Share on Twitter “I don’t want your opinion on my body,” says the slogan on the rubbish truck slowly moving through the streets of Buenos Aires. “I don’t want to know what you’d like to do to me” is the message embossed on another. For porteños, residents of Argentina's capital city, these are reminders that women experience public space differently to men. It’s October 2nd, the city’s annual Anti-Street Harassment Day; time to remind everyone that, for the last five years, street harassment has been illegal. According to Law 5742, passed in 2015, street harassment spans comments of a sexual nature, unwanted photography, unwarranted physical touch, following someone, and indecent exposure. The law was intended to protect people’s liberty to enjoy public space, equally.