Gay Hook-up App Ads Will Remain In Washington D.C. Metro Stops.

After the Netherlands refused to ban the ads earlier this year, after Cardiff does ban the ads in February, after Miami pulls down the ads in April after supposedly one complaint,  Squirt.org faced removal of its ads from Washington D.C.

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(CNSNews.com)– The Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority (WMATA) in Washington, D.C. is currently running an advertisement for Squirt.org, an app that helps homosexuals find hookup partners. But the WMATA  refuses to run religious or political ads.

A Metro representative said the Squirt.org ads could not be removed because regulating ad content violates the advertiser’s First Amendment rights, even though religious, political and advocacy-related ads are banned according to Metro policy because of their content.

The Squirt.org advertisement features two men, one looking at the camera while the other loosens the first one's tie and whispers in his ear. The caption reads, “Your place or mine?”

“The advertiser purchased a total of five ads in three stations through August 7. Metro has not received any customer complaints to date,” said Metro spokesperson Morgan Dye.

However, a petition by CitizenGO reveals that, at press time, 1,624 people objected to the ad.

“Not only does the advertised website encourage homosexual hookups and video chats, it also provides an avenue for interested customers to find a ‘casual’ sexual encounter in a public place, such as a bar or a public restroom,” said CitizenGO’s English language Campaign Director Caroline Craddock.

“This activity, commonly known as ‘cruising,’ invites criminal activity such as indecent exposure and illegal prostitution,” Craddock continued.

Dye said that the First Amendment right to free speech prevents WMATA from regulating ad content.

“Metro advertising space has been ruled by the courts as a public forum protected by the First Amendment of the Constitution, and we may not decline ads based on their content, provided that they conform with our Board-approved ad policy,” Dye said. – cnsnews.com

 

Here's a video from a Miami news station  from April about the removal of the ads from that city.

 

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What comes to mind are the taxi top adverts for gentleman's clubs with scantily clad women appearing to be writhing with joy in the hopes that men who like women would stop on by.  You can't miss them in any large American city.  But are these the same thing? Would banning Squirt.org be the same as trying to ban strip club ads?  I don't know.  I'm not sure.  What has D.C. Banned in the past?

WMATA banned all ads with religious, political, or advocacy-related content from the Metro in May 2015, which according to NBC was a response to a proposed ad featuring a cartoon of the Prophet Muhammed.

The ban was made permanent in November 2015.

When CNSNews.com presented this apparent contradiction to the WMATA Board of Directors at their meeting on July 28, they did not comment. – cnsnews.com

What are your thoughts on the Squirt.org ads? 

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Should they stay or should they go? 

Should they just be in the gayborhoods or should they be all over?

Would it be different if the ad asked, "Your bottom or mine?" or " Where do you want to bust a nut?"

The gay Tinder-like app Lavender is now called Surge.  Would it be different if the app wasn't called squirt?

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Some believe this a win for equality ad gay rights.  Do you agree?

 

 

h/t:  cnsnews.com

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