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San Francisco may ban public nudity (with exceptions, of course)

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Over the summer, Rob Cox, board secretary of the Castro/Eureka Valley Neighborhood Association, and other community leaders canvassed business owners in the area. They asked how the influx of Naked Guys had affected commerce.

“Ninety percent of the business owners were furious,” Cox said. “I had heard it a lot from neighbors too. So we passed that information on” to Wiener.

In early October, the supervisor proposed the stricter ban, calling it legislation “I was hoping that I would never have to introduce.” But the Castro, he pointed out, was known for “its diversity and its vibrance,” and that sensibility was under attack.

“Jane Warner Plaza is the only usable public plaza in the Castro,” he said during the Board of Supervisors meeting. “It is our town square. And it has become dominated just about every afternoon by one group. ... The Castro is not about a group of men exposing themselves every day.”

Last week, the naturists struck back.

First, they held a nude-in on the steps of City Hall. Then they filed a federal lawsuit.

To Gypsy Taub, protest organizer and hostess of a local show called “My Naked Truth TV,” the proposed ban is proof that officials want to turn the city back into “the Dark Ages of body shame and fear.”

To Taub’s 9-year-old son, Bunny Gonzalez, who was fully clothed during the protest, nudity “is a good cause. Scott Wiener is trying to make nudity bad.”

Placard-waving Web designer Mitch Hightower said the San Francisco clampdown smacked of gentrification: “More and more they’re taking away the things that are only-in-San Francisco.” Dressed in a T-shirt, sun hat and not much else, even he had to admit: “I’m cold!”

Ckiara Rose, in ballet-style flats and chandelier earrings, said banning public nudity in the city was pure hypocrisy. “San Francisco was founded on the Barbary Coast, full of brothels and saloons,” the self-proclaimed sex worker said. “They don’t come from Puritan origins.”

But that’s the way things could be headed if Wiener and his colleagues aren’t stopped, said attorney Christina (formerly Christopher) DiEdoardo, who is representing Taub, Hightower and others in the federal lawsuit.

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