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Monday, January 26, 2015

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Since Nudity Doesn't Shock Us Anymore: FG Plans To Ban Porn Site In Nigeria

Abraham - January 26, 2015
In Paris on Thursday, fashion designer Rick Owens gave audiences quite a show when he sent male models down the runway wearing clothes with peepholes that offered a glimpse of the guys' formerly private parts.
"Nudity is the most simple and primal gesture -- it packs a punch," Owens said of his decision to have his models bare all. "It's powerful. ... Who else can really get away with this stuff? It's a corporate world!"
The looks were simply for shock and awe and the attention such reactions generate -- after all, they can't be worn out in public and won't be sold in stores. But let's be honest: Were we even shocked? After all, female models have been asked to sashay down runways in states of near nakedness for years.

Of course, In Nigeria women have been going full frontal in films brought to the country by the Ghanains Folks Called Ghollywood. Apart from this, The interest developed by Nigerians from the western culture has caused its citizens to see Nudity as nothing.
The Afrocandys and Maheedas of today have gone wild, using the internet to as a medium to share their raunchy pics.
Consider their norms: Going commando -- that's "without underwear," because, yes, there's even a phrase for it. Giving birth on TV. Posing naked for mainstream magazines. The Kardashian sisters spent the fall one-upping each other -- first Kim's naked backside on the cover of Paper (a sight credited with "breaking the Internet") and then Kourtney's naked pregnant belly (and backside) online at DuJour, because if one reality sister does it, so, too, must the other.

The NSA, who was represented by the Minister of Special Duties, Kabiru Turaki, said:

“Government is planning to ban and block websites that inculcate negative attitudes in our children but we need a law to support such move.”“Because without a law, people can go to court and claim infringement on their rights,” he added.

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