In what way is their choice of dress unsuitable, in your opinion? Too see-through, revealing their private parts, too waterproof, too hot in the winter months ........
I suppose all the other ladies wear the same quality, same style than? None buying the latest fashion from Haute couture houses ........
you mean like this:
Is this an exmple of chains you presumably consider acceptabl?
Or maybe this:
Were there no non Christians, if that is the majority religion, prior to ameristan and others turning their former country into a war zone and bombing it back to the stone-age. Forcing the citizens to run away for their and families safety?
Last edited by OhOh; 05-06-2018 at 03:15 PM.
A tray full of GOLD is not worth a moment in time.
I think it's outrageous that women should be forced to remove their veil. Only the good looking ones should have to remove their veil. The ugly ones can keep it on. IMHO of course. I'll volunteer as veil inspector as it would be a job requiring the utmost tact and subtlety. Two qualities I am well known for........ Sorry darling you have to remove the veil. Not you, FFS keep it on you ugly bitch.
You jest but that actually highlights something that has always bemused me about religion and the Abrahmic religions in particular.Originally Posted by Hugh Cow
They all have solid elements of misogyny built into them where the woman is the property of and subservient to the man but if you're going to go down that route then why not at least make it worthwhile.
Why make them cover-up in unappealing clothing. Why not make all the women where short skirts or bikinis or something (the hot ones at least).
Old Gulf War joke:
A reporter in Kuwait before Saddam invaded noticed how the men walked in the front with the women sheepishly following behind.
After the liberation, he return to Kuwait City to see all the men at the back and the men leading the way.
"This is amazing", he said to the men, "you are now treating women as equals. Why?"
To which one of them replied "Landmines".
First woman fined under Denmark's new veil ban laws after shopping centre scuffle
The Government said the law is not aimed at any religion.
A 28-year-old woman wearing a face veil has become the first person in Denmark to be fined for violating a new law
banning such garments in public places.
Key points:
- Police were called to a shopping centre to respond to two women involved in a scuffle
- One of the women was charged with violating the full-face veil law
- Both women were charged with violating the peace
Danish news agency Ritzau reported police were called to a shopping centre in Horsholm, a city of 46,000 close to Copenhagen,
to confront a woman wearing a niqab garment covering her face.
The woman had been involved in a scuffle with another woman who had tried to tear her niqab off, police duty officer David Borchersen told Ritzau.
"During the fight her niqab came off, but by the time we arrived she had put it back on again," Mr Borchersen said.
Police reviewed CCTV footage to determine whether the second woman had intentionally pulled off the veil, and believed it was incidental to the fight.
The woman was fined 1,000 Danish kroner ($210) and was asked to either remove the veil or leave the premises. She opted to leave.
Both women were also charged with violating the peace.
There is a significant industry in Islamic female beauty. Even though they have so little to show, especially in hard line sharia regions. They still like make the most of what they’ve got. Even hair styling, manicure/pedicure and make up is very popular with many Muslim women.
Would now be a good time to mention Indonesia? Most women wear head scarves but almost none wear a veil. So veil has nothing to do with religion. It is a tribal custom.
I’m pretty sure their religion requires certain parts of the body to be covered for Muslim women. It depends which brand of the faith they are required to follow.
Its still subjugation by gender, and not to my personal taste.
Having lived in a moderate Muslim area of Indonesia, I can say that the observation is tolerated and adapted to suit local custom.
I may be wrong about religious requirements as opposed to tribal standards, but it still doesn’t sit well, especially if it’s used to demonise some decent folk of my acquaintance.
It doesn't, it requires them to "dress modestly". Of course some beardy twat has decided that means they have to dress like a fucking penguin.
There was an hilarious phone in on LBC Radio on this topic last night. Some mussie phoned in to tell some shit story his grandad told him that everything beautiful is hidden, "Gold is hidden in gold mines, diamonds in diamond mines", etc., and this is why women are covered up.
Until the host asked him why all the Arabs go strutting around Kensington in their Lambos and Ferraris and proceeded to press him further, at which point he fell to bits and blurted it out that it was because "men can't control themselves".
The host did everything but say "Well we fucking can, it's you simians that can't", but at least the boy got to the truth:
All of this was originally done to stop simians from raping women.
Then they will not come...
This is a well argued piece imo. Are we really supposed to believe that Boris Johnson, for example, could actually give a shit about the clothing choices of Muslim women?
https://www.theguardian.com/commenti...muslim-problemIt is helpful at this point to pause for a moment and explain the role the burqa plays now in political discourse. It is now merely a device, a symbol for people to appear muscular or to telegraph, as it were, a message. The issue of the burqa itself, its merits, demerits, whether it is worn by choice or through coercion, is now meaningless. No one seems to gives a damn what women who wear burqas want or don’t want, and no one seems to be interested in trying to figure out how many women actually do wear the burqa in any given country that is obsessed with it. Burqa has been used as a code – for Muslims, brown people, all the others who want to dictate their ways onto the helpless and authentic people.
islamophobes go 'round and 'round...
https://www.theatlantic.com/internat...il-ban/566630/Limitations on wearing face veils in public have already been enacted in France, Belgium, the Netherlands, Bulgaria, and Austria. They’ve been debated as far as Australia and the Canadian province of Quebec. Despite regional differences, a similar pattern of events has recurred in some of the countries. Although not every element of the pattern has appeared in every country, France, Quebec, and Austria, for instance, have followed a progression that goes roughly like this:
First, politicians in a country propose banning the face veil, which is worn by a small number of Muslim women and reflects one interpretation of the Quran’s injunction to “cover and be modest.” They argue that a ban will promote integration, or public safety, or that wearing a veil is inconsistent with national values like gender equality. Pundits and lawmakers loudly debate the policy, and the argument rages in the press. A few propose legal challenges. Eventually, the ban is passed into law.
Then, Muslims protest in the streets together with non-Muslims, some of whom wear veils in solidarity. Then comes yet another round of loud debate, amplified across the media. With time, reports indicate that discrimination against Muslims is rising in the country. Many Muslim women begin to hold more tightly to their religious identity, and some who didn’t wear the veil before the ban now start wearing it as an act of protest. Some others opt to stay home, though it’s impossible to say how widespread the phenomenon is.
If the ban was truly meant to promote gender equality, it appears to backfire. And yet, a few months later, another country enacts its own ban, and the whole process happens all over again.
Denmark has got it wrong. Yes, the burka is oppressive and ridiculous – but that's still no reason to ban it
BORIS JOHNSON
Ah Denmark, what a country. If any society breathes the spirit of liberty, this is it.
It was only a few weeks ago that I was in Copenhagen for some international conference, and as ever I rose early and went for a run. As I passed through some yuppie zone of warehouse conversions and posh restaurants I saw to my amazement that the Danes had also got up early for exercise – and they were diving stark naked into the bracing waters of the harbour. And I thought to myself – that’s the Danes for you; that’s the spirit of Viking individualism.
Read more:
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/201...iculous-still/
Boris Johnson says Muslims wearing burkas 'look like LETTER BOXES’ sparking fury
BORIS Johnson has been slammed after saying Muslim women wearing burkas “look like letter boxes”.
The ex-foreign secretary also described burkas as “absolutely ridiculous” and said their wearers looked like “bank robbers”.
Johnson came out against calls for a ban on the face-covering veils in public places – but compared their wearers to rebellious teenagers.
His comments, in response to the introduction of a burka ban in Denmark, sparked an angry response from Muslim organisations and MPs who accused him of stoking Islamophobia for political gain.
Denmark last week followed France, Germany, Austria and Belgium in banning face-covering garments like the burka and niqab in public places.
Johnson said he felt "fully entitled" to expect women to remove face coverings when talking to him at his MP's surgery, and said schools and universities should be able to take the same approach if a student "turns up ... looking like a bank robber”, writing for the Daily Telegraph.
"If you tell me that the burka is oppressive, then I am with you," he wrote.
"If you say that it is weird and bullying to expect women to cover their faces, then I totally agree – and I would add that I can find no scriptural authority for the practice in the Koran.
"I would go further and say that it is absolutely ridiculous that people should choose to go around looking like letter boxes."
https://www.dailystar.co.uk/news/pol...es-bank-robber
Cancelled
Last edited by TuskegeeBen; 08-08-2018 at 02:56 PM.
There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)