I don't see where the intent of a photograph should have any bearing on restriction. Indeed, the intent of a street photographer is self evident. The nature of self-restriction within what is legal is personal, and set by the individual. Right or wrong is a personal concept. Some people may be offended by my INFIDEL t-shirt. Am I wrong to wear it? Some would say so, and I say, so what? I have every right to wear it. If they care, society or individuals may censure me as a result of their convictions as they will, but they can not censor me.
The biggest irritation for me in this series of threads have been the constant stream of straw men that have been trotted out and puppeted to make support for a basic foundational freedom seem unsavory. I don't have to like or agree on a personal level with Dominco's actions in the least to fully support his freedom to do what he does. Debating whether or not he was right or wrong is simply a giant circle jerk. The KKK is allowed to operate within the law in the US. Unsavory? Yeah, you bet, vile even.
The alternative is pure evil of the highest order.
At this point in this multi-threaded and passionate debate, I wont attempt to quote or paraphrase anyone, but I have to agree that the pole question of this thread was poorly phrased, and the results, therefore, skewed.
I also have to agree with JB's summation.
I believe the largest area of contention has
not been whether offensive behavior is legal, it most certainly is, but rather, should it be tolerated? The short answer is yes.
There is little recourse for the offended, short of assault, or returning the favor, in hopes of embarrassing the
offender into submission. There is no hope of a criminal indictment, for no crime has been committed.
A civil suite would almost certainly be dismissed with prejudice because the photograph(s) would fall under the realm of art, and therefore would not be subject to the same restrictions and liabilities found in commercial photography.
Flag burning is legal and I support a creepy protester's right to burn one. But I would rather enjoy seeing him get his ass kicked for doing so.
ASMP has some FAQ's on their web site which touch on the Art vs. Commercial aspect of this discussion. Another more lengthy explanation may be viewed below.
http://www.danheller.com/model-release.html