We are living in a society that continues to go from bad to worse everyday.People seem to be fascinated with nudity and sex.Infact these days if a celeb wants to revive her career, All she needs is to release a sex tape or do a nude scene and she would become an instant success.This trend is so bad that the pornographic industry in america now organizes "award ceremonies" to"honor" people who engage in these pornographic acts for public viewing what a shame.(Read this:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AVN_Awards)
People don't respect Gods laws of civility anymore.Fornication is called a quickie or a one night stand and society makes us think this is normal and that abstinence is out of date.They make us feel that we need not be ashamed of our bodies and can roam about naked like animals.
I know how our minds have been conditioned to view these things as "normal" but we have to wake up and oppose these people(jude 3)Or else they will succeed in conquering the minds of people that their satanic and barbaric attitude is ideal.
We are the force for good on earth and we have to stand up and challenge these people (phil 2:15)

PETA model uses nudity to bring attention to animal rights issues
Below are Stories ive culled from some few tabloids to show how this "abomination" is becoming a fad among people:
Nudity is completely over-exposed. Flip around the TV channels (preferably not while you are eating) and you'll happen upon TV shows with the word 'naked' in them, or with lots of naked people in them; Miss Naked Beauty, How To look Good Naked, Dawn Gets Naked, The Great British Body, Naked Office.
Last week saw the start of BBC3's Naked, where psychologist Emma Kenny and image consultant Jonathan Phang 'launched a radical self-confidence building course, as a group of five professionals undertake a series of challenges designed to help them get rid of inner demons and help their self-esteem at work and at home'.
As you've probably already guessed, this involves them taking all their kit off. The format in these programmes is pretty much always the same; mostly flabby, under-confident females (it's always women - I don't think men would agree to such nonsense) are persuaded to remove their clothes.

Empowering or exploiting? Gok Wan with one of the competitors on the Channel 4 reality show Miss Naked Beauty
They then look in the mirror, get prodded by a loud and invasive, over familiar presenter or two, burst into tears when they see how awful they look, and then burst into tears again when a psycho-babbling pep talk, a quick hair-do, a vertically striped T-shirt and some George at Asda heels conspire to give off the illusion that they are a couple of pounds lighter.
Naked will culminate in 'a dramatic naked stunt', where we find out which of the volunteers have gained the confidence to become nude life models for the day. Oh, I can't wait.
The 'radical self-confidence building' bit is, of course, bogus and incidental; the psychology element shamefully exploitative.
This is cruel, cheap entertainment - voyeuristic naturism dressed up as an esteem-building social experiment. Funny, isn't it?
When I was a kid, you had to sit through a Test cricket match or a home nations rugby game and hope for a streaker if you wanted to see a naked female.
What is baffling for male viewers chancing on this ugly hokum is why the people involved agree to do it.
Why do apparently intelligent modern women let themselves be ritually humiliated in such a manipulating, callous manner?
I always thought that Trinny and Susannah's school-marmish prodding and pinching and their knockabout use of the words t**s and ar** was the apotheosis of sniggering, guileful humiliation masquerading as empowerment.
Humiliating contestants: Myleene Klass co-presented Miss Naked Beauty with Gok but maintained her dignity by staying fully clothed and made-up
Humiliating contestants: Myleene Klass co-presented Miss Naked Beauty with Gok but maintained her dignity by staying fully clothed and made-up
Then Gok Wan came along on Channel 4 and I now believe new depths of irritating and pointless nudity have been plumbed.
Was it just me who found Wan's last vehicle, the grotesquely uncomfortable Miss Naked Beauty, profoundly offensive?
It started with Wan and co-presenter Myleene Klass herding a group of women into an empty municipal swimming pool, then ordering them to strip down to their underwear and be hosed down until every trace of make-up was washed away.
'Girlfriends, I love you!' screamed Gok, as he manned the pipe, apparently oblivious to the fact that he appeared to resemble a member of the Korean riot police.
Isn't this the sort of thing that Saddam Hussein's son Uday used to pull on the innocent women of Baghdad to entertain himself when he was bored of crashing his Ferraris?
It got worse when Myleene was sent down to talk to the sodden, flabby women with hair plastered to their heads and mascara running down their faces.
'You look absolutely stunning,' she said to one poor girl, who looked like she'd come third in an Alice Cooper lookalike competition.
Myleene was, of course, fully clothed and wearing make-up during this sequence, and her skimpy bikini, made famous by her own shower interludes on primetime TV, was not given another outing.
Over-exposed: Dawn Porter strips in the show Dawn Gets Naked
Over-exposed: Dawn Porter strips in the show Dawn Gets Naked
You can see the irony here, can't you? Myleene was probably chosen because she knows all about being overweight.
After Pop Idol, she got fat and her weight yo-yoed. She told the papers she wasn't happy with the way she looked. So when she was going nowhere, Mylene went on a disciplined crash diet, worked out a bit and enjoyed career-enhancing showers in the I'm A Celebrity jungle bathroom. Suddenly, things started to look up.
Gok Wan, meanwhile, was also fully-clothed. I'm sorry, but I don't buy this nonsense about nudity 'empowering' women, because an awful lot of this empowerment seems to be all about humiliating them, too.
Desperate for affection and attention, and spurred on with a patronising cuddle, they are forced to accept that gut-wrenching embarrassment is the route to self-esteem.
It's a shamefully tawdry misuse of the TV medium. Producers always go for lardy, style-free types with Poundland wardrobes and Iceland eating habits.
They show them pre-makeover in butch combat pants and shapeless hoodies. Their husbands don't fancy them any more. They've let themselves go. They are an easy target because, well, putting it bluntly, things could hardly get worse, could they?
Gok Wan's show tends to choose not the truly obese (that would be far too ugly and disturbing) or the almost firm, well-proportioned and attractive (that would be too titillating and soft pornish), but the emotionally susceptible, the bingo-winged, the love-handled, the muffin-topped and the fat-fingered.
In short, he fronts a freak show that strips people of their clothes and their dignity at the same time. There is no workout, no diet, no plan.
Gok's 'victims' are fatties when he finds them and still fatties when he leaves them - just poured into body stockings and High Street frocks.
Like some grim, circus ringmaster, he pushes and pushes and pushes until he achieves the trashy TV nirvana of tears. Then he takes them in his arms, appears to feign concern and pretends to spare their dignity by dragging them off to a room where the cameras can't go, but somehow seem to follow anyway.
Eventually, some apparently bogus event is staged: a fashion show, a photoshoot - or, in the case of this new BBC show, a life-drawing class - where the victim struts about a bit and, egged on by a gloating and teary-eyed Gok, camps it up for the cameras and the audience.
Members of her family may be watching. She is now supposed to be empowered and transformed.
But surely, all that being naked, being photographed naked or having a naked shot of you bill posted up in a shopping centre will do is remind you just how much better you look with clothes on.
Culled From:
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/article-1135884/Naked-exploitatio...
We chest love hottie couture:
THIS season's must-wear colour is nude - completely nude.
From London Flash-ion Week to the Nude York runway shows, models all over the globe seem to be getting their kit off in the name of couture.
Take this snap from London Fashion Week – the model wore an eye-popping heart, two glitter discs and a feather hat to cover her modesty.
But she isn't the first fashionista with a naked ambition.
Culled From:
http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepage/features/article2275928.ece
Naked Quotes By Famous People:
-"I wish we were all naked all the time, ... I have always believed it is what's underneath that counts. If we were all forced to be naked, perhaps we would start to see that a little bit more."- Celine Dion, in the U.K. Sun
-"Honestly, I walk around my house naked, ... I think the body's a beautiful thing and you should not hide yourself."- Britney Spears, Rolling Stone Magazine Sept. 2001
-"Laws against public nudity stem from people's unease with the human body. It makes people uneasy that others are comfortable enough to be naked in public, when they are not".(Katie Mann, from article in Going Natural, Vol. 17, Number 2)
-"I think everyone should be able to run around naked. I don't think I did anything wrong".
(Deb Ballou, from Going Natural, Vol. 17, Number 1)
-We ought to be able to be comfortable being naked, and it doesn't have to be about sex." Patricia Arquette, actress, in the May 2002 Paper magazine interview about her latest role in the movie "Human Nature"
-I come from a country where you don`t wear clothes most of the year. Nudity is the most natural state. I was born nude and I hope to be buried nude."
Elle MacPherson, Australian model and actress.
-How idiotic civilization is! Why be given a body if you have to keep it shut up in a case like a rare, rare fiddle?"Katherine Mansfield.
- “I have a strong sense of my own sexuality. I love the naked human body and I have huge body confidence.” Lady Gaga