That statement didn't really have anything to do with the hijab.If a certain style of dress symbolizes something that conflicts with a society's values, I consequently see no issue in forbidding it. — Tzeentch
Every country does this already. The difference between allowing the visibility of men's and women's nipples makes it easy to see this has cultural ideas built in, though really cultural ideas run through whatever the dress codes are. Further hijabs don't just symbolize something that conflicts with society's values, they are something that does. Or potentially do, depending on the society's values. We wouldn't say handcuffs merely symbolize state power. I do realize that's a more extreme example. In any case no one can wear whatever they want. Or not wear. Unless they are in certain private areas, like a nudist colony.If a certain style of dress symbolizes something that conflicts with a society's values, I consequently see no issue in forbidding it. — Tzeentch
There are of course, reasons. Everything has reasons. That doesn't make them good. — thewonder
Assumedly, you would let them wear whatever they want to in a free country. — thewonder
Further hijabs don't just symbolize something that conflicts with society's values, they are something that does. Or potentially do, depending on the society's values. — Coben
I would agree with you if you could replace retarded imbecciles with right wing islamophobes who watch fox news 24/7 .The real problem is the eternally faulty epistemic stance of the populace of retarded imbeciles in the West. They do not believe something because of its justification -- they are way too stupid to verify the justification anyway -- but because of whom says it, e.g. the blue-pilled narrative of the manipulative mainstream media and official, state-controlled education/indoctrination system.
It seems to turn, in your mind, people into violent automatons, and this is something you enjoy. I think your ancestors would not have respected you.By the way, I can trivially trick you into saying things in the presence of Muslims that guarantees that they will slaughter you like a dog. Islam is a tool, my friend; and a very powerful one. — alcontali
I don't think that banning them in schools is a good idea. It is a religous choice. — thewonder
I don't think overly simplistic solutions like imposing bans on styles of dress will do anything to help matters. — thewonder
To me, it is a simplistic solution that fails to address the real problems at hand. Better cultural dialogue will do better to undo intransigent fundamentalisms than somewhat offensive limitations imposed upon the expressions of one's faith such as the ban on the hijab. — thewonder
I don't think Islam (or fundamentalist Christianity, for example) really work with society. Or better put, not with one I want to live in. I don't think neo-conservatism does either, don't get me wrong, and they had a hat on their kids, I'd ban it from schools also.As society becomes more open to Islam, Islam will become more open to society. — thewonder
I'm suggesting that better cultural dialogue will result in that fundamentalist Muslims become less fundamentalist.
As an Anarchist, I was kind of hoping that with the Arab Spring that people in the region would just abandon Islam altogether and start some sort of Anarchist insurrection, but that never quite panned out. — thewonder
Me too. I am trying on an interventionist hat, here,now. I am tired of what kids are put through. And Islam can hardly demand tolerance of cultural differences, not these days. And it is a very intolerant religion.I guess I do think that you should respect a certain degree of cultural difference. — thewonder
Maybe.I think that the ban hinders dialogue — thewonder
Sure, the biggest thing that could be done would be to stop messing around with the Arab nations under the guise of noble or self-protective bs, the whole regime change monstrous Project for a New Century long term plan they have been carrying out. That would be the place to start.Imposing the ban only substantiates that Muslims are persecuted by the West, in my opinion. Some other methods need to be taken to effect a better situation for women in Muslim society. The West should also have a much different approach to Islam in general. — thewonder
Sure, the biggest thing that could be done would be to stop messing around with the Arab nations under the guise of noble or self-protective bs, the whole regime change monstrous Project for a New Century long term plan they have been carrying out. That would be the place to start. — Coben
Yes, I remember public schooling also and the other parents also. The truths we were taught. What was considered normal. The great deadening of the heart, that's now been tranfered over to treatments with psychotopics and social media. Religous people can be very blunt and spastic with their mindtrashing. And secular people can be so much subtler and all Versailles about it.Who gives a shit about foreign radicals? How about the US where child abuse is encouraged in the form of ignorant parents instilling lies in their children. — I like sushi
Yes, the neo-liberals and neo-cons have been trying these last five decades.Headdress? Why care? Are innocent minds being destroyed by institutional stupidity/ignorance? Yes, and it is NOT due to the influx of foreign religious ideas but due to the paranoia, hypocrisy, megalomania and willful disregard to rational fact-based analysis.
the evolutionary trait of 'tribalism' which humans have in common with other primates. — fresco
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