vle year 2001, will be tothat the biggest challenge, in he year 2001,
will be to 7tdecide which ineffectual party is he lesser of the evils. Our political
parties all want and try to portray themselves as being able to facilitate change-
hopefully for the better. They try and sell themselves as caring for the 'average'
Canadian, looking out for the 'little guy'. But what politicians in this fine
country of ours have said and what they have actually done has been appallingly
aberrant and of little similitude.
One of the most glaring examples of the political 'double-speak' we hear each
day are the laws governing. Prostitution is legal in Canada, yet politicians insist
on legislating against `communicating for the purposes of sex' and `running bawdy
houses'.
Politicians speak about the total abolition of the world's oldest profession yet,
it is safe to assume, many of them have or do engage the services of those plying
the trade. HUSTLER, a long time advocate of liberalized laws in relation to consensual
sexual conduct among adults, will continue to seek out and expose
hypocritical politicians who impose, support and enforce restrictive and punitive
laws on Canadians yet engage in those same activities behind closed doors.
The only real thing that can be said for our political parties is that the more
things change, the more they stay the same.
When Mulroney's Conservative seized power from the Liberals they promised to get
rid of the deficit, they promised greater employment and prosperity. The reality
was a greater deficit, greater unemployment and the hated `Goods and Services
Tax'. Canadians gave his party two chances and both times found themselves profoundly
disappointed. Upon failing to deliver, quite appropriately, the Canadian electorate
kicked their butts out of office.
Along came our saviour, Jean Chrétien and his Liberals who promised to
get rid of the deficit, unemployment, and the hated GST. The reality is that unemployment
is still high and the GST is still with us. But the Liberals do proclaim to have
wrestled down the deficit, which they have. But it had little to do with their
policies or managerial style. All they had to do was sit back, hang tight with
the policies Brian Mulroney's Conservatives had put in place and set in motion
and laugh at the Canadian voter who trusted his government to put the average
Canadian citizen's best interest ahead of their political machinery. And what
we got, is perhaps, what we deserved - a government based on deception, misinformation
and blatant lies.
The Liberals will quickly point out that unemployment is at its lowest in years.
And perhaps, depending on how one manipulates the statistics, it is. But much
of the new found employment is part-time, low paying and has little if no security.
Quality work, work on which a person can rely and raise their family is still
a very scarce commodity.
The Liberals also boast that they have eliminated the deficit, but this accounting
miracle seems to be of more significance to their corporate cronies on Bay and
Wall street than the average Canadian. And this great reduction was done on the
backs of every Canadian. It was done by taxing us at every given opportunity,
by slashing our social programs, by robbing our EI fund and by sneakily squeezing
almost every spare cent working, non-working and retired Canadians had in their
pockets.
We work longer and longer hours for the wages we earn, we get paid less and less
for the work we do, and we get fewer and fewer social benefits than ever before.
Food is more expensive, housing is more expensive and petroleum prices are astronomical.
In the case of gasoline prices, the government taxes gas at the pump almost 50%.
Politicians again, use their 'doublespeak' mentality. They trash the oil companies
for greedily inflating their prices and call on OPEC to boost its oil production.
Yet when Canadians call upon their politicians to cut the outrageous gas tax it
falls on deaf ears - typical 'double-speak' !
EI benefits have been cut, eligibility has been made more difficult if not impossible,
and the length of time we may collect benefits has been cut in half! Welfare benefits
have been reduced, workfare has been instituted and Provincial governments are
no longer willing to make up for the Federal Government's abdication of responsibility.
Even our Canada Pension Plan premiums have been increased and our benefits cut.
In spite of all the prosperity the Liberals had promised the sad reality is that
our standard of living continues in a downward spiral.
Now Stockwell Day and his Alliance Party say they are going to fix all that -
they are going to succeed where the Liberals failed. Stockwell Day, who was once
the finance minister in Alberta, claims he knows all about running a country's
finances (even though his budgets in Albertâ were off by up to 400%). He
also claims to be able to fix our moral woes. He aims to restore our `family values'
(right wing code for jailing prostitutes, banning abortion, trashing gays and
executing criminals). By pulling us all right of centre he is going to fix our
ailing economy and morality. Mr. Day on more than one occasion has said that he
would readily use the `not withstanding' clause in our constitution to override
court rulings, regarding human rights, which conflict with his party's political
platform. How can a party which so easily dismisses our hard earned rights of
freedom of speech, association and expression possibly profess to have the 'best
interest' of Canadians on hand? And how can he or any other political party in
this country claim to have any moral authority when each and every day thousands
of Canadians go hungry and homeless? And what about those who are victims of violence?
It should be remembered that the Reform Party voted against bills on 'hate crimes'
and 'equal rights' for all Canadians. On one hand Mr. Day's Alliance Party advocates
gun use and seems to tolerate violence in every aspect of Canadian life and on
the other hand they denounce prostitution, pornography, and any type of `alternative
lifestyle'. In fact, they readily attribute the erosion of the 'Canadian Family'
on the aforementioned. I would argue that the real destruction of the Canadian
family comes not from prostitution, pornography and/or alternative lifestyles,
but from the financial and economic hardships thrust upon Canadians as a result
of uncaring politicians who put their own self-serving interests and those of
the multinational conglomerates above those who voted them to office. Of all the
Canadians who have lost their homes, gone without and made personal sacrifices
during economic hard times one thing is probably certain, there was unlikely a
politician among them.
To us, the average Canadian, we're tired and we've heard it all before. We've
heard the same sorry song, from the same sorry parties on the same sorry issues.
Yet nothing has changed, changes or, it seems, will ever change.
For our part, we are becoming more and more skeptical, cynical and complacent.
Voter participation in elections is decreasing each election. And those who do
vote often do so out of habit, not really paying much heed or mind to the process
as a whole.
This perhaps will be our greatest challenge of 2001. It will be a challenge to
scrutinize our political parties, carefully select our candidates and send a very
clear message that if they don't deliver that they will receive the full wrath
of the Canadian voter.
It will be a challenge to make decisions based on logic, fairness and common-sense.
It will be with great remonstrance that we not allow the divisiveness of a pro-Western
populist party or the uncaring myopia of a pro-Eastern party to whip our emotions
into a frenzy and deflect the real issues at hand. It will take great vigilance
to avoid the temptations set by politicians from eroding and limiting our freedoms
by using the promise of better economic prosperity as an excuse.
However, it is not an insurmountable challenge nor an impossible one. We are fortunate
that Canadians possess the most valuable resource - themselves. If one thing can
be said about Canadians it is that we are fairly intelligent as a people. We are,
for the most part, rational, informed and level-headed. Now it is time to put
all of our political leaders on notice that they are accountable and that we are
waiting, watching and ready to take action.
As Pierre Elliot Trudeau once said, "The greatest risk to not participating
in the political process is that we may end up being governed by those lesser
than ourselves". This is one outcome Canadians will never allow.
On behalf of every one at HUSTLER Canada I would like to thank all our readers
for their loyal support and wish you all success, hope and happiness in the year
2001.
Belinda Riverin
Publisher
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