In any social movement for change, it doesn't take the entire population to make the change. For example during the civil rights era of the early sixties, there were something like 20 million black Americans. We know that only a relatively few participated enough, to make the significant news and actions. The marches were not millions, but thousands, the core was fewer and many of those were other races.
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So, how can that be harnessed and organized and what activities would be most effective and when?
Actually, there was the Million Man March in 1965, which involved mostly black men.
MLK's "I have a dream" speech was at a 1963 march that had "only" about 250,000 people.
Unfortunately, the naturist movement doesn't have (and never had) leaders with MLK's eloquence and charisma. The environmental movement of the 50s and 60s had David Brower (of the Sierra Club and similar organizations). He was a very prominent leader at the time. Naturists could really use someone like him.
Let's not forget, too, that many people died - both white and black - in the Civil Rights struggle of the 60s. Later that decade there was Kent State, which was a different sort of turning point. We don't need a repeat of that.
The naturist "cause" isn't quite analogous. There isn't, to be honest, quite as much at stake. We probably need a different approach from either the Civil Rights or the Gay Rights movement.
I wish I knew "what activities would be most effective and when". So far the best I've come up with is the incremental "build critical mass" approach. 17 million gays and 20 million blacks got attention. The number of naturists now isn't in the same ballpark.
But note that the incremental approach yields benefits right away: Find more naturists in your local area, and you have more people to share social nudity with. That's at least something.
My point here is that it only took a relatively few activist to spawn those movements. Those movements didn't start with huge marches. They started with some people eating at a counter and riding a bus. The generated numbers and support where simulated by the actions of a few.
I add again that we are more than 20 million bodies. Everybody has a body, every body. At varying degrees, not just practicing naturists. We are not looking for huge sweeping reform, economic reforms, desegregation, etc.. We are looking at everyone's humanity, and it is not a threat to dismantling institutions and power. We're looking for a simple change. Stop arresting me for my natural act, experiencing my body, a human right. The laws are the crime, not the experience of life.
The various movements are not the same, but what tactics can be employed, what lessons were learned? A quarter million people walking down the streets of Washington nude and proud demanding civil rights will not happen, doesn't need to happen. A simple message and awareness of a practical common sense human issue will suffice. "Seeing a body naked is harmless, healthy and natural, NOT criminal." Such an occurrence as having ones body seen, or seeing other's bodies is not something that should cause kids to kill themselves, emotional trauma to the innocent, choke the planet, imprison and destroy social standing, strike fear, or even provoke disgust. It is an important correction, not a complete restructuring of the social and economic order.
The question to ask here is what tools were employed that can be used to create change. There was a common thread in the tipping point of the aforementioned social changes. People saw that their thinking was incorrect when it was brought to their attention and they responded with compassion when they saw that it was hurting other people. The dominate society saw civil rights, all men are created equal. They saw that color in people's skin is not an indication of inferiority. They can use the same facilities with no health issues. They can be moral, very moral. Their presence is not harmful. Their differences will not destroy the fabric of the nation. They are not over sexed compulsive rapists. The text is the same inside, no matter what the cover of the book, or if it even has a cover. It is wrong to preserve, or conserve the way things have been, just because it is the status quo, things must be questioned from time to time and changed, in order to form a more perfect union. Oppression is wrong. The list goes on. All of these things have been laid on the nudist population, too.
Whether gay, color, or socio-cultural, or body freedom, a significant majority has to be made aware of injustice and change opinion. People want to do the right thing.
People die everyday, inside and their potential dies, their self esteem. People physically die from social pressures. Mob rule on facebook can kill a kid, just as sure as a hanging.
Jbee
P.S. Over a third of Americans have tried skinny-dipping or nude sunbathing with others. And over a quarter of Americans would consider trying it in the future.
NEF’s Question 10: “Have you, personally, ever gone skinny-dipping or nude sunbathing with others?”
35% answered “Yes” and 63% said “No.”
This question has been included in each poll since 1983, when 15% of respondents said “Yes.” In 2000, it went up to 25% and remained at this percentage in 2006.