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French MPs vote to ban Islamic full veil in public
One of those hot issues that seems to wind everyone up.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/10611398.stm I hate the full veil (I look dreadful in it) but I'm not sure I support it being banned. If it's going to be, then I think it should be banned along with other clothing that, depending on the ultimate reason, fall under the same criteria. For instance, if the issue is one of security and of the need to see people's faces in public buildings (a not unreasonable one, I think), then ban anything that covers the face in those instances - low-hanging hoodies, balaclavas, Jedi masks, whatever. Or better still, just have the rule that 'faces should not be covered in public buildings'. If it's about emphasizing the secular nature of the state, then I'm inclined to think the government should royally feck off! The point being, secularism and enforced irreligiosity are not the same thing. Yes I roll my eyes when I see women wandering around Cardiff in their niqabs and hijabs, and silently despair at how silly people are still clinging to all that nonsense in the 21st century - but secularism should surely be about people being free to express, within reasonable limits, their religious views in any way they choose; not about removing the insignia of religion (or religion-based culture) and attempting to make everyone - at least on the surface - non-religious. Which leaves us with the big one, women's rights, and the notion of the niqab and burka as the most visible symbol of a certain view of women pervasive in much of Islamic culture. And the question is, what do you do when many of the women themselves insist that they are not oppressed and that it's their right to cover their head/face? I'm truly not sure which is worse: the government stepping in and telling women what (not) to wear, or letting it continue. Maybe it shouldn't be banned but just needs to be challenged more vigorously. But how, and by whom? Thoughts? |
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this all boils down to the terrible racism against muslims and others of middle eastern descent in france. like it or not, the french are doing to muslims what the south did to blacks in the 50s.
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I know in this country (the UK) when I hear this topic being discussed, it doesn't take long to realise that women's rights and secularism aren't the overriding concerns of the anti-veilers (unless the far right parties and the great conservative British public have suddenly decided that it's time to ditch religion and fight the feminist cause :D ) No question about it, a lot of public opposition seems to boil down to little more than "these foreign looking people with their foreign ways, coming into our country... " etc etc). Really, I get the impression that narrow-mindedness and bigotry have a large but silent part in this 'debate'. But while legitimate reasons are being bandied around, it's still worth examining whether there really is a real case to be made for a ban. As I say, I'm not convinced. |
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there are no legitimate reasons... it's totally barbaric to ban certain types of clothing, religious or not. i know a lot of the right over here in the states are whining about socialism, but the europeans are moving way too close to authoritarianism when the government has the power to do this type of thing. this would never happen in the united states, the laws and bureaucracy aren't even set up for this type of psychotic control over people's personal lives.
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I suggest you check your local laws. . . I bet that, except on halloween, mardi gras, and new years eve, wearing a mask in public is unlawful. At least it is here, in fairfax county virginia. I hazard a guess, the same is true in most metropolitan areas of the US. |
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Most likely a a measure to curb the actions of the KKK. |
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have you ever heard of dragoncon? wearing a masque in public is not illegal...
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Want to bet US$100 that Georgia has laws against wearing a mask in general public??? come on bet. . . Its only gambling if you lose! |
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overturned in 1990 by lower court. reinstated 6 months later |
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And from this, back to my questioning of motives - if Conservative MP Philip Hollobone has a reputation for championing women's rights or campaignign for secularism, I must have missed it. The truth is, for a large part this is being fuelled by the typically British xenophobic, illiberal and pompous attitude of "When in Rome..." - by mean-spiritedness and tribalism. But very few in the wider public debate dares to acknowledge this (ironically ...for fear of causing offence to mean-spirited sour-faced bores! But of course we don't call it political correctness when dodging offence occurs that way round, do we?) |
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I find this kind of ban to be offensive. It's clearly not motivated by women's rights concerns, any more than opposition to the building of mosques in a number of states here in the U.S. is.
"Mosque construction plans have encountered resistance nationwide in recent months. Proposals to build mosques in Tennessee, Wisconsin and near ground zero in New York have all been met with protests. 'When churches decide to expand or build facilities, what's the purpose behind that?' asked Affad Sheikh, civil rights manager with the Greater Los Angeles Area chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations. 'Why is this question being asked of the Muslim community?'" and... The mosque would be built next to Calvary Baptist Church. Pastor Bill Rench worries the mosque is too large for the site. But he said he's particularly concerned about what he described as "the whole issue of Islam and what it stands for." "It's certainly a religion that is not only different but contrary to Christianity," he said. "Where it's dominant, religious freedom goes out the window ... the message of Islam is the spread of Islam by whatever means necessary." Putting the mosque next to Calvary is "almost like trying to put oil and water together," Rench added. The longer all these debates rage on, the more it becomes apparent to me that the opposition to Islamic veils, or mosques, or whatever else Islam-related is motivated by ignorance and flat-out bigotry. I'm getting sick to death of it. Sorry Deckard - I don't mean to hijack the thread into mosque-protest-land. I only posted it because it seemed somewhat pertinent to the discussion. :) |
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Not at all Sean - it's very relevant.
The other consideration of course is that by continuing to target Muslims - be it their clothing or their places of worship or hunting out all these "in case it offends Muslims" stories - we end up cultivating a siege mentality and pushing more and more Muslims into ever more conservative and extremist positions. Keep attacking an 'out group' and it makes integration and moderation that much harder. For me, as I think I've said before, this is the single most frustrating aspect of it all; this feedback loop. |
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Chris Hitchens in Slate:
The French legislators who seek to repudiate the wearing of the veil or the burqa—whether the garment covers "only" the face or the entire female body—are often described as seeking to impose a "ban." To the contrary, they are attempting to lift a ban: a ban on the right of women to choose their own dress, a ban on the right of women to disagree with male and clerical authority, and a ban on the right of all citizens to look one another in the face. The proposed law is in the best traditions of the French republic, which declares all citizens equal before the law and—no less important—equal in the face of one another. Ah I see.. so all the French are proposing is "lifting" a ban? Presumably conservative Muslims are similarly "lifting" the right of women to reveal their heads/faces? Seriously Hitch, for all your strengths, every now and again you come out with the most shocking sophistry. |
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Hitchens would throw his own mother at the pope if he felt like he had a clear shot. Everything I read of hitchens suggests he would tolerate a police state if it were free of religion.
Its retarded for a government body to posture themselves as a solution to this problem and I gaurantee it will cause a dangerous precedent in western culture. Governments have absolutely no business debating such a ban. It gets really old when the culture is jammed with the attitude that people who don't want governments enacting this ban somehow support the evil in question, in this case burqas. |
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Honestly, me personally, I wouldn't have a major problem with the government coming out with a rule about keeping faces uncovered in certain public buildings. It's just about at the limit of what I'd find acceptable in the security-liberty trade-off, but I could just about accept it if the reason was right. The problem I have is that in this instance the reasons aren't remotely convincing, or at least they're reasons that the government has no business getting involved in (effectively forced integration). And yet it has such overwhelming backing, it's disturbing. A British newspaper carried out a poll last month and found a ban on burkhas is supported by 99 per cent of Britons Quote:
EDIT: The Islamic veil across Europe |
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If the concern is truly women's rights, then I would expect to see legislation more tailored to combating the core of the issue as opposed to what this is - simply targeting one of it's symptoms. And targeting it in such a way that will actually be harder on the women who ARE compelled to wear burqas by their husbands or clerics no less. Instead of just being forced to wear a burqa, now the woman will also be forced to pay a fine and is left stuck between a rock and a hard place - do as their misogynistic husband is telling them to do or face the consequences, or do as the country's laws are telling them to do or face the consequences? |
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Well... the real thing behind all this is that the actual right government here is just sending a "message" to the 10% approx of extreme right voters so that they'll vote "correctly" at the next 2012 elections... the rest doesn't really exist and the women's right thing is just a pretext (studies here are talking of about less then 400 women actually wearing a burqa, in a country of 65 million with approx 5 to 6 million Muslims).
Apart from that, I have to say that I wouldn't feel very normal to meet a woman wearing a burqa in a school, a Post office or an hospital... which actually never happened to me here... (and I'm not saying that because I'm totally opposed to this government, being myself left oriented). |
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This is what many people are saying but the reality to this is that if you are uncomfortable meeting a woman in a burqa, it is your problem - not the women wearing it. So why should she be forced by the law to not wear it because you are uncomfortable with it? (That is not an attack at you directly, but rather using your comment to point out this issue) |
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myrrh, i rarely agree with you, but this is one thing we have in common. but i doubt you would show the same tolerance towards other issues under the sharia law system.
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Sorry to keep putting a British spin on a French vote, but another poll has just been conducted in Blighty:
Islamic Burka Ban: 67% Of Britons Agree More than two-thirds of people believe there should be a complete ban on wearing the burka across Britain, according to a Five News and YouGov poll. The Five News and YouGov poll revealed out of more than 2,000 respondents, 67% either agreed or strongly agreed with a British ban. One of those who thinks the burka should be outlawed is the chairman of the Muslim Educational Centre in Oxford. Imam Dr Taj Hargey: Quote:
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In the UK the "debate" continues.
First, the Daily Mail was apoplectic with rage (when is it not?) when Conservative environment secretary Caroline Spelman appeared to defend the wearing of burkas. Quote:
The Conservative immigration minister Damian Green was next up, insisting that the French ban was "very unlikely" to be copied in the UK. ("Telling people what they can and can't wear, if they're just walking down the street, is a rather un-British thing to do ... we're a tolerant and mutually respectful society.") All the while, the right wing newspapers are doing their best to faciliate a calm and rational debate on this topic: http://i28.tinypic.com/15d00mo.jpg I'm confused. I thought it was only "the PC brigade" that called for things to be banned? As in "Now the PC Brigade wants to ban the veil... in case it offends.... and YOU pay.... " etc etc Btw, isn't that photo great? Nice and direct, communicating to the dear reader the gravity of what Britain is up against. Photojournalism at its best. |
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And off topic, I need to find that Daily Star cover to send to my friend Pete Burns. I can't seem to track it down so far - where did you get it Deckard? |
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Sean,
It's just a thumbnail from Sky News (slide 3) I take it your friend isn't the one who founded Dead or Alive and went on to... (well, I'll leave it there just in case ;) ) EDIT: Here's today's Daily Star: http://i28.tinypic.com/16aa32b.jpg This isn't the only national newspaper that's been spending years doing this sort of thing. |
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Anyway... yes, veiled Muslims... Muslim woman wearing veil 'refused bus ride' in London Yasmin said at first she boarded the bus by mistake when it was not in service to ask where it was going, but was told by the driver to get off. "About 10 minutes later... the passengers started getting on. When I went forward to show my ticket he said, 'Get off the bus'. I presumed he was still angry because I got on the bus before. He said, 'I am not going to take you on the bus because you two are a threat.' I realised it wasn't due to me getting on the bus, this may be a racist attack."Good for her! |
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