sparkey
Great Adventurer
- Messages
- 2,248
- Reaction score
- 359
- Points
- 83
- Location
- California
- Ethnic group
- 3/4 Colonial American, 1/8 Cornish, 1/8 Welsh
- Y-DNA haplogroup
- I2c1 PF3892+ (Swiss)
- mtDNA haplogroup
- U4a (Cornish)
If moslem men cannot contain their urges like other men in society, then some form of drug needs to be invented for them.
why do women need to suffer this form of " imprisonment "from society.
I'm shocked to find myself agreeing with you about anything, Sile, but in this case you have explained the issue very well.
Such a usually reasonable forum, now agreeing that authorities should force a drug on men of a certain religion. :useless:
What I'm talking about is the need for a general law, because our governments don't in fact have the resources to treat each case separately, and because it's never helpful, IMO, to be naïve about how people make decisions in the context of the family and society they live in.
What is with the epidemic of burka wearing in Canada, that now your courts are overloaded with these cases?!
For example, if a young woman growing up in a muslim neighbourhood in a distant suburb of Paris decided to ignore whatever clothing rules were being imposed by her family or her neighbours, she would likely be the victim of domestic violence at home or sexual violence on the street, so most young women never risk challenging such rules. That doesn't mean they're exercising free will. In most cases involving moslems in western countries, those rules don't yet require the wearing of burkas, but it does happen in some cases.
OK, and now you're saying that burkas are not an epidemic, but only "some cases." ...What was your point again?
See my last response to LeBrok for my opinion of how much a burka ban would help a domestic violence victim. As a general principle, you have to expect that making something illegal will make its underlying problems less public, and in fact more difficult to detect.
If a woman who grows up in a more liberal and typically western environment decides she wants to wear a burka, she can choose to move to Saudi Arabia and become human chattel, but if a young woman growing up in Saudi Arabia decides she wants a more western lifestyle, she doesn't have the option of leaving the country without her father's permission.
This doesn't address the question of what you would have the authorities do to a free, independent Muslim convert who chooses to start wearing a burka in public. Unless you're saying that she would be given an ultimatum to have it confiscated, or be exiled to Saudi Arabia?