Vyraeth wrote:I think you're minimalizing the issue. We're talking about public sex here. It's abit different then someone hanging a poster which someone might find offensive (to give an example). Sex is an extremely charged element of life, and to allow it to occur in the public (and by public I mean places that the actual public funds, like the sidewalks and streets in a major city, certain parks, etc.).
So? Why should being "extremely charged" (whatever that means) necessitate banning?
It's more then just being uncomfortable with it, it's the absurdity of the idea.
Oh, please. Absurdity is hardly something you can ban from public places. Are you going to ban Happy Friday Guy from the Ball State Campus (which is funded by taxpayers, mind you) next?
As some people have alluded to, what's to stop a couple from having sex outside of a grade school (actually that might of been your example), or having sex in the middle of a sidlewalk in say downtown Los Angeles (besides the fact that they'd get trampled), or anywhere else they please in the scope of the "public" (and to clarify, public meaning places funded by citizen's tax dollars, not "public places" like movie theaters).
Nothing.
What would be the ramifications on young children (say under 10 years old, since I'm sure everybody discovers what sex really is by the time they're 12-13), how would people take it?
Oh no! Think of the children! This debunks my entire argument, to be sure, since the
very mention of sex is traumatizing to children! While we're saving the children from confusion, why don't we ban people speaking Chinese in the streets, too?
Wouldn't you agree a significant amount of people would find it offensive?
Do you realize that an appeal to popularity is a fallacy?
A significant amount of people that contribute, monetarily, to that public area?
So?
And on the risk of sounded convoluted, my logic is not that everything that's offensive to the majority should be banned, I'm trying to make a disnction between extremely offensive things, like, in my belief, public sex and minor ones.
So instead of just anything that's offensive to the majority, you'll ban anything that's
really offensive to the majority. All right! Sanctify the flag! Burn the goddamn witches! Let's hunt down the atheists and put them all to death!
I don't have exact criteria, but isn't it generally agreeable that sex between two strangers might be more offensive then say a billboard advertisement for a gun show?
If you don't have criteria, then you've got no business making an argument, genius.
I was never referring to rights in a legal context. Atleast not intentionally, although in a way, I think laws against indecent exposure or even having sex in public exist for some of the reasons I mentioned, because that's the only reason, beyond extraordinary pressure from religious groups that I can think of as to why they're there in the first place.
What context beyond legality does the word "right" have? In any case, you're only making a convoluted appeal to popularity again.