I'm confused by the "not in the streets" caveat.
I think they are referring to a tendency by lawmakers to placate activists by stating a purpose in the law without clearly stating a meaning. Many state laws, my state included, have this caveat in the nudity statutes. Nudity is ok on private property unless it can be visible to the public. Here is a prime example of a confusing law. As a former president of ours was fond of doing, "that would depend on what the definition of public is". A neighbor looking out the window of their 2nd story? A person walking down the street? One person? Two? Twenty? The law doesn't say, which puts law enforcement and sometimes the judiciary on the hotseat to make these decisions.
Although we do have a heritage, which we're slowly forgetting, of male nudity in locker rooms and school swimming pools and the like. In that context, nudity was normal and objecting to it was deviant. In country districts, there was the old swimmin' hole where boys (much less often girls) swam naked.
I don't think I'm going to read a long article which uses the word "naturalist".
I agree with you. My post was getting a bit long winded. Maybe it's our place to remember these old practices and keep them alive. That's one purpose for maintaining a heritage.
A point just occurred to me as I write. We had fewer things to fear back in those days. Or maybe the things we did fear were so far removed we didn't have them in our face on a daily basis to remind us to be afraid.
I wonder if the reporter took the time to look into the differences in the words, naturist, nudist and naturalist? It's difficult to tell from this article.
State government lawmaking does not reflect the prevailing social attitudes. It is a rigged system, dominated by special interest and not monitored by the "we the people" part of the equation. Most people don't even know who their state reps are, or where they come from.
As long as we voters sit on our hands and don't make a move to correct problems, the status will not change. If a law is perceived as not being particularly fair but not so egregious that it motivates large scale action, it will remain in effect as the "status quo". Until it has large scale impact it won't change, even if it doesn't precisely reflect the "will of the people". The fact that no effort is supported by a sufficient majority, implies widespread acceptance. Not out of a belief, but out of an unwillingness to be inconvenienced. It's one of the warts on democracy.
It is a rigged system all right. And the ones making absolute use of it are the special interests.
If you were able to generate enough interest to attract enough influential people to push an agenda you see as vital, you would be a special interest. The system was designed to make it easy to change, but only if you can generate a required majority. There in lies the challenge. Those that wish for change must get up and do instead of demanding others do for them. The risk, as I pointed out earlier, is associating with undesirables, "politicians".
Didn't your state just pass a harsh law recently that doesn't reflect the "norm."
Are you talking about the law making it a crime to expose yourself to a minor in a public restroom?
Where men, as we have for centuries, happily demonstrated to our boys the man's way of taking care of business? Where, in a natural environment for and a natural method of taking care of said business, a young boy will observe a natural part of a grownup man?
You talking about that law?
Another example of a blurry confused law. They were after the pedophiles, not men just taking a whiz. But someone with an agenda could have a man arrested for taking a leak.
Yeah, that one made it through. It's a puzzle. To make it impossible to break that law, men's restrooms would have to basically be redesigned to the same way women's are. Everyone with their own stall. Errrrrr!!!
Thanks for reminding me. I shall have to check on that. Here in Nevada, some laws voted on have to pass muster in two successive elections. If it fails on the second try the process starts over. That's not a wart on this process.
Duane