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Libety Round Table supports exhibitionist webmistress [fs]
From: Declan McCullagh <declan () well com>
Date: Tue, 27 Jan 2004 00:11:41 -0500
News coverage:
http://edition.cnn.com/2003/TECH/internet/12/30/offbeat.naked.web.ticket.ap/
The 21-year-old Web designer was busted for violating Lincoln's public
nudity ordinance by posting pictures on her Web site that apparently
showed her naked in a downtown bar... (Melissa) Harrington was to be
arraigned in Lancaster County Court on January 29. If convicted, she faces
a maximum penalty of six months in jail and a $500 fine.
Original documents:
http://www.thesmokinggun.com/archive/nakedlincoln1.html
Melissa's site:
http://www.melissalincoln.com/main.html
The Liberty Round Table's "Free Melissa" project:
http://www.libertyroundtable.org/projects/freemelissa/
Meet our new friend Melissa. She's a fairly ordinary 'girl next door' who
has a day job and does web design. She also has a healthy respect for
human beauty and is completely unashamed of her body. She has combined the
two and built a web site that features, among other things, nude pictures
of her, some in what appear to be fairly public places ... and found that
she really likes the feeling this gives her. She compares it to a natural
high.
For our part, we are not exhibitionists, but do believe that anything that
de-mystifies sex, shows that good clean fun and healthy bodies are not
'dirty', is a very positive thing. There's no end to the flood of misery
produced by people's twisted ideas about sex, love, and the human body, so
we say: 'Hurray for Melissa's one woman war against benighted puritan
attitudes!' That Melissa's site has a commercial side makes her work no
less valuable -- have not libertarians and objectivists always said that
freedom is so valuable that there ought to be a way to promote it at a
profit? We agree with Melissa; she has nothing to be ashamed of, not her
body, not her pictures, not her profit.
Unfortunately the police don't see it our way -- or perhaps they do, but
have their hands tied by blue-nosed laws that should be stricken from the
books. Whatever the reason, Melissa has been targeted and ticketed for
"public nudity" and faces a $500 fine and possible jail time of up to six
months.
Even if everything Melissa is accused of is true (and with photoshop being
what it is these days, no one can really claim that pictures on a web site
prove anything anymore), it would not be as though she had flashed anyone,
nor subjected anyone who did not want to see it to the sight of her body.
Her pictures were taken in a discrete environment of consent, and viewed
online by people who chose to see them. The only crimes committed are
those of the authorities who are willing to apply the full force of law to
a woman who has hurt no one. Make no mistake, for daring to enjoy her
freedom, her self, and sharing that fun, Melissa is to be arraigned on
January 29, and could soon be the victim of legalized theft and enslavement.
We should also say, lest anyone think we are trying to mislead freedom
activists (or Melissa herself), that she never claimed to be a
libertarian. In fact, while she does believe her web site has artistic
merit and should be protected by the First Amendment, and the playful
banter on the site is an unabashed sales pitch ('unabashed' just seems to
go hand in hand with Melissa), she says it's really all about having fun.
She would do it anyway, even if there was no money to be made, and she
says she's willing to spend every last penny she gets from the site
fighting for her freedom to express herself (and everyone else's freedom too).
So, how can you help?
Well, Melissa says that she wants to fight this "all the way" and has no
intention of taking any plea bargains. So, of course, there're legal
expenses. But rather than asking people to contribute to a legal defense
fund, she asks folks who want to help to "sign up" for her web site
(register as paying subscribers to gain access to the full content of the
site). Even if you don't want to see pictures of Melissa, this will help
her, financially, of course, but also to show that many people approve of
what she's doing -- or, at least, disapprove of what the state is doing to
her. It seems to me that there is no better way to show appreciation for
an artist than to pay for her work; it has a better, cleaner feel than
straight charity and allows her to be able to give some value in return
for the help.
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