Double standards? If straight folk were to flash themselves in public, at a parade or otherwise, would it be “permissible”? Would it be acceptable? And it’s not just plain old nudity here but the context and intent. More comment below the article. MH
Chris Menahan – Information Liberation June 26, 2022
A group of degenerates at a Gay Pride Parade in Seattle over the weekend were filmed flashing their genitals at children to cheers from left-wing lunatics.
Video of the disturbing incident was captured by Katie Daviscourt of The Post Millennial and shared Sunday on Twitter (HT: The Gateway Pundit).
WARNING, GRAPHIC:
“I asked the [Seattle Police] about the nudity in front of children and they said it is permissible under the city’s indecent exposure laws,” Daviscourt reported
Police in Idaho, in apparent coordination with the feds, earlier this month staged the mass arrest of right-wing activists protesting against a “LGBTQIA+ Pride” and hit everyone involved with fraudulent “conspiracy to riot” charges to ensure the event went forward. Drag Queen performers were accused of exposing themselves to children at the event.
Similar scenes went down two weeks ago at the Los Angeles Pride March:
If God doesn’t punish America, he’s going to have to dig Sodom and Gomorrah up and apologize.
Martin comments: And yet, here’s what the law says:
On a legal level, whatever reason a person can have for publicly running around naked is irrelevant in the eyes of the law. Since no one can stop a stupid person from doing stupid things except themselves, here is what will happen if a person is arrested for streaking.
Indecent Exposure
Streaking can leave you with a fun, little charge of indecent exposure. Penal Code 314 guarantees that a person who, “exposes his person, or the private parts, thereof, in any public place,” will be guilty of a misdemeanor offense.
Misdemeanor Consequences
A misdemeanor doesn’t sound like a big deal, but this is far from the truth. In California, according to California Penal Code 19, a misdemeanor is punishable up to six months in jail or a $1,000 fine, or in especially unlucky cases, both.
Even after serving jail time and or paying a fine, a misdemeanor follows you around for years or even a lifetime under certain circumstances. While it is legal to get a misdemeanor expunged one year after conviction, this does not remove it from a criminal record but instead dismisses it, meaning you don’t actually get rid of it. SOURCE
WHAT ABOUT SEATTLE’S NUDITY LAWS?
Nudity was made legal here in the case of Seattle v. Johnson. Yes, really
Little known Seattle factoid: City law allows you to be nude anywhere, any time.
Not, however, if you flaunt it and make others uncomfortable. (Flashers, be warned.)
Despite this free range law, nudists stick to pockets of the city where others openly express their nudity…Seattle police spokesman Sean Whitcomb said using nudity to harm others, especially minors – no go. SOURCE
So I would say there were a few uncomfortable looking kids in the Twitter clips above. And surely BDSM demonstrations and calls of “we have genitals we have lube” aimed at kids is clearly “harming minors”. A line has been crossed between “nudity” and “indecency”.