Ban the Burqa?

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  • ukit0

    Is the law banning headscarves or just the part covering the face? If it's the second one, these examples kind of disprove your point georges.

    • I mean yes, people wear hats, big fookin dealukit
  • georgesIII0

    ban the gaga

  • georgesIII0

    I'm saying this law is goddam hypocrital,
    that's what I'm saying,

    Sarkozi is losing votes as hell and decided to ride the extreme right band wagon because of it,

    If you can still go on and not realize that they only reason we're even hearing about it now, is that failing politician want to use the publics fear of islamofascist to gain more votes, then you must be living in a hole somewhere in USA (no offense of course)

    muslim/catholic/jew/orthodox women have been wearing different types of headscarf for decades (if not centuries) now,
    nobody cared until the big bad brow terrorist fear was instilled into us.

  • georgesIII0

    and they are wearing it for their personal religious faith,
    why should we only target the muslim faith while ignoring the dozen other faith were women wear head scarfs,

    oooh I forgot, they're supposed to be terrorist, right?

  • ukit0

    I agree - but don't you think it's hypocritical to go after France and not other countries that restrict peoples' freedom - Islamic countries in many cases being some of the worst.

    When you bring this up, people will say, well, it's Saudi Arabia or Iran's culture to treat people this way, and I'm largely sympathetic to that. But it seems inconsistent to say that they can impose their culture on the society and France can't - regardless of the motivation.

    • they don't call themselves a coalition of shining white hatted cowboys saving the world though do they.airey
    • The only reason you even cite iran is because, the media have been portraying them as the evilest society in the worldgeorgesIII
    • the west proffers some high moral ideal and yet here we are failing it.airey
    • yet most of the "arabs" that bomb your twin towers are from saudi arabia but it is still your biggest oil partner theregeorgesIII
    • you see the hypocrisy?georgesIII
    • No, and you avoided the question, because there are restrictions on peoples' lives in those societies.ukit
  • airey0

    widen it further. i'm white and a kiwi. i live in australia. once my accent changed people stopped making fun of me. it's my fucking right to be vilified for being an immigrant yet because i look the same i'm ignored. treated equal. fuckers.

    • Well, if it makes you feel better, I never would have guessed you were a kiwiukit
  • kgvs720

    Looks fine to me.

    • nobody said it doesn't look insane. but they should have a right to look insane.airey
    • Doesn't bother me at all. Although I think it becomes problematic when it comes down to Photo IDskgvs72
  • kgvs720

  • airey0

    if this is freedom then i change my mind. state should rule.

  • kgvs720

    Looks fine to me.

    • drinking coffee must be hell.Amicus
    • I remember seeing this video a long time ago and it never said the country where it was filmed, propropropaganda...georgesIII
  • ukit0

    Religion is an embarrassing relic of the past anyway. All comedians know this


    • comedians are some of the most observant people in the world.iCanHasQBN
  • ukit0

    For the record, I think all this crap is silly - wearing the veil, banning the veil, I'm against all of it. Fuck the fucking veil.

    I mean there's absolutely nothing to be gained from wearing a black outfit that covers your entire body, especially when you live in the desert. What is it but yet another piece of bullshit superstition, as ridiculous as Scientologists measuring your thetans or Catholics worshipping an aging Nazi pedophile who carries a staff with a dead guy carved on it.

    It's all a load of childish bullshit and the fact that we even have debates over these issues shows that humanity isn't really that far from their primate ancestors. It's a wonder we don't just spend all day flinging poo at each other for all the progress we've made.

  • georgesIII0

    "When you bring this up, people will say, well, it's Saudi Arabia or Iran's culture to treat people this way, and I'm largely sympathetic to that. But it seems inconsistent to say that they can impose their culture on the society and France can't - regardless of the motivation. "

    Guess why I speak french, because they imposed their culture onto mine and nearly erased all traces of it. French imposed their culture on most of Africa.


    Now should I see them as shiny knights ready to defends the right of the poor muslim women heck no.

    • yeah, fuck ghana. nobody wants it, not even the french. and they kept marcel marceau.airey
    • everyone conquers everyone else if you wait around long enoughukit
  • ukit0

    ack...this is turning into another reflexive East vs West argument. Suffice to say Muslims conquered other countries too, and we don't decided who gets what rights based on historical karma.

    Now if you'll excuse me I'm going to put on my special bunny costume that allows me to telepathically communicate with Satan. BRB

    • What is now Iran, for instance, was conquered by Muslims who proceeded to impose their religion on them. Persia was originally not Islamic.ukit
    • originally not Islamic.ukit
  • georgesIII0

    you're right Ukit,

    most of the people don't care about burka o no burka,
    they just want other to act and think exactly like themselves,

    yep, that some freedom you've got there brother.

    • I don't live in France, the burqa is fine and well here in the good ol' US of Aukit
    • (Hail Satan)ukit
  • Amicus0

    If everyone acted and thought like me my life would very much poorer for it.

    I don't think too many people actually care about the head scarves and hair coverings – moslem or otherwise. It's the hiding of the face and therefore the identity and emotion of the wearer that is the problem. Think about Phantom of the Opera and how Christine wishes to unmask the Phantom and see his true self.

    It's the reduction of individual identity and the ability to communicate that seems to be the main concern with this.

    • But he was horribly disfigured,
      that is why...
      ooooh I see your point,
      georgesIII
  • airey0

    down with the french! no niqab's yet they made this guy a fucking hero!


    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mar…

  • ukit0

    Miss Iran, 1974

    • She's hiding her anguish at not wearing the burqa incredibly well..ukit
    • so her choice was not to wear. so what?airey
    • if it's all oppressive and not choice why isn't she wearing one?airey
    • once again you completely ignore why Iran went for being a democracy to a theocracy,
      georgesIII
    • you keep on ignoring why most of those country less than 50 years ago were all going the democratic way until some other countries that I won't name fuck it up for them,georgesIII
    • some other countries that I won't name fuck it up for them, ignoring it won't make it go awaygeorgesIII
    • um, airey, this was pre-Islamic Revolution. You don't see this today.ukit
    • There is no choice for millions of women (as opposed to the couple thousand in France who want to wear the burqa)ukit
    • arrh righto. fair dos.airey
    • man, ukit, who put down Moghsadeg, who gave money to the opposition, who got the nation oil business, google itgeorgesIII
  • maikel0

    this is a fuckall thing (as ukit said)
    I cannot walk around naked because here is against the law (here is England).
    In a Muslim country probably you need to adhere to their dressing code (am I right? I may not be so... I pretty ignorant in this matter)
    If France decides that people can or cannot wear something is equally fair or wrong that ANY other restriction.

    It is like going to China expecting everybody to be fluent in Spanish... as long time expat I guess you take the culture of the place you chose to live or you get the fuck out of there. No whining, aye?

    • -it may not -I AM pretty ignorant...
      also I cannot fucking type///
      maikel
    • Exactly, at least be fair! What's good for the goose...etcukit
    • se we should all measure our civil rights and moral attitudes by china's? fuck.airey
    • fuck... you were almost intelligent until that comment airey.... reread it for goodness sake.Amicus
    • i refuse.airey
    • well the analogy is pointless. and everyone seems to say 'well in this country...'airey
    • when we bang on about holding ourselves to higher ideals.airey
    • do we actually do that though?airey
    • anyone that goes to china expecting everyone to be fluent in spanish is a fucking idiot.airey
    • anyone going there expecting a translator service at a money changer may not be an idiot.airey
    • I demand the right to look at porn on the internet in China!ukit
    • airey, you are missing the point.maikel
  • ukit0

    airey, another way to look at it would be, if you are concerned with oppressing peoples' freedom, why not focus on the most egregious examples of the problem? i.e., the fact that in much of the Middle East today, women can no longer dress the way they want (some may want the burqa but certainly not all), choose to pursue the career they want, and their rights have even gone backward since the era pictured above.

    In that light, it's easy to see how the burqa or the hijab almost becomes a symbol of that oppression in some peoples' eyes. I mean, FFS, Iran is even one of the less restrictive in terms of this stuff and yet you still get this (from Wikipedia, which I don't think is full of made up Western propaganda)

    "The Islamic revolution is ideologically committed to inequality for women in inheritance and other areas of the the civil code; and especially committed to segregation of the sexes. Many places, from "schoolrooms to ski slopes to public buses", are strictly segregated. Females caught by revolutionary officials in a mixed-sex situation can be subject to virginity tests.[9]"

    "Bad hijab ― exposure of any part of the body other than hands and face — is subject to punishment of up to 70 lashes or 60 days imprisonment.[10][11] In April 2007, the Tehran police, (which is under Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei's supervision), began the most fierce crackdown on what's known as "bad hijab" in more than a decade. In the capital Tehran thousands of Iranian women were cautioned over their poor Islamic dress and several hundred arrested."

    "During the Sixth Parliament, some of Iran's strongest advocates of women's rights emerged. Almost all of the 11 female lawmakers of the (at the time) 270-seat Majlis tried to change some of Iran's more conservative laws. However, during the elections for the Seventh Majlis, the all-male Council of Guardians banned the 11 women from running for office, and only conservative females were allowed to run. The Seventh Majlis reversed many of the laws passed by the reformist Sixth Majlis."

    "During the administration of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's administration, the use of Siqeh, or temporary marriages (that can last from 30 minutes to a lifetime), became heavily used,[citation needed] especially in response to the financial demands of prenuptial agreements. The temporary marriages, enacted by fatwa in 1983 under Khomeini, are heavily criticized as a form of legalized prostitution."

    • totally agree. but i ask again, are we measuring our acceptance by these countries?airey
    • does forcing them unoppress (sic) them as some people think or oppress them more?airey
    • Why not measure our outrage by the severity of the crime?ukit
    • is all i'm asking.airey
    • not sure i follow?airey
    • i don't live in the middle east. i live here. and i'd like here to stand to higher individual values.airey
    • haha, but you don't live in France do you? I used to, so I arguably have a greater say than you.ukit
    • maybe but the bigger players in the globe all follow each others lead in this kind of thing.airey
    • Maybe in Europe. Here in the U.S. it's a non issue because we don't have many Muslims.ukit
    • we have a lot here and i'd like to think we could try to be accepting rather than small minded.airey