John Furie Zacharias
having a bad day in a strange place
Thunderstorms Anywhere

Thunderstorms in the Imajica



 The different ways I don't like you 
 in a list that may never become organized
[Search Topics]

[Bush] [Fraggin']
[Iraq] [Conspiracy]
[Florida] [Evil Thumbnails]
[Iran] [Sex]
[NASA] [Movies]
[Politics] [GooTube]
[Media] [TIDGADA]
[Sports] [LBOH]



[Tag Board] [Archives]
   
<< March 2004 >>
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
 01 02 03 04 05 06
07 08 09 10 11 12 13
14 15 16 17 18 19 20
21 22 23 24 25 26 27
28 29 30 31

JfZ making a mess of the web
[@twitter] [@facebook]
[@playlist] [@plastic]
[@vodpod] [@zazzle]
[helpforum] [web-litter]
[verissimus] [morphine dreams]
[dark skies] [brilliant weeds]


Phreek-went Phaves
[blogs] [ezines] [rtmfd]
[eye candy] [ear candy]
[mind candy]

[Buy Thunderstorms Gear]
Get Some Effin' Gear

[Supported Causes]





Add to My Yahoo!
[+ favorites]
AddThis Feed Button
rss feed


Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License.

Privacy Policy


If you want to be updated on this weblog Enter your email here:

Wednesday, March 10, 2004
Daytona Beach Bike Week


When I was young, dumb and full of cUmera film In Daytona Beach, Florida, a week of thunder on two wheels (aka Bike Week) is finishing up with an emphasis on America's favorite obsession, breasts.  According to the Daytona Beach News Journal, Liz Book hoped to lead 1,000 "top-free" women and men along a half-mile of Main Street protesting the city's ordinance.  Ironically, if the nudity is part of a political protest, it is allowed.  Otherwise, on the beach or on the back of a Harley, it's a lewd act that carries a $253 fine.
Last year, 59 women were fined during Bike Week doing what Book considers part of the biker lifestyle for more than 50 years.




















According to Daytona Beach police sargeant, Al Tolley, "The complexion of any protest can change, and it can turn into a lewd act in a heartbeat."  In a pre-emptive move, Book sued the city and mayor in federal court in Orlando, seeking a restraining order to prohibit police officers from arresting topless marchers.  U.S. District Judge Gregory Presnell refused to grant the injunction because there wasn't time to hear from both sides.
 
Women recently have won the right to go top-free in parts of Maine, Vermont and in several provinces of Canada, said Morley Schloss, a retired school administrator who helped decriminalize women's bare breasts in New York in the late 1980s.  Perhaps some good first amendment attorney could argue that a biker chick flashing her breasts from the back of a Harley is considered an impromptu political protest.  Is this a cause with no support?


Read the article and commentary on Plastic.

[> permalink <]

Posted at 08:10 am by John Furie Zacharias

 

Leave a Comment:

Name


Homepage (optional)


Comments




Bookmark and Share



 
Previous Entry Home Next Entry