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View Full Version : PETA Tries to Whip Leather Fetishists Into Shape


Jake
June 25th, 2003, 09:04 PM
The fur flew at the annual "Leather Weekend" last January in Washington, D.C., as activists with People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals sought to persuade the slaves of fashion and their biker buddies gathered for the fetish convention to give up black leather - studs and all.

"Why would I?" demanded Norman Wagner of Scottsdale, Ariz. "I'm 6-foot-3, and 230 pounds, and I can wear anything I want to."

Wagner told reporter Lance Gay of The Knoxville News Sentinel that he is not harming anything by wearing his black leather biker duds, and he questioned the sanity of activists picking on those who chose to wear animal skins. "It's been around for a thousand years, it's durable, and I'm not wasting resources by using it," he said. "Why would someone wear burlap?"

Kayla Rae Worden, a trans-gendered PETA activist from Asheville, N.C., who showed up to leaflet the event decked out in skimpy dominatrix hot pants in spite of freezing Washington weather, sought to persuade the fetishists that synthetics are just as erotic.

Worden, who said she used to wear leather and eat meat when she was a boy 15 years ago, contended the synthetic lifestyle provides even more protection than leather, and can be much more comfortable to wear. Besides, she said, leather smells.

One PETA activist showed up in a black biker outfit made of "pleather" - a silky synthetic black rubber, and white synthetic snakeskin boots. He said he was trying to show that fetishists can make a fashion statement without using leather.

Glen Sams, a 50-year-old member of the Centaur Motorcycle Club of Virginia, said the only requirement for those attending 33rd annual Mid-Atlantic Leather Weekend was to have "a pronounced interest in leather" and he was not pleased that PETA is picking on the gathering.

When a mistake or accident causes a biker to put his motorcycle down on the pavement, nothing protects the skin from being scraped off on the asphalt like leather, Sams said. He dismissed the PETA protest. "We were here before PETA, and I imagine we will be here a long time after," he said.