To the Montreal escort community,
It’s time we talk about something deeply shameful — and no, I’m not talking about kink or taboo. I’m talking about blatant discrimination against people living with disabilities.
Recently, it came to my attention that the agency Euphoria refuses to offer outcall services to clients with disabilities. No nuance. No case-by-case. Just a cold, flat-out refusal — as if being disabled disqualifies someone from intimacy, pleasure, or even basic human respect.
Let me be crystal clear: this is dehumanizing, discriminatory, and completely unacceptable.
We live in 2025 — in a city that prides itself on openness, inclusion, and care for others. For any agency, especially one that profits from providing companionship and connection, to deliberately shut the door on a whole population of people is not only cruel — it’s hypocritical.
Being disabled doesn’t make someone less deserving of touch, intimacy, or dignity. What it does mean is that they often face countless extra barriers — physical, social, emotional — just to access what many of us take for granted. And now they’re being denied again, by those who should understand the value of connection better than anyone?
Shame on Euphoria.
And shame on all of us if we let this slide in silence.
To the community — clients, companions, and agencies alike — if you agree that people living with disabilities deserve respect, boycott Euphoria starting now. Don’t support a business that chooses exclusion over compassion. There are plenty of agencies and independents who treat all people with dignity — let’s uplift them instead.
To other agencies: do better. Make your services accessible. Educate yourselves. Build policies rooted in inclusion, not ignorance.
To everyone else: speak up. Ask hard questions. Let Euphoria know this is not okay. Let others know we expect more from this industry — and we’re done tolerating discrimination.
Because if your business is built on connection, but you can’t see the humanity in someone with a disability, then what are you really selling?
Enough is enough.
— An advocate who refuses to stay silent
It’s time we talk about something deeply shameful — and no, I’m not talking about kink or taboo. I’m talking about blatant discrimination against people living with disabilities.
Recently, it came to my attention that the agency Euphoria refuses to offer outcall services to clients with disabilities. No nuance. No case-by-case. Just a cold, flat-out refusal — as if being disabled disqualifies someone from intimacy, pleasure, or even basic human respect.
Let me be crystal clear: this is dehumanizing, discriminatory, and completely unacceptable.
We live in 2025 — in a city that prides itself on openness, inclusion, and care for others. For any agency, especially one that profits from providing companionship and connection, to deliberately shut the door on a whole population of people is not only cruel — it’s hypocritical.
Being disabled doesn’t make someone less deserving of touch, intimacy, or dignity. What it does mean is that they often face countless extra barriers — physical, social, emotional — just to access what many of us take for granted. And now they’re being denied again, by those who should understand the value of connection better than anyone?
Shame on Euphoria.
And shame on all of us if we let this slide in silence.
To the community — clients, companions, and agencies alike — if you agree that people living with disabilities deserve respect, boycott Euphoria starting now. Don’t support a business that chooses exclusion over compassion. There are plenty of agencies and independents who treat all people with dignity — let’s uplift them instead.
To other agencies: do better. Make your services accessible. Educate yourselves. Build policies rooted in inclusion, not ignorance.
To everyone else: speak up. Ask hard questions. Let Euphoria know this is not okay. Let others know we expect more from this industry — and we’re done tolerating discrimination.
Because if your business is built on connection, but you can’t see the humanity in someone with a disability, then what are you really selling?
Enough is enough.
— An advocate who refuses to stay silent