Florida OnlyFans Girls Are Losing Their Minds Over Proposed 50% 'Sin Tax' And This Might Be The Most Florida Political Debate Ever
87 days ago
Nothing says American politics in 2026 quite like a group of OnlyFans creators standing around arguing about taxes on adult content.
A video posted by Donie O'Sullivan is making the rounds showing several Florida OnlyFans creators speaking out against a proposed 50% “sin tax” on their earnings, and the whole thing feels like a political storyline that could only happen in Florida.
The proposal comes from Republican gubernatorial candidate James Fishback, who floated the idea earlier this year as part of a campaign push aimed at cracking down on revenue from adult content.
The basic pitch is simple, if you’re making money posting explicit content online, the state would take half of it.
Fifty. Percent.
Which, depending on how you look at it, is either a moral crusade or the government basically realizing that OnlyFans creators might be the highest taxed profession in Florida overnight.
The creators featured in the clip are obviously not thrilled about the idea. In the video they argue that the tax unfairly targets them and treats their work differently from other online careers.
One of them points out that people make money on the internet in all kinds of ways, streaming, influencing, subscription content, but somehow the government only wants to slap a massive tax on adult creators specifically.
And look, you don’t have to be an economist to understand why that would make them panic.
Imagine waking up one day and finding out that the state just decided your job gets taxed twice as much as everyone else’s because they don’t like what you do.
Now whether the proposal actually goes anywhere is a totally different story. Campaign ideas get floated all the time that never make it past the headline stage.
But the clip perfectly captures the moment we’re living in where politics, internet culture, and the modern creator economy are colliding in the weirdest possible ways.
Ten years ago politicians were arguing about oil, healthcare, and trade policy.
Now we’ve got candidates proposing OnlyFans taxes while a group of creators stands in front of a camera explaining why the government shouldn’t take half their subscription money.
Which honestly feels like the most Florida debate imaginable.
