You are simply a German or whatever you are, whose first language is English, happen to write like a typical Singaporean, said you are from Singapore because you've spent so much time there and is sooooo proud to be Asian but not even knowing what "longkang" and "gahmen" are (heck, even my expat friends who havent been there for long do), and chose a nickname synonymous with its National flower, an orchid. All coincidence of course. My bad.
Everyone happy? Back to public holidays in Ticino...
Really? So finally you get round to telling us what got you wound up, shocked and disgusted. The hypothetical risk of hypothetical paedophiles. I have no problem with that but why didn't you say so. It would've saved us a whole lot of bother if you'd made your own thread clear and then kept it on topic.
C'mon. If you start a thread in the complaints forum with words like "shocked" and "disgusted" then you're taking a stand and inviting people to fuss over your comments. Otherwise what's the point of starting the thread. If you have principles, at least stand up for them.
No, I don't think English is their first language. I'd be willing to bet a few pints on that. Non-natives make fairly common mistakes in English (as does everyone in every language).
I've often thought a book of, say, the top 20 English mistakes by each country in the world would be an interesting teaching tool as I can so often narrow down, if not outright peg, English speakers to a country or region by what they stumble upon. I've made a few friends in my travels by identifying total strangers by said linguistic tics in English. Good times.
When my son was born he didn't have a stitch on! And I had to carry him all the way through the delivery room totally naked. There were doctors and nurses looking! Any one of them could have been a paediatrician! One of them even took a photograph!
What I find disturbing is not that the children were naked, but they were during kindergarten time and in a public place...I will check with my son's kindergarten, I really hope that they are not letting him run around naked in a public place...
This is simply INAPPROPRIATE. No, there is nothing wrong with childrenbeing naked however this is in a SCHOOL setting in a PUBLIC place and at theages of 5-6-7, they should be taught that we need to leave our clothes on! Children are children but they do need togrow-up.
If there was a prolblem it is a legal one. Would any single person in visual distance have complained by mobile phone to the police, it would have become illegal immediately. "LiB" above somewhere has pointed to this speciality of laws in Switzerland. That you can do many things and get tolerated until/unless someone takes offence. Then you suddenly have the legal apparatus against you. As a cousin of me, who is a lawyer, once told me, the law here in many fields only starts when you can deliver evidence that your personal interests/feelings/belongings got "damaged"
In other words, had the O.P. been a Swiss, equipped with a Mobile Phone and the required routine to complain, hell would have broken loose
That is pretty much the same as UK law. Being naked in a public place is not illegal unless it 'offends public decency'.
Recently in the UK there have been two large gatherings of nudists in public that have not caused any particular issues: cyclists in Brighton and a sponsored 'skinny dip'on a National Trust beach in Wales.