What are the consequences of flashing and how is it perceived by women?

  • Thread starter zomgwtf
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In summary, a man on a subway trip was caught with his fly down and a condom on his penis, leading to accusations of indecent exposure and sexual assault. Some argued that public nudity should be allowed in a free country, while others argued that it is still illegal and deserving of outrage. The conversation also touched on the topic of constitutional rights and government limitations.
  • #36
jarednjames said:
Should children be exposed to it?

I'm still looking for an answer on this one? No one wants to answer it for some reason.

You can argue whether or not public nudity should be allowed all you like, but this is a major factor and something that needs to be addressed if you're going to start claiming it should be legal.
 
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  • #37
Most people would have little to grumble about if someone wants to lay nekkid in the park, basking in the sun, burning his bum. It's wholesome.

Flashing your penis in a subway? That's not innocent public nudity and it's not wholesome; it's creepy.
 
  • #38
jarednjames said:
I'm still looking for an answer on this one? No one wants to answer it for some reason.

You can argue whether or not public nudity should be allowed all you like, but this is a major factor and something that needs to be addressed if you're going to start claiming it should be legal.

Children exposed to nudes sunning in the park - sure.

Children exposed to a guy flashing on the subway - hell no, and I don't want to see it either.

The difference is the creep factor: it's hard to define, but I know it when I see it.
 
  • #39
hamster143 said:
You can argue that the government lacks the statutory authority to pass the law.

One of the best-known recent laws that were overturned on those grounds was the Gun-Free School Zone Act of 1990.

With public indecency, things are a bit murkier because the law against that is a state law.
Agreed.
 
  • #40
Gokul43201 said:
I think there is a good point here (crowded subway versus isolated park bench), but I don't see value in the line of reasoning that something is justified because society thinks so.
If not the people, who in a democratic society does get to decide what - for the people - is within the bounds of common decency?
 
  • #41
lisab said:
Children exposed to nudes sunning in the park - sure.

Children exposed to a guy flashing on the subway - hell no, and I don't want to see it either.

The difference is the creep factor: it's hard to define, but I know it when I see it.

Exactly, and this for me is the key here. There are far fewer situations where you can be nude and not considered creepy than where you are nude and creepy.

If you go somewhere that people sunbathe and there are nude bodies there, it's something you expect. But when walking down a high street you don't expect to be confronted with a bunch of nude figures.
 
  • #42
DaveC426913 said:
If not the people, who in a democratic society does get to decide what - for the people - is within the bounds of common decency?

Would you believe it, it's the government voted in by the people. :rolleyes:

The simple answer is if you don't like laws such as those against nudity, fight to get someone who will stand against them into office, or start a lawsuit against to fight against them.
 
  • #44
Precisely. It's not just nudity here.

But even if it was just him standing with his wang out, why would that be considered acceptable?
 
  • #45
DaveC426913 said:
If not the people, who in a democratic society does get to decide what - for the people - is within the bounds of common decency?
That's a legal argument. I thought we were debating a moral/rational argument. After all, slavery, institutional racism, sexism, blahism ... can be legally justified in that they were all simply expressions of the will of the majority. That doesn't provide a rational justification for them.
 
  • #46
jarednjames said:
Precisely. It's not just nudity here.

But even if it was just him standing with his wang out, why would that be considered acceptable?

Perhaps some people do find it acceptable just as a majority society decided it's not acceptable and the law reflects that.

Cry about the constituition.

I don't talk to black people I see in a restaurant like:
"Boy fetch me a glass of wine."
for the same reason.
I mean no physical harm! Clearly I'm given this right being human!
 
  • #47
jarednjames said:
But even if it was just him standing with his wang out, why would that be considered acceptable?
I believe you've shifted the burden to the wrong side. For a citizen living in a free society, anything that is not unacceptable should be considered acceptable. The question, therefore, should be: why should that be considered unacceptable?
 
  • #48
jarednjames said:
Precisely. It's not just nudity here.

But even if it was just him standing with his wang out, why would that be considered acceptable?
Not acceptable. A man hanging his penis out and about is about his penis. This goes a bit beyond simple nudity. Still, in itself not necessarily a problem. Heck, a man fully naked on a city bus or subway, keeping to himself, shouldn't be a problem any more than one walking down a street.

Flashing, however, usually involves directing that "nudity" at someone. But as I said, it's not just nudity.
 
  • #49
DaveC426913 said:
?


Physical harm? Agreed. This has not conceded anything though. Lawful boundaries betwen people regarding public behaviour go well beyond physical harm.

Would you agree that I have no right to stand over you on the subway holding you in your seat with my knee, spitting my mucus on your face, shaking a porn mag in your face and screaming racial epithets?

No physical harm...

Holding me and spitting at me is clearly harmful. I'm okay with having laws against that. The rest is free speech.
 
  • #50
jarednjames said:
But that doesn't answer the first part of my post. Should children be exposed to it?

In my book, you can have a law against exposure to children, as long as you can round up experts and prove beyond reasonable doubt that a child can be harmed (in any meaningful sense of the word) by mere sight of a part of a human body.
 
  • #51
hamster143 said:
In my book, you can have a law against exposure to children, as long as you can round up experts and prove beyond reasonable doubt that a child can be harmed (in any meaningful sense of the word) by mere sight of a part of a human body.

Well, in the cases of flashing, it's not just a sight. It's an erotic/sexual expression directed at another. There's a world of difference between children seeing a naked/semi-naked adult and a naked adult pointing his pencil at them.
 
  • #52
Newai said:
Well, in the cases of flashing, it's not just a sight. It's an erotic/sexual expression directed another. There's a world of difference between children seeing a naked adult and a naked adult pointing his pencil at them.

Exactly. Flashing is completely different than a naked guy, just acting normal.
 
  • #53
hamster143 said:
Holding me and spitting at me is clearly harmful.
Nope. Neither will physically harm you, which was the criterion you asked me to accept.

hamster143 said:
I'm okay with having laws against that. The rest is free speech.
This is not the free speech. Free speech does not mean you can say whatever you want to whomever you want wherever you want. Why do people think this?
 
  • #54
DaveC426913 said:
Free speech does not mean you can say whatever you want to whomever you want wherever you want. Why do people think this?
How would you define free speech?
 
  • #55
Gokul43201 said:
How would you define free speech?

Well re-write it slightly:

The constitution does not mean you can say whatever you want to whomever you want wherever you want. Why do people think this?

I believe DaveC is referring to free speech as outlined by the constitution.
 
  • #56
DaveC is from Canada, I think hamster is from the US. So it's not clear that we are talking about what a specific country has codified as much as what (you or I think) any liberal democracy ought to protect.
 
  • #57
Gokul43201 said:
DaveC is from Canada, I think hamster is from the US. So it's not clear that we are talking about what a specific country has codified as much as what (you or I think) any liberal democracy ought to protect.

Ah, I thought both were from the US. In which case, not a clue.
 
  • #58
DaveC426913 said:
Nope. Neither will physically harm you, which was the criterion you asked me to accept.

By physical harm I did not mean bodily injury. "The only purpose for which power can be rightfully exercised over any member of a civilized community, against his will, is to prevent harm to others. " John Stuart Mill, 1859. There's harm in preventing me from going about my own business. There's no harm in showing me a bodily part.

This is not the free speech. Free speech does not mean you can say whatever you want to whomever you want wherever you want. Why do people think this?

That's precisely what free speech means. Once again, only if the speech results in harm to others (yelling "fire" in a crowded theater), can we criminalize that.
 
  • #59
hamster143 said:
By physical harm I did not mean bodily injury. "The only purpose for which power can be rightfully exercised over any member of a civilized community, against his will, is to prevent harm to others. " John Stuart Mill, 1859. There's harm in preventing me from going about my own business. There's no harm in showing me a bodily part.
Physical harm. There's lots of psychological and emotional harm.

Uttering death threats causing no physical harm either but it is also a crime.

hamster143 said:
That's precisely what free speech means. Once again, only if the speech results in harm to others (yelling "fire" in a crowded theater), can we criminalize that.

No it does not. Screaming racial epithets in someone's face is grounds for assault under the law.
 
  • #60
DaveC426913 said:
There's lots of psychological and emotional harm.
Why should there be psychological or emotional harm from looking at a human body?
 
  • #61
Gokul43201 said:
Why should there be psychological or emotional harm from looking at a human body?

Looking at a nude person doing normal things? No harm, no foul.

Being flashed in a confined space, like a subway? Totally different. In fact, it could be pretty disturbing and threatening.

I don't understand why we haven't yet hammered out the difference between non-sexual public nudity and flashing. Really, they're totally different behaviors, with different motivations and intents.
 
  • #62
Gokul43201 said:
Why should there be psychological or emotional harm from looking at a human body?
Oh come on.

Voluntarily looking, at a time and place and under circumstances of your choosing?

Or having it thrust upon you by a complete stranger in an cramped place when you are not expecting it, for the purpose of getting a reaction from you for his own pleasure?


Did I wake up this morning in BizarroWorld? Are people here claiming flashing is perfectly all right? It's a about as close as you can get to rape without physically touching someone.
 
  • #63
Exactly Dave, what this bloke did in particular was not a case of simple public nudity.

There is a clear cut difference between simply being nude and flashing someone.
 
  • #64
DaveC426913 said:
Oh come on.

Voluntarily looking, at a time and place and under circumstances of your choosing?

Or having it thrust upon you by a complete stranger in an cramped place when you are not expecting it, for the purpose of getting a reaction from you for his own pleasure?


Did I wake up this morning in BizarroWorld? Are people here claiming flashing is perfectly all right? It's a about as close as you can get to rape without physically touching someone.

Pff. It wasn't even cramped in her case.
 
  • #65
DaveC426913 said:
Screaming racial epithets in someone's face is grounds for assault under the law.
Not under US Law, I don't think. It might come down to how loud you are screaming, maybe, but in that case, the content of the creams wouldn't be relevant.
 
  • #66
DaveC426913 said:
Are people here claiming flashing is perfectly all right? It's a about as close as you can get to rape without physically touching someone.
That's an appeal to emotion.

Brandishing a gun or knife is as close as you can get to murder without physically touching someone.
 
  • #67
Well, sure. And brandishing a gun or knife is a crime in at least some jurisdictions.
 
  • #68
zomgwtf said:
For evidence after the man had a condom on his penis and was rubbing himself against a female on the subway? Trueeeeeeee.

I was not aware of those two things. I believed man did not know that he is exposing, maybe too tired or mentally unhealthy etc. On the other hand, putting videos on youtube are no less worse than flashing itself.

As one can flash; other can shout. It worked perfect in this case; everyone sympathized with the lady as the video suggests.
 
Last edited:
  • #69
Newai said:
Well, sure. And brandishing a gun or knife is a crime in at least some jurisdictions.
But if you can open carry (a heavily regulated object like) a gun (which can kill you without the user having to physically approach you) in many states, that would help make the case that ought to be allowed to more easily (rather than less easily) open carry a part of your own body (which is about the last place you want the government to go - telling you what you may or may not do with your own body).
 
  • #70
Gokul43201 said:
But if you can open carry (a heavily regulated object like) a gun (which can kill you without the user having to physically approach you) in many states, that would help make the case that ought to be allowed to more easily (rather than less easily) open carry a part of your own body (which is about the last place you want the government to go - telling you what you may or may not do with your own body).
I'm going to take this to my English class and have them diagram it.

Clipped Gokul43201 said:
But if you can open carry a gun in many states, that would help make the case that ought to be allowed to more easily open carry a part of your own body.
Fine. Open carry a part of your body. Let it out. Just make sure you don't go up to a woman and stick it in her face. (so to speak)
 

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