BAckfired. A topfree issue when authorities evolved in to political BS. Here they passed a law in response:
Perhaps, there are dangers inherent?
There are always dangers inherent when attempting to confront ignorance. There is danger out your front door.
“It's a dangerous business, Frodo, going out your door. You step onto the road, and if you don't keep your feet, there's no knowing where you might be swept off to.” - Bilbo Baggins
I was on the phone with my dad in 1989 during the time when the Berlin Wall was coming down. He asked me if I felt safer because of what was happening half a world away. I said that I was more worried about getting mugged than about what was going on in Eastern Europe. It’s all about what is in front of you. Sometimes the moral fight has to sit on the back burner for a while. Stewing. Till it’s ready.
Fear is usually rooted in ignorance. And fear pushed into a corner can become irrational. Fight or flight. The id flailing to get back into the lighted safe spaces.
Sure, I go to my usual spots to hike naked. We all have a place we know is
SAFE. I just posted an explanation of why I chose a place. It’s not crowded and I won’t be challenged or bump into anyone there. When you live in a highly congested area, you have more restraints. More inconveniences.
I admire this woman. Not so much ‘what’ she is doing, but the spirit in which she does it. Go read her posts. I guess you have to make a decision, at some point, and bite the bullet. The harder you push, the harder it is to take another step. And if you choose to go a step further, you’re going to get stoned, as Bob Dylan wrote;
Dylan’s comment to New York radio host Bob Fass in 1986, struck a chord, “’Everybody must get stoned’ is when you go against the tide […] and to do what you believe in […] people take offense to that. You can look through history and find people have taken offense to [others] who [have] a different viewpoint.”
. . quoted from “Everybody must get stoned …”
It’s Divine, Clever or Whatever …Hamlet, waffles back and forth on this choice. Ultimately his decision is irrelevant, he pays;
“just a-like they said they would”. Do you stand up and suffer the slings and arrows? Metaphorically or literally, I guess we all do.
It is a challenge though to listen straight faced to an argument that states that two people, one man and one woman, dressed exactly the same, are not equal under the law because of an anatomical variation. It taxes my patience and sanity.
We, on this forum, see and understand the issue. But, we are the choir. Convincing the authorities and the public otherwise is the challenge. And therin lies the danger, or the rub. Of course, nowhere in the article is the public mentioned as a participant or is a referendum mentioned. The public was mentioned only as a straw dog.
This was an edict passed by a city council. I would hope that it is one step in forcing the legality challenged in court. I am not a fan of advocating boycotts to achieve political agendas but this ruling is a financial one. It’s all about revenue. The rulers of the city made a decision and it could be challenged in court or by the court of a public vote, if someone chose to. But if the clear vote says ban one group over another, so be it.
A city has a right to govern itself how it sees fit. You would have to live with that, or you could stand and fight.
Maybe you’ll start a movement.
If you disagree, don’t go there with your discretionary dollars and let the market eventually decide.
‘Course, I wouldn’t want to go to,
this beach.
You could go elsewhere, like I do. And wherever you end up going, there won’t be any slings, arrows or stones to endure.
. . . at least it will be quiet!
Duane