Oh I hate you and you're lucky Canadian kind! Lol.Mr. Wong from a PM wrote:Not a problem. Above-the-waist nudity is not considered pornography in Ontario where I live. In fact, women are allowed to walk around topless in public here.

Moderator: Edi
Oh I hate you and you're lucky Canadian kind! Lol.Mr. Wong from a PM wrote:Not a problem. Above-the-waist nudity is not considered pornography in Ontario where I live. In fact, women are allowed to walk around topless in public here.
The Duchess of Zeon wrote:To be honest I think you should wear appropriately decent clothing in public. Private property is different - If it's your's, do whatever you want there, and if it's someone else's, whatever the owner lets you - But in public there should be standards of decency common to society and especially considering there may be young children about.
I think the differentiation between public and private, however, should be quite important. I don't think the government should be able to stop you from doing anything in private unless you're physically harming someone else.
And there are a lot of people who would violently disagree with that. Because of that, displays of nudity to children should be a parenting choice, and should be controlled in areas where parents would have no control themselves over what their children can see. Nudity in a movie is fine; parents can keep their kids from going to one if they have a brain. Nudity on private property, the same. But walking down the street, or in a park open to the public? No.Shinova wrote:
Many people on this board believe that exposing children to pornography does not do them any harm. Do you have any comments on this?
In other words, prudes have the right to shove their sexually repressive bullshit down everyone else's throats. Gotcha.The Duchess of Zeon wrote:And there are a lot of people who would violently disagree with that. Because of that, displays of nudity to children should be a parenting choice, and should be controlled in areas where parents would have no control themselves over what their children can see.
Bullshit. Provide one reason why the sight of topless women harms children. The fact that some people are assholes about it does not justify the law.Nudity in a movie is fine; parents can keep their kids from going to one if they have a brain. Nudity on private property, the same. But walking down the street, or in a park open to the public? No.
It's quite fascinating that you say this, considering your contempt for Islamic law. Many an Islamic cleric has said the same thing with respect to women wearing short-sleeve shirts, tight dresses, or make-up, and with the same justifications.The Duchess of Zeon wrote:To be honest I think you should wear appropriately decent clothing in public. Private property is different - If it's your's, do whatever you want there, and if it's someone else's, whatever the owner lets you - But in public there should be standards of decency common to society and especially considering there may be young children about.
Islamic dress for women is the dress of oppression; that is to say, it enforces inferiority by being demeaning and constraining. There's a considerable difference between that and having some simple decency in public. Human beings are inherently sexual creatures and for society to function we do have to contain that to a degree.Darth Wong wrote: It's quite fascinating that you say this, considering your contempt for Islamic law. Many an Islamic cleric has said the same thing with respect to women wearing short-sleeve shirts, tight dresses, or make-up, and with the same justifications.
There are actually a fair number of women who don't breastfeed in public, thinking it inappropriate; though there is considered to be some leeway there in general by the average person and government (local, where most such regulations exist) alike.SyntaxVorlon wrote:Breastfeeding would be kind of hard too. I mean the wool alone would probably itch, and the baby might not like it either.The Duchess of Zeon wrote:But walking down the street, or in a park open to the public? No.
Exactly. It's called defending the minority from the tyranny of the majority. If some people genuinely believe their children will have serious psychological damage for life from viewing genitals or pornographic material at a young age, then society should not force them to be put into a position where their children view such things. That is the essence of the constitutional republic, as opposed to a direct-rule democracy, that we have certain protections for people who believe certain things, no matter how stupid, ridiculous, or wrong-headed we think they are, and I suspect the situation is basically the same in Canada.Darth Wong wrote: In other words, prudes have the right to shove their sexually repressive bullshit down everyone else's throats. Gotcha.
I see no reason to defend the scientific reasoning behind the position; that's not why I have my own. Just a private distaste, really.. For me, rather, it is the fact that the beliefs of people must be respected in our form of government, that the elegance of our constitution and our republic (here in the USA at least), is that the minority - and, bluntly, I suspect it is the majority in this case, if a rather narrow one, though it will probably change in the coming decades, our social mores have been constantly evolving - Must be protected from the tyranny of the majority.Bullshit. Provide one reason why the sight of topless women harms children. The fact that some people are assholes about it does not justify the law.
Moronic stance for such mothers since breastfeeding is good for the baby, formula doesn't counteract that either.The Duchess of Zeon wrote: There are actually a fair number of women who don't breastfeed in public, thinking it inappropriate; though there is considered to be some leeway there in general by the average person and government (local, where most such regulations exist) alike.
It's not the child, it's the mother. If she isn't being milked, she stops producing milk, so after a period of time the child has to be bottle fed.Malachius wrote:I also remember reading that if a child is on formula for a certain period of time the child cannot go back to breastfeeding. Can anyone confirm this?