Upskirting - Should the gender of the skirt wearer matter?

Clippings from news sources involving fashion freedom and other gender equality issues.
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shadowfax
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Re: Upskirting - Should the gender of the skirt wearer matte

Post by shadowfax »

The Voyeurism (Offences) (No.2) Bill (a.k.a. the Upskirting bill) passed third reading in the House of Commons chamber and will now be considered by the House of Lords.
The gender of the victim of the upskirting will not be a factor.

The amendment on misogyny was withdrawn by Stella Creasy, the MP who had proposed adding it to the Upskirting bill, when the government minister announced that the government would be setting up a review/enquiry on misogyny in general.
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Re: Upskirting - Should the gender of the skirt wearer matte

Post by crfriend »

shadowfax wrote:The amendment on misogyny was withdrawn by Stella Creasy, the MP who had proposed adding it [...]
Good. Perhaps somebody informed her of the inherent perils of segregating people into factions and then treating them unequally. If they're to consider misogyny as a "hate crime" (a term which I detest) then they need to consider misandry in the same light -- and the latter is vastly more common these days than the former.
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Re: Upskirting - Should the gender of the skirt wearer matte

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crfriend wrote:
shadowfax wrote:The amendment on misogyny was withdrawn by Stella Creasy, the MP who had proposed adding it [...]
Good. Perhaps somebody informed her of the inherent perils of segregating people into factions and then treating them unequally. If they're to consider misogyny as a "hate crime" (a term which I detest) then they need to consider misandry in the same light -- and the latter is vastly more common these days than the former.
I suspect that Ms Creasy would have attached her amendment on misogyny to any bill that was even vaguely related to it? IMHO Her intention was to get a review on misogyny and once the government minister, Lucy Frazer, confirmed that the review would take place, Ms Creasy was happy to withdraw her misogyny amendment.

Here is the Hansard text of the debate.
https://hansard.parliament.uk/Commons/2 ... )(No2)Bill
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Re: Upskirting - Should the gender of the skirt wearer matte

Post by crfriend »

shadowfax wrote:Here is the Hansard text of the debate.
https://hansard.parliament.uk/Commons/2 ... )(No2)Bill
Well, that was an interesting read, and a point that did not escape my notice is that it was only the women MPs who insisted in portraying the behaviour as strictly threatening women. At least a couple of the Male MPs properly referred to the sex-neutral [1] wording -- bravo.

One thing stands, though, and that's that the practise is damnably difficult in practise and thus likely not as common as might be made out in horror stories. Is it a violation of privacy? Absolutely. Should it be criminalised? Possibly. The assertion of an estimated 29 prosecutions per year points up how rare the matter is in practise and that other, more general, statutes are already in place that technically cover the matter. Are there not more pressing issues to attend to? (Like the matter brought up of cell' 'phone use whilst driving (or attempting to)?)

The hate-crime aspect frightens me, however, for how that's likely to be applied. In the US, effectively a matriarchy, there's an assumption of misogyny -- whether it exists or not -- and the upshot of that would be that the penalty for anybody stupid (or just plain dim-witted) enough to commit the offence would be automatically subject to the elevation of penalty because of the "aggravating factor" of the "hate crime". The mandate of making "upskirting" a crime of misogyny would also defeat the language that is, wisely, sex-neutral, when it came to taking lewd photographs of men wearing kilts or skirts. Good law should apply equally to all citizens and should not favour or elevate one class over another no matter what that class distinction is. (Yes, I know that's not how it works, at least on these shores, but one can hold out hope.)

[1] Before anybody goes off on the sex-versus-gender aspect here, this is merely a matter of gross anatomy. The victim either has, or does not have, external genitalia.
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Re: Upskirting - Should the gender of the skirt wearer matte

Post by Sinned »

As for misogyny/misandry I like the statement "The weaker sex is the stronger sex because of the weakness of the stronger sex for the weaker sex." Conventional definitions as standing. :lol:
I believe in offering every assistance short of actual help but then mainly just want to be left to be myself in all my difference and uniqueness.
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Re: Upskirting - Bill progress in The Lords

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Latest news on the Voyeurism (Offences) (No. 2) Bill 2017-19

The First reading in the House of Lords took place on 6 September. This stage is a formality that signals the start of the Bill's journey through the Lords.

The Second reading - the general debate on all aspects of the Bill - is scheduled for 23 October.

Information and a link to a PDF of the Bill that their lordships will be debating.
https://services.parliament.uk/Bills/20 ... esno2.html

The wording of the bill is still non-gender specific. :)
Last edited by shadowfax on Sat Sep 15, 2018 8:26 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Upskirting - Should the gender of the skirt wearer matte

Post by Daryl »

Ray wrote:FT444 - frequently. No problems at all.

Most recent one was in Reading (okay, not West Mids) when I wore my green non tartan kilt suit to a work conference. My 200 colleagues loved it! More than one asked me, jokingly - “why are you wearing a skirt?” My three word response? “ Because I can!”
My go-to response is still "because I'd get arrested if I didn't."
Daryl...
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Re: Upskirting - Should the gender of the skirt wearer matte

Post by Daryl »

oldsalt1 wrote:There should be no difference in the rules . The problem is that most of these laws were written in a different. time .I would think that as they are rewritten the laws will treat both sexes eaqually

I think that anyone who tries to upskirt is a sick individual. Now excuse me I have a pair of shoes that I have to polish the tips :lol: :lol: :lol:
I once wore a pair of shoes with domed mirrors and little focused flashlight bulbs aimed upwards
on them to a Hallowe'en party. When people asked I told them I was Peter the Perv and
flashed the lights on and off.

I have caught women trying to see up my skirt, and one woman, familiar to me but not an
intimate acquaintance, started raising my skirt once in jest. I am pretty sure that as a
man I feel nowhere near the amount of invasion or threat from these acts that women
can feel, but nonetheless the law should apply equally in all cases even if just so that it
doesn't need to be revised someday in the future.
Daryl...
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Re: Upskirting - Should the gender of the skirt wearer matte

Post by Daryl »

shadowfax wrote:I found a story on the BBC News website about a campaign in the UK to make 'Upskirting' a sexual offence.
Should the gender of the skirt/kilt/dress wearer make any difference? I for one wouldn't want to be a victim of upskirting whilst out in public wearing my kilt or a skirt.
The sex of the wearer should not be a factor but whether to call it a "sexual offence" or not is less clear to me, because in some jurisdictions the consequences could be far out of proportion to the real harm due to moral panic around sex offences, and attitudes being heavily tinged with zero-tolerance ideology. It is certainly a social offence worth legally punishing but separate law should take care of any degrees of the crime, up to and including calling it a "sexual offence", for example in the case of making pictures and distributing them (with graduations for whether or not the victim was identifiable or not, and so forth).
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Re: Upskirting - Should the gender of the skirt wearer matte

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A quick update on the upskirting bill's progress through the UK Houses of Parliament.
The bill reached the Committee Stage in the House of Lords on the 26th of November.
Line by line examination of the bill took place. Amendments discussed covered clause 1 of the bill.

The Report Stage – further line by line examination of the bill - is scheduled for the 18th of December.

I pulled this exchange from the Hansard report on the Committee Stage. It is relevant to UK members of this forum.
Lord Swinfen
"My Lords, I have one quick question: does this apply to men wearing kilts as well as to women wearing skirts?"
Baroness Vere of Norbiton
"My Lords, I can address that question very quickly: yes, it does. This is a non-gender-specific piece of legislation."

Edit
For the sake of completeness, here is a link to the Hansard report on the Second Reading of the bill in the House of Lords where the Lords debated the key principles and main purpose of the bill and were able to flag up any concerns or specific areas where they thought that amendments were needed. This was on the 23rd of October.

Interactive Guide on How a Bill becomes a Law. The Upskirting Bill started in the House of Commons.
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Re: Upskirting - Should the gender of the skirt wearer matte

Post by skirtyscot »

Those that respect the law and love sausage should watch neither being made.
Keep on skirting,

Alastair
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Re: Upskirting - Should the gender of the skirt wearer matte

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skirtyscot wrote:Those that respect the law and love sausage should watch neither being made.
:) :) :)
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Re: Upskirting - Should the gender of the skirt wearer matte

Post by skirtyscot »

Thanks to Mark Twain or Otto von Bismarck, depending on which sources you look up!
Keep on skirting,

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Re: Upskirting - Should the gender of the skirt wearer matte

Post by crfriend »

skirtyscot wrote:Thanks to Mark Twain or Otto von Bismarck, depending on which sources you look up!
Either way it's libel on sausage-makers.
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Re: Upskirting - Should the gender of the skirt wearer matte

Post by shadowfax »

crfriend wrote:
skirtyscot wrote:Thanks to Mark Twain or Otto von Bismarck, depending on which sources you look up!
Either way it's libel on sausage-makers.
You can't beat a good fry-up or English Breakfast.
A local cafe, serves a great fry-up with sausages and bacon from the family-owned butchers shop next door to the cafe. Delicious! :)
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