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Equality 7-2521
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Joined: August 11 2005
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Points: 15784
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Posted: July 14 2010 at 12:37 |
The T wrote:
Epignosis wrote:
Slartibartfast wrote:
Sadly I would like for people to dress as they want to, but the problem with the burka is that is perfect for concealing a terrorist and his/her weapons. Are there not a sufficient number of countries that will allow or even require you to wear one if you're a woman?
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I'm pretty sure terrorists would prefer trench coats, not something that greatly restricts peripheral vision.
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It greatly restricts everything... yet men force it on women... And we're supposed to defend their right to do so... Go figure.
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Allowing women to wear a burqa isn't defending the right of men to force women to behave a certain way. Its defending the right to be able to wear a garment of your choosing. You're creating this false dichotomy and trying to justify your position with it.
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"One had to be a Newton to notice that the moon is falling, when everyone sees that it doesn't fall. "
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WalterDigsTunes
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Posted: July 14 2010 at 12:42 |
Vibrationbaby wrote:
One thing that has a lot of people still pissed here in Canada is that the East Indians who join the Royal Canadian Mounted Police are permitted to wear turbans. Th RCMP is full of tradition and the uniform reflects that. I had a friend who was pulled over for speeding by an officer wearing a turban and he refused to co-operate until an officer was sent wearing the proper uniform. So they actually sent another cruiser with an officer with the proper uniform and he got his speeding ticket. There is also provisions in the Canadian Forces for them to wear tubans as part of the uniform.
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Canada and India were both outposts of a now-dead empire whose lackeys (oops, "soldiers") came from various backgrounds, thus making this not a wholly alien link
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harmonium.ro
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Posted: July 14 2010 at 12:45 |
Padraic wrote:
You are not going to solve the women's rights issue in the Muslim world with this law. You simply won't. |
Do you imagine that anyone in France thought that by issuing a law concerning what happens in France they will help with women's rights in the Muslim world?
Padraic wrote:
But
there will be women, strange as it may seem to us non-Muslims, who are
now forbidden to wear (their choice) the garments that are part of their
heritage and culture - as much as that culture may be abhorrent to the
average Westerner. |
That, in theory. Practically, the burqa is just one (not the only) element of a culture of oppression against women. Sure, there are women who got used to it, but this doesn't take the French the right to deny this culture completely from French public space.
Padraic wrote:
I think this is just a
difference in mindset between the American and the European and we're
probably just bewildered at the others' take on this.  |
Yes, and also a difference coming from different degrees of involvement with the issue. It looks different from inside than from the outside (I was told exactly the same thing when debating various stuff about American issues, btw ).
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The T
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Posted: July 14 2010 at 12:47 |
Equality 7-2521 wrote:
The T wrote:
Epignosis wrote:
Slartibartfast wrote:
Sadly I would like for people to dress as they want to, but the problem with the burka is that is perfect for concealing a terrorist and his/her weapons. Are there not a sufficient number of countries that will allow or even require you to wear one if you're a woman?
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I'm pretty sure terrorists would prefer trench coats, not something that greatly restricts peripheral vision.
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It greatly restricts everything... yet men force it on women... And we're supposed to defend their right to do so... Go figure.
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Allowing women to wear a burqa isn't defending the right of men to force women to behave a certain way. Its defending the right to be able to wear a garment of your choosing. You're creating this false dichotomy and trying to justify your position with it. |
You're trying to defend the right of women to wear garments forced upon them by men... I understand your love of absolute liberty is behind this and you give your opinion according to your principles. I just don't see it that way. Some government intervention is necessary. And this is one of those cases.
And about governments forcing things I don't agree with or like, I have experience, much more than you probably. In my country right now is a far-left president who's almost a dictator. I oppose his views. That's my right. That doesn't mean I have to promote the absolute lack of government as the answer.
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clarke2001
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Posted: July 14 2010 at 12:48 |
As far as I know, various veils and scarves have ancient tradition, but burquas hiding entire (female) body from forehead to toes is relatively new invention, perhaps a century old; and motivated more politically than religiously. I think woman in Kabul would welcome such a ban, including a few other ones, such is not being aloud to sing in public.
Such sinister laws are NOT imposed because of certain religion. They're monstrously skewed from good origins - Nietzsche's philosophical concept of ubermensch led to Nazism, Marx's idea that 'workers should controls productions' led to socialism.
One of the Abrahamic religions - the Islam - is basically similar to many (dare I say all?) human religions - a belief in God, the idea of Love, a moral codex that is basically teaching not to steal, to respect the elderly, be a honest man. Let us not forget the Muslim word paved the way for some tremendous human achievements, such are math, astronomy and medicine; as well as great works of art and literature - while Europe was in the dark middle ages.
That being said, sacred texts could be interpreted in many ways - varying from humane, tolerant, love-nurturing, to those oppressing Universal Declaration of Human Rights; just take a look in how many different ways Christianity could interpret The Bible.
I've read the Qur'an (I have three copies at home) and if anyone think something is inherently wrong in it as as set of moral codices , well, that's just plain wrong. It's interesting it acknowledges Jesus as a prophet (Muslim prophet of course - Allah simply means God, so a human being who believes in God following a certain codex is Muslim, no mystification here), also it states Muslims and followers of other religions should have respectful conversations and debates. I'm not a Muslim, so I take various chapters with a grain of salt - this book was written centuries ago, just like the Bible, so some things such are stoning homosexuals to death should be looked from the historical perspective.
My two cents.
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The T
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Posted: July 14 2010 at 12:50 |
Padraic wrote:
You are not going to solve the women's rights issue in the Muslim world with this law. You simply won't. |
The intention only has to do with France, a sovereign country that can do what it wants to adapt people to its system, just like America.
Padraic wrote:
But
there will be women, strange as it may seem to us non-Muslims, who are
now forbidden to wear (their choice) the garments that are part of their
heritage and culture - as much as that culture may be abhorrent to the
average Westerner. |
Again, the French have the right to preserve their culture as much as Americans crying for "learn english" have... (not a cheap shot, is just the first example I could think of... )
Padraic wrote:
I think this is just a
difference in mindset between the American and the European and we're
probably just bewildered at the others' take on this.  |
Exactly. As I mentioned, in Spain and Germany there's a lot of agreement with this ban. In America there isn't. It's two different worlds.
Edited by The T - July 14 2010 at 12:53
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harmonium.ro
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Posted: July 14 2010 at 12:50 |
BTW why is Firefox's spell check underlining "women's" when I write "women's rights"? Does Firefox also think that women should not have a genitive, meaning that women can't own anything? Now that's oppressive 
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Padraic
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Posted: July 14 2010 at 12:51 |
harmonium.ro wrote:
Padraic wrote:
You are not going to solve the women's rights issue in the Muslim world with this law. You simply won't. |
Do you imagine that anyone in France thought that by issuing a law concerning what happens in France they will help with women's rights in the Muslim world?
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No, I'm sure they were concerned with the throngs of Parisian Christian women who walk around wearing burqas.
Fine, substitute Muslim world with French Muslim community.
You knew what I meant.
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harmonium.ro
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Posted: July 14 2010 at 13:00 |
@Pat: sorry, I actually thought you meant that. Maybe I'm not very bright, I've been told that before.  Well, I don't know how much will this law will "solve", but it will send the few fundamentalists a strong signal. But really, this issue isn't major at all in France. People here are quite relaxed, and the integration policy has worked in general. Other countries have much bigger problems with the Muslim communities, like UK or Netherlands. If I remember well, Theo Van Gogh, Vincent Van Gogh last descendant, was killed on the street by cutting his throat exactly because he produced a critical documentary about women's right in the Dutch Muslim community. I don't see that possible in France... But if the situation would be similar to that, I think the measures taken would be different, according to the context.
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JLocke
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Joined: November 18 2007
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Points: 4900
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Posted: July 14 2010 at 13:04 |
harmonium.ro wrote:
BTW why is Firefox's spell check underlining "women's" when I write "women's rights"? |
Because FireFox is an overrated web browser with more kinks than a Na'vi's hair braid.
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harmonium.ro
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Posted: July 14 2010 at 13:05 |
clarke2001 wrote:
As far as I know, various veils and scarves have ancient tradition, but burquas hiding entire (female) body from forehead to toes is relatively new invention, perhaps a century old; and motivated more politically than religiously. I think woman in Kabul would welcome such a ban, including a few other ones, such is not being aloud to sing in public.
Such sinister laws are NOT imposed because of certain religion. They're monstrously skewed from good origins - Nietzsche's philosophical concept of ubermensch led to Nazism, Marx's idea that 'workers should controls productions' led to socialism.
One of the Abrahamic religions - the Islam - is basically similar to many (dare I say all?) human religions - a belief in God, the idea of Love, a moral codex that is basically teaching not to steal, to respect the elderly, be a honest man. Let us not forget the Muslim word paved the way for some tremendous human achievements, such are math, astronomy and medicine; as well as great works of art and literature - while Europe was in the dark middle ages.
That being said, sacred texts could be interpreted in many ways - varying from humane, tolerant, love-nurturing, to those oppressing Universal Declaration of Human Rights; just take a look in how many different ways Christianity could interpret The Bible.
I've read the Qur'an (I have three copies at home) and if anyone think something is inherently wrong in it as as set of moral codices , well, that's just plain wrong. It's interesting it acknowledges Jesus as a prophet (Muslim prophet of course - Allah simply means God, so a human being who believes in God following a certain codex is Muslim, no mystification here), also it states Muslims and followers of other religions should have respectful conversations and debates. I'm not a Muslim, so I take various chapters with a grain of salt - this book was written centuries ago, just like the Bible, so some things such are stoning homosexuals to death should be looked from the historical perspective.
My two cents.
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Perfectly agreed, excellent and necessary points! I wanted to say RE Mike's video that I agree with the guy except for the moment when he blames it on Islam. He should blame it on the people and on the society who created this culture of women oppression.
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Padraic
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Posted: July 14 2010 at 13:08 |
harmonium.ro wrote:
Well, I don't know how much will this law will "solve", but it will send the few fundamentalists a strong signal. But really, this issue isn't major at all in France. People here are quite relaxed, and the integration policy has worked in general. |
OK, but I'd like to think Muslims that live in this country are for the most part well integrated without us having to pass laws banning burqas, minarets, etc.
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harmonium.ro
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Posted: July 14 2010 at 13:13 |
^ I don't agree with that, should we also renounced at the laws concerning theft, fraud, assault, etc. just because society manages to educate most kids into thinking those are bad things?
Edited by harmonium.ro - July 14 2010 at 13:13
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Padraic
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Posted: July 14 2010 at 13:14 |
harmonium.ro wrote:
^ I don't agree with that, should we also renounced at the laws concerning theft, fraud, assault, etc. just because society manages to educate most kids into thinking those are bad things? 
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No, and if you can't see the difference between theft and wearing a garment, I'm at a loss.
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Epignosis
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Posted: July 14 2010 at 13:17 |
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harmonium.ro
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Posted: July 14 2010 at 13:19 |
@Pat: Same here; if you don't see the difference between wearing any garment and wearing a burqa, then it means that you don't want to make a difference between them - but the difference exists and you're ignoring it in the name of your principles.
Edited by harmonium.ro - July 14 2010 at 13:19
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Mr ProgFreak
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Posted: July 14 2010 at 13:20 |
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Padraic
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Posted: July 14 2010 at 13:21 |
harmonium.ro wrote:
@Pat: Same here; if you don't see the difference between wearing any garment and wearing a burqa, then it means that you don't want to make a difference between them - but the difference exists and you're ignoring it in the name of your principles.
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Boy Alex. Looks like we're going to have to agree to disagree. That ocean seems like it's a big divide.
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Padraic
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Posted: July 14 2010 at 13:22 |
Ultimately, I'll stop caring, as I don't live in France and am not a Muslim woman.
Edited by Padraic - July 14 2010 at 13:22
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Padraic
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Posted: July 14 2010 at 13:23 |
What was that again about debate on the internet being useless? 
Anyone have their mind changed this time around?
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