Apart from decide what she wants to wear if what she wants to wear isnt what you want her to wear?
Do you actually know any women in the West that wear a head covering and have you talked to them about it?
Thats not addressing that point in a meaningful way at all.I've addressed in my previous post (#60)
Thats not addressing that point in a meaningful way at all.
Youre basically going "You're not able to make decisions for yourself, I'll do it for you." and you're doing it purely because you disagree with their choice in the first place.
Really it doesnt.It does.
You're saying these women "want" to wear one.
I'm saying when there's such a discrepancy in relative power a yes isn't always a yes.
And I'm not disagreeing with their choice, I'm disagreeing they were ever truly given a choice in the first place.
What power discrepancy?
Right, women the world over are treated as equals. No gap in social power, pay, anything. It's all hunky dory. Like I mentioned before, liberals seem to abandon their principals as soon as the topic of Islam is introduced.
So would you say that the answer to that is to make their choices for them?
You seem to be happily ignoring those people who are able to make their own decisions but are making decisions that you dont agree with.
I'm saying women should be pressured into anything men wouldn't do. If showing ones face is immodest the men and women both should cover up. I'm not making choices for anyone, just recognizing the fact that the gap in power means many times women both individually and collectively aren't able to make a true choice although on the surface it looks as if they are.
So to be absolutely clear you support women wearing what they want if its their decision to do so?
Right, women the world over are treated as equals. No gap in social power, pay, anything. It's all hunky dory. Like I mentioned before, liberals seem to abandon their principals as soon as the topic of Islam is introduced.
Of course
And say to the believing women that they should lower their gaze and guard their modesty; that they should not display their beauty and ornaments except what (must ordinarily) appear thereof; that they should draw their khimār over their breasts and not display their beauty except to their husband, their fathers, their husband's fathers, their sons, their husbands' sons, their brothers or their brothers' sons, or their sisters' sons, or their women, or the slaves whom their right hands possess, or male servants free of physical needs, or small children who have no sense of the shame of sex; and that they should not strike their feet in order to draw attention to their hidden ornaments.
— Quran 24:31
So you fully support Muslim women who decide to wear the veil?
If that's their actual decision sure.
You're under the impression that they can make that choice though.
If we were discussing anything other than Islam it would be obvious that external pressures are a very, very heavy factor in that decision making.
Give it up, ugly. You're clearly wrong. Who wouldn't choose that? Sounds lovely. Sexual shame is perfectly healthy. Empowering even.
Excellent. But I was waiting for the "But.." and...
So because you believe that no Muslim woman is capable of making her own choice you have nobly decided to make it for her.
You dont think that maybe you're being a little bit patronising?
Frankly I think that it says more about your prejudices than it does about Islam or Womens rights.
Defend away, I'm done.
I'll happily defend peoples rights to make their own decisions all day long.
I think you missed the point of the past two pages of discussion. Cheers
Nope.
I and many others believe that women should be free to wear or not wear religious clothing. Some Muslim women are clearly wearing hijabs and burqas out of indoctrination, but you're not liberating them by banning that apparel -- you're just imposing a different set of cultural views.
And then you (ie. person who implements or supports the ban) becomes their problem for oppressing their right to their religious beliefs and the men who were coercing those into it in the first place are quickly forgotten about.
Change in how people practice religious beliefs needs to come from within. If it comes from an external source, then any internal difference of opinion quickly becomes overshadowed by those who want to take their choices away.
And any idiot who believes that Muslim women are mostly being forced/coerced into wearing religiously-significant clothing by men should look at the strength of belief in Christianity amongst Christians, and that's despite the erosion that many modern societies have had upon it.
Dutch comedian vs some muslim women:
We'll all be muslim here in a few short decades. allahu akbar!
At some point yea, but I want some derivative of my DNA to see the stars, the end is not *here* .. it cant be.At some point it will all be over anyway.