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 Topic: French parliament approves ban on face veils

 (Read 28904 times)
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  • Re: French parliament approves ban on face veils
     Reply #90 - July 14, 2010, 08:09 PM

    Grow a pair  Roll Eyes


     Cheesy Ok, bud, I'll get right on that.

    what I'm hearing is a win win. if she's forced to wear the veil when going out, she'll be forced not to by law. If she's so oppressed that she's not allowed to leave the house without the veil, if she doesn't want to live that way she goes to social services.

    The options are already there without this law in place. It's merely forcing her families hand if the law is in place. In reality i'm not sure how they would enforce a woman not to go out whether it's to go to work, pick up the kids, get the groceries or what have you. And if that family is so unhappy as to consider moving to another country what chance did this person ever have?


    This is a consequentialist argument that does not address the justice of the law, and I'm not even convinced your analysis of the consequences is correct.

    Quote
    I don't see a viable alternative solution. the options are leave it as it is, or change the law.


    Someone who sees solutions to social problems as emanating from the state indeed could not conceive of a viable alternative. Having the state enact a blanket ban on some sort of personal behavior is always the lazy, unimaginative, immoral, and cowardly solution-- little wonder why pandering, sleazebag politicians are so fond of them.

    Any meaningful and lasting change in society has almost always come from the ground up and very rarely from the top down.

    You guys wonder how the Muslims manage to force the government and its various authorities/agencies to concede to so many of their objectionable or silly demands? The common explanations given are that British culture has become too PC or that the government lacks balls. The former may be true, the latter isn't-- I wouldn't classify a government that has consistently been sending soldiers and intelligence agents to far-flung regions of the globe, continually engaging in direct or proxy wars between the 12th century and 2010 to be one that "lacks balls".

    No the real reason is that the Muslim community is simply better organized and more active than the secularists and other opponents of "Islamification" (not fond of that term, but we'll use it for shorthand right now). That's fuckin it, that's the main thing.

    Look, if you work in a factory you can vote every couple of years for some politician who promises to raise the minimum wage (thus driving all wages up) and hope he keeps his promise OR you can take matters into your own hands with your co-workers, get organized, united, and disciplined (form a labor union), and use your collective leverage to bargain better wages and working conditions from your employer right now.

    The secular opponents of political Islam in the UK and Europe (I don't anticipate it being a big issue in the US anytime soon, despite the gloom and doom pronouncement of the right-wing) have a similar choice to make. You can take a passive approach, voting for this or that politician hoping they'll pass some damn law that will make things better (and be prepared to give up some of your society's liberty in the process), or you can get organized, united, and disciplined and let both the government and society at large react to your organizational power.

    The goal should be to make religious fundamentalism socially unacceptable (here our problem is with the Christian fundies, there it's with the Islamists) no matter where you live, what your ethnicity is, or what name you give to God(s). It shouldn't be to pass legislation which will erode religious liberty while making very little real impact. Even if you take a consequentialist approach, history has shown such measures have a tendency to backfire and only increase religious fervor (again, what will the UK do if Muslim women start engaging in civil disobedience over wearing the burqua and provoke arrests and the use of riot police? Do you think that helps or hurts matters?)-- state-enforced secularism only works long-term if very repressive, totalitarian measures are used (like Hoxha's Albania).

    I'm still sitting on the fence on this issue, but I would have no complaints if France or any other country banned the burka/niqab in public places.

    The main reason is security.


    What do you mean by "public places"?

    I honestly think the "oh it's my religion!" argument is clouding this issue.  ANY other face covering would not be allowed in public places, so the burka/niqab shouldn't be either.


    Maybe they should be-- ever think of that? If someone stood in, what's that square/park in London where you have the people soapboxing, ranting and shit? Anyhow, if someone stood in the middle of that park and wore a balaclava to symbolize how modern society has become faceless and started making a political speech, you think the cops should arrest that person?

    Personally, I don't see how it's justified to ban face coverings outside no matter what the reason for wearing it is. In a secure facility I can understand it, or at a private institution with security concerns like a bank or a jewelery store (though that should be the decision of the proprietors), but just outside on the street? Fuck that. That doesn't, in and of itself, pose any more danger than you clenching your fist does-- should we arrest anyone who clenches their fist because they might be planning on hitting someone with it?

    Quote
    You know how we had a Draw Muhammad day?  I think we should have a "Wear A Balaclava Day" too just to see if the burka defenders feel comfortable with non-Muslim men and women walking around with their faces covered... in shops, in schools, in hospitals, in airports, in train stations etc.


    See-- that I don't have a problem with. I actually think it's a good idea. I just don't think having the state ban something like that is a good idea.

    fuck you
  • Re: French parliament approves ban on face veils
     Reply #91 - July 14, 2010, 08:11 PM

    what I'm hearing is a win win. if she's forced to wear the veil when going out, she'll be forced not to by law. If she's so oppressed that she's not allowed to leave the house without the veil, if she doesn't want to live that way she goes to social services.

    A win for you or for women's self-expression? Interesting that you fail to mention women choosing to wear the veil of their own free-will, only those coerced / forced. Are we to assume that the number who are not forced are so insignificant as to not be mentioned or considered? Would you mind providing some statistics?

    The options are already there without this law in place. It's merely forcing her families hand if the law is in place. In reality i'm not sure how they would enforce a woman not to go out whether it's to go to work, pick up the kids, get the groceries or what have you. And if that family is so unhappy as to consider moving to another country what chance did this person ever have?

    Again I ask, is this actually in the interest of the fictional victim you hold up and argue from behind? You speak of "merely forcing her families hand", without reasonably considering how this would actually affect women being placed in that situation. Would being under something resembling house arrest make it easier for them to obtain help? What of the women who might even decide to stay in their houses out of choice, or obedience. How does forcing them into that corner assist in their "integration", exactly?

    I don't see a viable alternative solution. the options are leave it as it is, or change the law.

    There is no solution, because there isn't an identifiable problem. If someone could identify a problem that women were being forced to wear veils, then helplines akin to the Forced Marriage Unit could be put in place - or we could discuss other measures. Changing the law should be a last resort, not the first.

    It should go without saying that I have serious issues with the hijab, not just the veil. However, I fear that imagined female victims are being leveraged in order to add an emotional dimension to the debate, which fundamentally is about curtailing women's freedom of self-expression.

    Each of us a failed state in stark relief against the backdrop of the perfect worlds we seek.
    Propagandhi - Failed States
  • Re: French parliament approves ban on face veils
     Reply #92 - July 14, 2010, 08:15 PM

    It should go without saying that I have serious issues with the hijab, not just the veil. However, I fear that imagined female victims are being leveraged in order to add an emotional dimension to the debate, which fundamentally is about curtailing women's freedom of self-expression.


    +1

    'The greatest glory of living lies not in never falling but in rising everytime you fall'
  • Re: French parliament approves ban on face veils
     Reply #93 - July 14, 2010, 08:20 PM

    No the real reason is that the Muslim community is simply better organized and more active than the secularists...

    Bingo.

    The goal should be to make religious fundamentalism socially unacceptable (here our problem is with the Christian fundies, there it's with the Islamists) no matter where you live, what your ethnicity is, or what name you give to God(s). It shouldn't be to pass legislation which will erode religious liberty while making very little real impact. Even if you take a consequentialist approach, history has shown such measures have a tendency to backfire and only increase religious fervor (again, what will the UK do if Muslim women start engaging in civil disobedience over wearing the burqua and provoke arrests and the use of riot police? Do you think that helps or hurts matters?)-- state-enforced secularism only works long-term if very repressive, totalitarian measures are used (like Hoxha's Albania).

    +1

    Each of us a failed state in stark relief against the backdrop of the perfect worlds we seek.
    Propagandhi - Failed States
  • Re: French parliament approves ban on face veils
     Reply #94 - July 14, 2010, 08:33 PM

    You're all thinking too esoterically. Try to consider the biological basis of behaviour before you consider speech or thought. Covering your face is a very elemental phenomenon. Look at the earliest forms of theatre.

    Religion is ignorance giftwrapped in lyricism.
  • Re: French parliament approves ban on face veils
     Reply #95 - July 14, 2010, 08:37 PM

    Yes, sl-- covering faces in most social circumstances is bad. No one disagrees with that here I don't think. That's not the issue-- the issue is whether the state has a right to ban it or not. We are adults, the state is not our parent there to make sure we make good decisions and tell us what to do and how to live our lives.

    If you take the position that is the state's role fine, but I never want to hear anything here from you about you supporting freedom, liberty, etc. if that's your position.

    fuck you
  • Re: French parliament approves ban on face veils
     Reply #96 - July 14, 2010, 08:51 PM

    There is no solution, because there isn't an identifiable problem. If someone could identify a problem that women were being forced to wear veils, then helplines akin to the Forced Marriage Unit could be put in place - or we could discuss other measures. Changing the law should be a last resort, not the first.


    +1

    The unlived life is not worth examining.
  • Re: French parliament approves ban on face veils
     Reply #97 - July 14, 2010, 08:53 PM

    You cover your facial muscles at your peril because people are immediately distrustful of your intention and put on guard before you even get the chance to open your mouth. Why initiate each encounter at a disadvantage? It doesn't make sense, unless you want to be deliberately confrontational, in which case they are right to distrust your intentions.


    That is all well and good for some. I see no reason why my needing to see other peoples faces should mean that another female cannot cover their face if they wish to.

    Besides considering we are in a period where people communicate via text messaging, non-video phones etc.
    Communication is not and never will be a valid reason to ban.

    It does not prevent communication. The problem here is the fact that you just do not want to talk to someone wearing it. So the issue is not them.

    Blind faith is an ironic gift to return to the Creator of human intelligence

  • Re: French parliament approves ban on face veils
     Reply #98 - July 14, 2010, 08:57 PM

    I'm still sitting on the fence on this issue, but I would have no complaints if France or any other country banned the burka/niqab in public places.

    The main reason is security.


    What security risks?

    Who has blown someone up in a veil in France? Veils have been in practice for a long time, it seems to me only now the "security" argument is used as a reason to ban.

    I have no problem with businesses having their own rules in regard to workers or government buildings but public streets? It's the prohibition in all public places that annoys me.

    Blind faith is an ironic gift to return to the Creator of human intelligence

  • Re: French parliament approves ban on face veils
     Reply #99 - July 14, 2010, 09:01 PM

    The whole essence of my point is that if you get the all important facial signals (the triangle of interest - eyes+nose+mouth mainly) you don't even need speech - it's redundant. Body talk, including what your facial expressions are, is shorthand. Using them indicates openness and usually potential friendship. Why create barriers unless you've got some ulterior motive?

    Religion is ignorance giftwrapped in lyricism.
  • Re: French parliament approves ban on face veils
     Reply #100 - July 14, 2010, 09:08 PM

    I do not see why if someone wears a veil automatically means they should be suspected. Perhaps demonstrating what they believe is their religion or culture is enough of a motive to be a suspect.

    As surprising as it is, there has not been many attacks by people wearing veils in France or most of Europe.

    Blind faith is an ironic gift to return to the Creator of human intelligence

  • Re: French parliament approves ban on face veils
     Reply #101 - July 14, 2010, 09:13 PM

    It does not prevent communication. The problem here is the fact that you just do not want to talk to someone wearing it. So the issue is not them.


    +1

    I think that's what it is, because I seriously can't see how I would have a significant problem communicating with someone in a veil. I wouldn't even ask her to willingly take it off, nevermind ask the state to come along and force it off her.

    The unlived life is not worth examining.
  • Re: French parliament approves ban on face veils
     Reply #102 - July 14, 2010, 09:14 PM

     @ Meredith: Grief, this is wearing. It's nothing to do with their religion - it's because the important part of their faces , to other people, is covered. Why is that so difficult to understand?

    Religion is ignorance giftwrapped in lyricism.
  • Re: French parliament approves ban on face veils
     Reply #103 - July 14, 2010, 09:15 PM

    The whole essence of my point is that if you get the all important facial signals (the triangle of interest - eyes+nose+mouth mainly) you don't even need speech - it's redundant. Body talk, including what your facial expressions are, is shorthand. Using them indicates openness and usually potential friendship. Why create barriers unless you've got some ulterior motive?


    Please explain how this justifies a government ban.

    fuck you
  • Re: French parliament approves ban on face veils
     Reply #104 - July 14, 2010, 09:20 PM

    The govt only responds to what people write in to their elected reps. If they get an agitational level of mail, some MP with a bee in his bonnet decides to make a populist name for himself. But the announcement in itself indicates sufficient groundswell of opinion.

    Religion is ignorance giftwrapped in lyricism.
  • Re: French parliament approves ban on face veils
     Reply #105 - July 14, 2010, 09:25 PM

    So whatever the majority wants, the state should enact/enforce?

    fuck you
  • Re: French parliament approves ban on face veils
     Reply #106 - July 14, 2010, 09:25 PM

    The govt only responds to what people write in to their elected reps. If they get an agitational level of mail, some MP with a bee in his bonnet decides to make a populist name for himself. But the announcement in itself indicates sufficient groundswell of opinion.


    So "public opinion" is enough to infringe on another's rights? Majority is enough to have laws against the minority?

    If that was the case death penalty would have been introduced in UK a long time ago not to mention other horrific laws.

    Blind faith is an ironic gift to return to the Creator of human intelligence

  • Re: French parliament approves ban on face veils
     Reply #107 - July 14, 2010, 09:26 PM

    @ Meredith: Grief, this is wearing. It's nothing to do with their religion - it's because the important part of their faces , to other people, is covered. Why is that so difficult to understand?


    Does not justify banning and infringing on freedom of expression.

    Blind faith is an ironic gift to return to the Creator of human intelligence

  • Re: French parliament approves ban on face veils
     Reply #108 - July 14, 2010, 09:29 PM


    fuck you
  • Re: French parliament approves ban on face veils
     Reply #109 - July 14, 2010, 09:51 PM

    Does not justify banning and infringing on freedom of expression.


    It has nothing to do with freedom of expression. In fact, quite the contrary if you stop to think about it. It should apply to all members of society except those who need to cover up for medical reasons.
    Hiding yourself in western society is always viewed negatively. It means you have something to hide. It is a basic biological motion to cover your mouth when you are not telling the truth. Children cannot help it and adults perform some sort of displacement behaviour instead, like rubbing their nose or touching an ear.
    It is a basic biological imperative to uncover your face if you want to be accepted unless your ancestors have lived for many generations in a fiercely hot climate where you fry if you don't cover up. Then it makes sense: but to incorporate it into a credo and make some big morality deal out of it is just plain loony, esp if you go and live somewhere the climate makes it biologically redundant. And more especially if it creates health problems if there's not enough sunlight - that's anywhere North of Reading by the way in the UK.

    Religion is ignorance giftwrapped in lyricism.
  • Re: French parliament approves ban on face veils
     Reply #110 - July 14, 2010, 10:00 PM

    Quote
    Freedom of expression is a cornerstone of democratic rights and freedoms.

    Freedom of expression is essential in enabling democracy to work and public participation in decision-making. Violations of freedom of expression often go hand in hand with other violations, in particular the right to freedom of association and assembly.


    Has everything to do with freedom of expression

    This also reeks of xenophobia and a means of using the cover of "protecting women liberty" to justify prejudices. It is not for the State to tell the citizens what they can and cannot wear in public!

    Blind faith is an ironic gift to return to the Creator of human intelligence

  • Re: French parliament approves ban on face veils
     Reply #111 - July 14, 2010, 10:05 PM

    It has nothing to do with freedom of expression. In fact, quite the contrary if you stop to think about it. It should apply to all members of society except those who need to cover up for medical reasons.
    Hiding yourself in western society is always viewed negatively. It means you have something to hide. It is a basic biological motion to cover your mouth when you are not telling the truth. Children cannot help it and adults perform some sort of displacement behaviour instead, like rubbing their nose or touching an ear.
    It is a basic biological imperative to uncover your face if you want to be accepted unless your ancestors have lived for many generations in a fiercely hot climate where you fry if you don't cover up. Then it makes sense: but to incorporate it into a credo and make some big morality deal out of it is just plain loony, esp if you go and live somewhere the climate makes it biologically redundant. And more especially if it creates health problems if there's not enough sunlight - that's anywhere North of Reading by the way in the UK.


     banghead

    You don't get it. You likely never will. You're a born-again authoritarian, secular Puritan, and "won't somebody please think of the children" nanny-stater who hasn't the slightest concept of liberty and natural rights. You need to read nothing but Locke, Jefferson, Rousseau, Nozick, Rawls, Rothbard, Bakunin, Proudhon, and Mill for a couple of years if there's to be any hope at deprogramming you from the cult of the state.

    Has everything to do with freedom of expression

    This also reeks of xenophobia and a means of using the cover of "protecting women liberty" to justify prejudices. It is not for the State to tell the citizens what they can and cannot wear in public!


    Not sure if you're responding to SL here or not, but if you are, I'm pretty sure SL's position on the topic has nothing to do with xenophobia (he's never struck me as a bigot) and everything to do with him viewing a legitimate role of the state to be to protect us from our own bad decisions, even if that results in a violation of someone's personal autonomy. The mentality is quite clear.

    fuck you
  • Re: French parliament approves ban on face veils
     Reply #112 - July 14, 2010, 10:12 PM


    Not sure if you're responding to SL here or not, but if you are, I'm pretty sure SL's position on the topic has nothing to do with xenophobia (he's never struck me as a bigot) and everything to do with him viewing a legitimate role of the state to be to protect us from our own bad decisions, even if that results in a violation of someone's personal autonomy. The mentality is quite clear.


    Oh no, I meant France's law on this reeks of it not the people on this board.

    Blind faith is an ironic gift to return to the Creator of human intelligence

  • Re: French parliament approves ban on face veils
     Reply #113 - July 14, 2010, 10:14 PM

    Okay, last post this evening, then good night, this place is too addictive!

    If people want freedom, they need to do more than say so, they need to grow a fucking spine and demand it for everyone at all times (again, except when such freedom directly and immediately infringes on the freedom of others).


    I hear what you are saying and respect it. The issue I have is the type of freedom that is being demanded and the consequences. Under liberal constructs,  Muslims can demand their kids to not play music at schools or get medical treatment if there are traces of a pig. They can voice about how there should be a law not to offend them when it comes to Mohammed depictions. Then they can voice about Sharia Law and Islamic Finance. Such freedom might not hurt/infringe the rights of others, but it infringes and fails themselves as a group (in my opinion). These are demands coming from the ground up also, but that doesn't make them right.

    I don't know how far back they go, but knock yourself out: http://www.statutelaw.gov.uk/ChronIndex.aspx
    I don't need to look it up, I know what the answer is without looking.


    Holy smokes! Thanks, bookmarked. Pretty hard to search through, so I cheated: I asked my sister who studies law. She said the majority of public laws in the UK are superceded by the EU laws. The only cases that comes to mind with respect to UK public laws being harsher than the EU's would be that of anti-terrorism legislation, there is a specific case with a former British Guantanamo Bay detainee trying to used the EU law to win his case (I don't know the specifics on this).

    But a blanket ban on full-grown women who can exercise the choice not to wear it and to leave their family and community if necessary is not justified.


    The way to counter it is by allowing these girls to get support if they need it. You seem to think the way to counter it is by forcing all Muslim girls NOT to wear it. That isn't true.


    I am very open to other suggestions, but if they were so obvious other nations would have implemented them by now. Since I think it is an intrinsic problem to begin with (division, oppression, lack of integration, security) I don't think a specific  unit can help with the matter.

    There is no solution, because there isn't an identifiable problem. If someone could identify a problem that women were being forced to wear veils, then helplines akin to the Forced Marriage Unit could be put in place - or we could discuss other measures. Changing the law should be a last resort, not the first.


    Good point. Only when obvious rights are infringed is it clear there needs to be a Forced XYZ Unit. But it is not so obvious where the roots of restrictive/divisive and lack of integration issues originate from, or where to draw the line with what is divisive or oppressive or intolerant and what isn't. And well, this is part of the hesitancy I have with use a law being used. However from my experience the veil is both oppressive, divisive and lacks integration with society but I'd welcome more research and data on this (as Mohsin Zaidi mentions, see reader comments below).

    However, I fear that imagined female victims are being leveraged in order to add an emotional dimension to the debate, which fundamentally is about curtailing women's freedom of self-expression.


    If it is imagined then I'm pretty sure between now and when the law passes there will be clear evidence in the media that veil does not equate with division/oppression or lack of integration. I place my bet on The Economist to do this, if this is the case!

    Speaking of which, a couple of articles from May:

    Running for cover: Both in Western Europe and the Muslim world (see article) the covering of female heads and faces is stirring passion—and posing a dilemma for governments

    ... and ...

    A bad idea... : ...whose time may soon come in parts of Europe

    ... and some reader comments on the article.

    Quote
    A dress the issue

    SIR – I read your leader calling for toleration of Muslim women wearing face-covering veils in public (“A bad idea…”, May 15th). Yet wearing the burqa has nothing whatsoever to do with religion. It is purely and simply to do with the subjugation of women. It is about control and possession and not about Islam and the Prophet. It is overt and aggressive sexism and it is a disgrace that it is accepted at all. We should no more tolerate the wearing of the burqa in public than we permit nakedness. Banning it is no more an infringement on individual rights than is a ban on public nudity.

    Voltaire would turn in his grave if he knew how you turned his noble and liberal utterance about defending to the death the right to free speech into an endorsement for wearing the burqa.
    Related items

    Elizabeth Purdam
    Swindon, Wiltshire

    SIR – Did you ever ask yourself that if this walking penitentiary is such a worthy symbol of religious piety, why isn’t the burqa worn by men?

    Olav Nilssen
    Bergen, Norway

    SIR – You were quite right to argue that sexual equality and secularism are insufficient grounds on which to ban garments that cover the face, but were quite wrong to dismiss security concerns. The problem is not merely “the need to be identifiable”, but that it is far more difficult to provide security in crowds when faces cannot be observed. You say that women can be required to lift their veils “if necessary”. Would that be before or after a veiled suicide-bomber detonates her (or his) device?

    Zach Liegel
    Madison, Wisconsin

    SIR – There is little distinction between a country that forces women to wear the burqa and a country that forces them not to. Although the former is more easy to categorise as going against our Western notions of equality and secularism, the latter just as readily violates those fundamental principles.

    You suggested enforcing existing domestic-violence laws to tackle the concern that women are being forced to wear the garment. Another good idea would be to set up an initiative that encourages dialogue with women who wear the burqa to find out their genuine reasons for doing so.

    Mohsin Zaidi
    Brussels

  • Re: French parliament approves ban on face veils
     Reply #114 - July 14, 2010, 10:19 PM

    @Q . It's nothing to do with anything you've mentioned. It's to do with biological imperatives - things that none of us can avoid. Take a step to one side and see it from a different and more fundamental POV.
    Tell you what - do some people watching for a few weeks (instead of this screen) and take notes, just like Jane Goodall did at Gombe on the chimps and then you'll understand what I mean a bit more.

    Religion is ignorance giftwrapped in lyricism.
  • Re: French parliament approves ban on face veils
     Reply #115 - July 14, 2010, 10:25 PM

    PS you're right about the xenophobia. How does a Greek/Sicilian/Englishman get to be xenophobic?

    Religion is ignorance giftwrapped in lyricism.
  • Re: French parliament approves ban on face veils
     Reply #116 - July 14, 2010, 10:25 PM

    No offense, SL, but I just can't do this with you anymore, okay?

    fuck you
  • Re: French parliament approves ban on face veils
     Reply #117 - July 14, 2010, 10:37 PM

    No offense, SL, but I just can't do this with you anymore, okay?


    I have the urge to send him some Locke and Jefferson material to read.
    He just does not get it.

    Blind faith is an ironic gift to return to the Creator of human intelligence

  • Re: French parliament approves ban on face veils
     Reply #118 - July 14, 2010, 10:40 PM

    OK, If you'll promise to read some Darwin and Goodall. Theoretical , highfalutin tracts on human, so called , rights; especially historical dated ones just don't cut it next to Nature.

    Religion is ignorance giftwrapped in lyricism.
  • Re: French parliament approves ban on face veils
     Reply #119 - July 14, 2010, 10:42 PM

    Can't speak for her but already have, and Morris. Evolution and justice are not identical. Fuck Social Darwinism. I'm done man.

    fuck you
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