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Theme Changer

 Poll

  • Question: Do you agree with Osama bin Laden's opposition to the French burqa ban?
  • Yes - 4 (12.9%)
  • No - 5 (16.1%)
  • Don't know - 0 (0%)
  • Fuck you (included by popular request) - 22 (71%)
  • Total Voters: 31

 Topic: Another question for ex-Muslims

 (Read 22003 times)
  • Previous page 1 2 34 5 6 Next page « Previous thread | Next thread »
  • Re: Another question for ex-Muslims
     Reply #60 - October 30, 2010, 04:21 PM

    It's good to disagree on things. Show's there is opportunity to learn from each other.


    Nice sentiment, but what exactly have you learned here, HighOctane? As far as I can tell, your views now are identical to when you arrived.

    Personally, I'd rather have more Muslims (and religious folks in general) like abuyunus2 around than atheists like you. I don't want to be controlled by God, superstition, religious authorities, or the state. Abuyunus doesn't want to enforce his beliefs on others, but you do. The state is your Allah. You traded one authority for another, one set of rules for another. Why should I, or anyone else, respect someone who wants the state (or any other authority) to regulate their personal behavior, to violate their rights? Look, you're a nice guy and all, but I can't respect anyone who wants the state to regulate personal behavior and violate people's rights.

    Finally, what's that on your shirt?

    "In battle, the well-honed spork is more dangerous than the mightiest sword" -- Sun Tzu
  • Re: Another question for ex-Muslims
     Reply #61 - October 30, 2010, 04:28 PM

    As do you mate but I don't express it. It's good to disagree on things. Show's there is opportunity to learn from each other. And when people don't like to learn or share their thoughts, it's good to have people you disagree with I think because ... :

    Winston Churchill - "You have enemies? Good. That means you've stood up for something, sometime in your life."


    lol, i don't consider you an enemy

    ''we are morally and philisophically in the best position to win the league'' - Arsene Wenger
  • Re: Another question for ex-Muslims
     Reply #62 - October 30, 2010, 04:31 PM

    Pretty sure he means me there.  grin12

    "In battle, the well-honed spork is more dangerous than the mightiest sword" -- Sun Tzu
  • Re: Another question for ex-Muslims
     Reply #63 - October 30, 2010, 04:33 PM

    lol, i don't consider you an enemy


    Come off it Abu, I'm quite sure he did not intend it that way..

    "Modern man's great illusion has been to convince himself that of all that has gone before he represents the zenith of human accomplishment, but can't summon the mental powers to read anything more demanding than emoticons. Fascinating. "

    One very horny Turk I met on the net.
  • Re: Another question for ex-Muslims
     Reply #64 - October 30, 2010, 04:34 PM

    Finally, what's that on your shirt?


    It's a Poppy for Remembrance day.. as if you didn't know.. Roll Eyes

    "Modern man's great illusion has been to convince himself that of all that has gone before he represents the zenith of human accomplishment, but can't summon the mental powers to read anything more demanding than emoticons. Fascinating. "

    One very horny Turk I met on the net.
  • Re: Another question for ex-Muslims
     Reply #65 - October 30, 2010, 04:37 PM

    What's with the rolly-eyes shit?

    I didn't know, that's why I asked. It looked like a photoshopped bullet hole/bloodstain or something. Don't forget we don't do the whole poppies for Veterans Day here, plus it's not even November yet. Memorial Day is really our version of "Remembrance Day"

    "In battle, the well-honed spork is more dangerous than the mightiest sword" -- Sun Tzu
  • Re: Another question for ex-Muslims
     Reply #66 - October 30, 2010, 04:45 PM

    Someone wake me up when we've stopped pretending the Burka is a fashion accessory.

    Too fucking busy, and vice versa.
  • Re: Another question for ex-Muslims
     Reply #67 - October 30, 2010, 04:48 PM

    Wake up, then. No one is doing that here, and I do mean no one. If you can find one person on this thread who does not acknowledge that the burqua is generally oppressive, I'll give you head.

    "In battle, the well-honed spork is more dangerous than the mightiest sword" -- Sun Tzu
  • Re: Another question for ex-Muslims
     Reply #68 - October 30, 2010, 05:03 PM

    So we understand that it is actually the practice of the burka and the oppressive nature of it that is under attack, and that it isn't and never was an issue of what women can and cannot wear. Good. We are making progress.

    Too fucking busy, and vice versa.
  • Re: Another question for ex-Muslims
     Reply #69 - October 30, 2010, 05:26 PM

    So we understand that it is actually the practice of the burka and the oppressive nature of it that is under attack, and that it isn't and never was an issue of what women can and cannot wear. Good. We are making progress.


    No.

    Look, this has been my position on this issue from the very beginning, and I'm not speaking for anyone else on the topic, but based on previous discussions here I would venture to say that most, if not all, of the people on this board opposing a burqua ban share a similar outlook on the subject:

    1. The burqua, whether an individual woman freely chooses to wear it or not, is oppressive and intrinsically linked with Islam's gender apartheid.

    2. Many, perhaps most women wearing it, are coerced or pressured into wearing it by their family/husband.

    (a) For these women, in Western countries, there are options to get out of such oppressive relationships

    (b) This is not an easy choice for women in such situations, but important life choices are rarely easy or without risk/sacrifice, it's not the role of the state to make personal choices for people.

    (c) Funding for organizations/agencies which can help women and their children out of such oppressive environments should be increased and made a priority. Hell, I'd support giving the women free guns and training them how to use them if their husbands try to force them back. The state can support these women's choice to liberate themselves, but cannot make that choice for them.

    3. Some women freely choose to wear it as an expression of their religious beliefs. This may be a small minority of niqabis, and the beliefs they are expressing we may find repellent, but the state is obligated, as a matter of justice, to respect this choice. A blanket ban on the burqua/niqab precludes this.

    4. In addition to whether it is just for the state to impose such a blanket ban, there are potential negative consequences of such a ban-- women being forced to stay home more by their husbands/families for example, further segregation, and perhaps resistance/civil disobedience towards the law that could result in a political and moral victory for the radical Muslims.

    In a nutshell, that's where I'm coming from on this issue.

    "In battle, the well-honed spork is more dangerous than the mightiest sword" -- Sun Tzu
  • Re: Another question for ex-Muslims
     Reply #70 - October 30, 2010, 05:34 PM

    ^ women that take pride in wearing burqua , feel violated by the ban since it's like humiliating  them publicly . what can we do about that ??



  • Re: Another question for ex-Muslims
     Reply #71 - October 30, 2010, 05:36 PM

    A: Don't ban it.

    "In battle, the well-honed spork is more dangerous than the mightiest sword" -- Sun Tzu
  • Re: Another question for ex-Muslims
     Reply #72 - October 30, 2010, 05:39 PM

    No.

    Look, this has been my position on this issue from the very beginning, and I'm not speaking for anyone else on the topic, but based on previous discussions here I would venture to say that most, if not all, of the people on this board opposing a burqua ban share a similar outlook on the subject:

    1. The burqua, whether an individual woman freely chooses to wear it or not, is oppressive and intrinsically linked with Islam's gender apartheid.

    2. Many, perhaps most women wearing it, are coerced or pressured into wearing it by their family/husband.

    (a) For these women, in Western countries, there are options to get out of such oppressive relationships

    (b) This is not an easy choice for women in such situations, but important life choices are rarely easy or without risk/sacrifice, it's not the role of the state to make personal choices for people.

    (c) Funding for organizations/agencies which can help women and their children out of such oppressive environments should be increased and made a priority. Hell, I'd support giving the women free guns and training them how to use them if their husbands try to force them back. The state can support these women's choice to liberate themselves, but cannot make that choice for them.

    3. Some women freely choose to wear it as an expression of their religious beliefs. This may be a small minority of niqabis, and the beliefs they are expressing we may find repellent, but the state is obligated, as a matter of justice, to respect this choice. A blanket ban on the burqua/niqab precludes this.

    4. In addition to whether it is just for the state to impose such a blanket ban, there are potential negative consequences of such a ban-- women being forced to stay home more by their husbands/families for example, further segregation, and perhaps resistance/civil disobedience towards the law that could result in a political and moral victory for the radical Muslims.

    In a nutshell, that's where I'm coming from on this issue.



    my articulation is generally piss-poor, but what he said ^^^^^^

    plus I would actually prefer this:



    queen Rania of Jordan  grin12

    ''we are morally and philisophically in the best position to win the league'' - Arsene Wenger
  • Re: Another question for ex-Muslims
     Reply #73 - October 30, 2010, 05:41 PM

    ^ women that take pride in wearing burqua , feel violated by the ban since it's like humiliating  them publicly . what can we do about that ??


    Or, alternative answer - nothing.  The feelings of such women won't cut any ice with the French, and there's not much anyone else can do.

    "Befriend them not, Oh murtads, and give them neither parrot nor bunny."  - happymurtad's advice on trolls.
  • Re: Another question for ex-Muslims
     Reply #74 - October 30, 2010, 05:45 PM

    plus I would actually prefer this:

    (Clicky for piccy!)

    queen Rania of Jordan  grin12


    I would allow her to have dirty, dirty sex with me.

    Or, alternative answer - nothing.  The feelings of such women won't cut any ice with the French, and there's not much anyone else can do.


    You too.

    "In battle, the well-honed spork is more dangerous than the mightiest sword" -- Sun Tzu
  • Re: Another question for ex-Muslims
     Reply #75 - October 30, 2010, 05:57 PM

    You're brave.

    "Befriend them not, Oh murtads, and give them neither parrot nor bunny."  - happymurtad's advice on trolls.
  • Re: Another question for ex-Muslims
     Reply #76 - October 30, 2010, 06:18 PM

    No.

    Look, this has been my position on this issue from the very beginning, and I'm not speaking for anyone else on the topic, but based on previous discussions here I would venture to say that most, if not all, of the people on this board opposing a burqua ban share a similar outlook on the subject:

    1. The burqua, whether an individual woman freely chooses to wear it or not, is oppressive and intrinsically linked with Islam's gender apartheid.

    2. Many, perhaps most women wearing it, are coerced or pressured into wearing it by their family/husband.

    (a) For these women, in Western countries, there are options to get out of such oppressive relationships

    (b) This is not an easy choice for women in such situations, but important life choices are rarely easy or without risk/sacrifice, it's not the role of the state to make personal choices for people.

    (c) Funding for organizations/agencies which can help women and their children out of such oppressive environments should be increased and made a priority. Hell, I'd support giving the women free guns and training them how to use them if their husbands try to force them back. The state can support these women's choice to liberate themselves, but cannot make that choice for them.

    3. Some women freely choose to wear it as an expression of their religious beliefs. This may be a small minority of niqabis, and the beliefs they are expressing we may find repellent, but the state is obligated, as a matter of justice, to respect this choice. A blanket ban on the burqua/niqab precludes this.

    4. In addition to whether it is just for the state to impose such a blanket ban, there are potential negative consequences of such a ban-- women being forced to stay home more by their husbands/families for example, further segregation, and perhaps resistance/civil disobedience towards the law that could result in a political and moral victory for the radical Muslims.

    In a nutshell, that's where I'm coming from on this issue.


    1. Yep.

    2. Yep, but the state doesn't always have to be your enemy Q. Not on eveything.

    3. This is where we separate. Why must the burka be respected? Why must all choice be respected? That line of thinking broadens all issues until they just evaporate into some naive and mystical hippy anything-goes ideal. Its a real discussion dampener.

    There are too many people (I don't mean you) falling over themselves professing to be advocates for liberal choice and free expression without even taking a real look at some of the choices they are endorsing. You have to draw the line somewhere. Not all cultures are equal. Some ideas and expression brought by foreign culture and cultural identity are simply incompatible with other cultures, and we should stop pretending they ever will be. The burka is a massive point of contention because the practice itself is inherently and diametrically opposed to the values of a nation like France.

    4. Those who oppose the burka wave the freedom and equality of women as a banner, and so do those on the other side, those who are against the ban. Both sides are sincere in this, I'm sure. Its a stalemate. Let that line of thought cancel itself out, so we can get some perspective and balance.  

    Look at it as a customs clash, because that’s what it is. Two cultures nose to nose causing conflict, whose custom and tradition are alien to each other. France is a big place, a nation to which no one is essentially foreign and co-existence is welcome. There are only some practices that are foreign to it and one of them is the burka. One of the pillars of French civilisation and tradition is courteous love and more recently the equality of women. France prides itself on the presence and visibility of women and this ban is a practical manifestation of this, in that there will be no exception made for any culture that threatens it.

    The burka is completely out of touch with French society. I respect this French ideal and concept, much more than I respect the article of faith we’re just ‘supposed’ to respect and that already goes part-way to removing inalienable rights of women. I'm with France on this 100%, since I actually do respect their stance on this willingly, without it being forced out of me or without me being guilt-tripped into it. I have no respect for the burka, nor should I have to.

    Too fucking busy, and vice versa.
  • Re: Another question for ex-Muslims
     Reply #77 - October 30, 2010, 06:40 PM

    i'm with france too , but what troubles me is that women with burqua feel proud wearing them , which they shouldn't burqua is very offensive to them but they just don't see that

    also many university students quit because of the burqua , it was a choice between they're religion or they're future and they chose RELIGION
  • Re: Another question for ex-Muslims
     Reply #78 - October 30, 2010, 06:42 PM

    2. Yep, but the state doesn't always have to be your enemy Q. Not on eveything.


    No, only where it unjustly infringes on personal autonomy. Which happens a lot, sadly.

    Quote
    3. This is where we separate. Why must the burka be respected? Why must all choice be respected?


    Because it is what's just.

    Quote
    That line of thinking broadens all issues until they just evaporate into some naive and mystical hippy anything-goes ideal.


    Were folks like Locke, Jefferson, and Freeborn John mystical hippies? The idea of minarchism (limited state power and respect for personal autonomy) is a well-founded idea, and, in fact, an entire national government (mine) was founded on the concept.

    I do think anything-goes as far as the state not intervening is concerned until and unless personal autonomy directly and immediately infringes on the personal autonomy of someone else. This is the entire concept of limited civil government/minarchism.

    Quote
    You have to draw the line somewhere.


    But I do, and I've stated what that line is many, many times before-- the line is where the exercise of an individual's personal autonomy directly and immediately infringes upon the rights of another.

    Quote
    Not all cultures are equal. Some ideas and expression brought by foreign culture and cultural identity are simply incompatible with other cultures, and we should stop pretending they ever will be. The burka is a massive point of contention because the practice itself is inherently and diametrically opposed to the values of a nation like France.

    Look at it as a customs clash, because that’s what it is. Two cultures nose to nose causing conflict, whose custom and tradition are alien to each other. France is a big place, a nation to which no one is essentially foreign and co-existence is welcome. There are only some practices that are foreign to it and one of them is the burka. One of the pillars of French civilisation and tradition is courteous love and more recently the equality of women. France prides itself on the presence and visibility of women and this ban is a practical manifestation of this, in that there will be no exception made for any culture that threatens it.

    The burka is completely out of touch with French society. I respect this French ideal and concept, much more than I respect the article of faith we’re just ‘supposed’ to respect and that already goes part-way to removing inalienable rights of women. I'm with France on this 100%, since I actually do respect their stance on this willingly, without it being forced out of me or without me being guilt-tripped into it. I have no respect for the burka, nor should I have to.


    All of this culture clash stuff is irrelevant to my point. One does not have to respect or value certain cultural practices in order to maintain that the state should not ban them. In fact, one can despise certain ideas/practices and stand firm against state prohibition of them. For example, our Bill of Rights allows Nazis to march in the streets and many of us support that, even if we despise the Nazis themselves. I've shown up to Nazi rallies just to beat the shit out of them, but I'd never support a law that prohibits such rallies. This seems to be the point that you keep refusing to accept, not just on this issue, but others. Respecting the burqua and respecting a person's right to wear it free of state (or family) coercion are two different things.

    "In battle, the well-honed spork is more dangerous than the mightiest sword" -- Sun Tzu
  • Re: Another question for ex-Muslims
     Reply #79 - October 30, 2010, 06:50 PM

    I don't have to accept your point, thanks, beyond acknowledging that yes, you did make some semblance of a point. We can both play the ‘your point is irrelevant’ card all day, but it gets boring after a while. We just disagree. It happens. 

    I'm curious what other issues you mean though, when you say “the point that you keep refusing to accept, not just on this issue, but others.”

    Too fucking busy, and vice versa.
  • Re: Another question for ex-Muslims
     Reply #80 - October 30, 2010, 07:03 PM

    I don't have to accept your point,


    Well, of course you don't-- I'm a libertarian after all, would not want to force you to accept my point. Wink

    Quote
    I'm curious what other issues you mean though, when you say “the point that you keep refusing to accept, not just on this issue, but others.”


    The drug issue is one, and there was another that came up some weeks or months ago, but I'll be damned if I can remember what it was. If I remember later, I'll post what it was here. The point being, though, is that generally you are much more willing to allow the state to infringe upon personal autonomy than I feel is justified, and you sometimes seem to equate arguments for legal permissibility of "X" as arguments in favor of/approving of "X"

    "In battle, the well-honed spork is more dangerous than the mightiest sword" -- Sun Tzu
  • Re: Another question for ex-Muslims
     Reply #81 - October 30, 2010, 07:04 PM

    i'm with france too , but what troubles me is that women with burqua feel proud wearing them , which they shouldn't burqua is very offensive to them but they just don't see that

    also many university students quit because of the burqua , it was a choice between they're religion or they're future and they chose RELIGION



    Tough shit on them then.  Whatever about the general burqa ban, France is perfectly entitled to ban religious symbols in state funded universities.   Anybody, whether muslim, Jew, Christian or other, who doesn't like it can lump it.

    "Befriend them not, Oh murtads, and give them neither parrot nor bunny."  - happymurtad's advice on trolls.
  • Re: Another question for ex-Muslims
     Reply #82 - October 30, 2010, 07:14 PM

    Q, the only thing you have to understand is that I am more than happy with the state imposing this particular restriction on me and others, and I don't see it as the sky is falling or anything, or that I am at risk of losing any other rights. I'll treat each proposition on its individual merits and flaws, and draw a conclusion based on some consideration and my own feelings. How I think on this issue and others might differ, and shouldn't lead you to believe there is any kind of pattern or inclination to hand over my rights to the highest bidder. I am actually right now exercising one particular right that I hold dear - freedom of thought and speech.

    The only thing we both must accept is that people sometimes disagree.

    Too fucking busy, and vice versa.
  • Re: Another question for ex-Muslims
     Reply #83 - October 30, 2010, 07:33 PM

    Q, the only thing you have to understand is that I am more than happy with the state imposing this particular restriction on me and others, and I don't see it as the sky is falling or anything, or that I am at risk of losing any other rights. I'll treat each proposition on its individual merits and flaws, and draw a conclusion based on some consideration and my own feelings. How I think on this issue and others might differ, and shouldn't lead you to believe there is any kind of pattern or inclination to hand over my rights to the highest bidder. I am actually right now exercising one particular right that I hold dear - freedom of thought and speech.


    But ishina, the problem is that a state which has the power to ban something we disapprove of also has the power to ban something we approve of. Look how the European governments are treating Wilders (who I hate but whatever) and other critics of Islam. Look at Ireland's new blasphemy law. We can't expect the state to always wield its powers in the best way, so it's safest to simply limit those powers to where the state can only intervene and prohibit personal activity when that personal activity directly and immediately infringes on someone else's rights.

    Sorry, but I do believe that once you allow state power to cross that line, it's a slippery slope from there.

    Quote
    The only thing we both must accept is that people sometimes disagree.


    I don't have to accept shit! Wink

    But I will, just for you.

    "In battle, the well-honed spork is more dangerous than the mightiest sword" -- Sun Tzu
  • Re: Another question for ex-Muslims
     Reply #84 - October 30, 2010, 10:22 PM

    Tough shit on them then.  Whatever about the general burqa ban, France is perfectly entitled to ban religious symbols in state funded universities.   Anybody, whether muslim, Jew, Christian or other, who doesn't like it can lump it.


    I'm not sure about this one Cheetah. Before I get into it, I better just clarify that I'm not against a general blanket ban because I think the burqa, or any other aspect of any religion for that matter, needs to be respected or whatever - but simply because I think the state is unjustified in taking this choice away from women. There are underlying principles at stake here and I don't think it's warranted for them to be ignored/compromised here. I do fully support however a ban on burqa for security reason i.e. banks, airports etc. I also would fully support the rights of employers to refuse someone employment because of the burqa i.e. school/college/university teachers should be expected to show their faces to their pupils - I would find the burqa unacceptable here.

    However, although the sate may have the right to ban religous symbols in its universities, I would find it terribly uncomfortable to get behind such bans. I don't like the idea of denying someone an education for something which at the end of the day is as petty as a religous symbol. If we take perhaps the most extreme case, the burqa, as an example - in some rare cases it is actually the father that is forcing an 18/19 year old girl to wear the burqa - these young women don't have independance from their families yet and are in fact finacially dependant on them - it would be wrong to deny them an education - an education which likely would help them gain varied and liberal veiwpoints. Even then, regardless of whether a young woman is having the burqa forced on her,  I would still fundamentally oppose such bans. As has been pointed out some young women have chosen and will continue to choose the burqa over a good university education. However, people grow and change, if we deny young women an education because she wishes to wear a burqa at the time, then the likelihood is she is less likely to integrate and contribute to society in a healthy manner compared to someone who was 'allowed' to wear her burqa and come to university.


    ''we are morally and philisophically in the best position to win the league'' - Arsene Wenger
  • Re: Another question for ex-Muslims
     Reply #85 - October 30, 2010, 10:42 PM

    ^ nicely said

    from my experience , women who wear burqa are from super religious families they wear it because they want to , they don't hate it since they used to wear it since the age of 7-10 ,

    so you can see why taking it off is very hard , it's a part of they're identity
  • Re: Another question for ex-Muslims
     Reply #86 - October 30, 2010, 11:56 PM

    Nice sentiment, but what exactly have you learned here, HighOctane? As far as I can tell, your views now are identical to when you arrived.


    They’ve changed a lot actually you’ve only noticed me until I reached a tipping point of pragmatic and consequentialism based views which has changed my view on things entirely.

    I don't want to be controlled by God, superstition, religious authorities, or the state … Why should I, or anyone else, respect someone who wants the state (or any other authority) to regulate their personal behavior, to violate their rights? Look, you're a nice guy and all, but I can't respect anyone who wants the state to regulate personal behavior and violate people's rights.


    You are actually starting to share some thoughts now. This is good, now why couldn’t we do this before all the swearing, name calling and negativity?

    So: the reason I think it is important for the state to draw boundaries is because like in chaos theory (please take your time to watch here), is that it is entirely productive and good of the state to make law and order for consequential benefit. E.g. banning drinking and driving: this is a law not to take away people’s pleasure on a night out, but to protect pedestrians who get killed by such drivers since there is scientific evidence of the mind being influenced by alcohol which affects a driver’s judgement behind a wheel. This IS regulating a person’s behaviour and it is entirely moral to do so. Now, at the same time, I agree that too much influence of the state is a bad thing like in Saudi Arabia. The best way to find that right balance (from chaotic and from ordered to complex as in the video) is to rationalise with science, evidence and statistics which then implement law and order that give society the best intended outcomes and a at the same time there being a platform which allows for feedback and control of such laws being updated/changed/improved (which btw, in my opinion implement the ideas of people like Locke/Jefferson for the safe keeping of individual rights and religion tolerance where applicable). I am sure at this stage you agree with me. And I shall continue onto the next section below.

    lol, i don't consider you an enemy


    Nor do I – lol – I was making the point that when a person doesn’t want to have a dialogue, when they don’t want to learn but stick to their closed minded views because it feels right to them – then if such people are disagreed with, then it’s good for there is be disagreement, because just like having an enemy you profoundly disagree with, it is a good thing since it shows you stand up for something.

    No.

    Look, this has been my position on this issue from the very beginning, and I'm not speaking for anyone else on the topic, but based on previous discussions here I would venture to say that most, if not all, of the people on this board opposing a burqua ban share a similar outlook on the subject:

    1. The burqua, whether an individual woman freely chooses to wear it or not, is oppressive and intrinsically linked with Islam's gender apartheid.

    2. Many, perhaps most women wearing it, are coerced or pressured into wearing it by their family/husband.

    (a) For these women, in Western countries, there are options to get out of such oppressive relationships

    (b) This is not an easy choice for women in such situations, but important life choices are rarely easy or without risk/sacrifice, it's not the role of the state to make personal choices for people.

    (c) Funding for organizations/agencies which can help women and their children out of such oppressive environments should be increased and made a priority. Hell, I'd support giving the women free guns and training them how to use them if their husbands try to force them back. The state can support these women's choice to liberate themselves, but cannot make that choice for them.

    3. Some women freely choose to wear it as an expression of their religious beliefs. This may be a small minority of niqabis, and the beliefs they are expressing we may find repellent, but the state is obligated, as a matter of justice, to respect this choice. A blanket ban on the burqua/niqab precludes this.

    4. In addition to whether it is just for the state to impose such a blanket ban, there are potential negative consequences of such a ban-- women being forced to stay home more by their husbands/families for example, further segregation, and perhaps resistance/civil disobedience towards the law that could result in a political and moral victory for the radical Muslims.

    In a nutshell, that's where I'm coming from on this issue.

    clap This is what I call sharing thoughts and learning from each other.  Afro
    1. Yep.

    2. Yep, but the state doesn't always have to be your enemy Q. Not on eveything.

    3. This is where we separate. Why must the burka be respected? Why must all choice be respected? That line of thinking broadens all issues until they just evaporate into some naive and mystical hippy anything-goes ideal. Its a real discussion dampener.

    There are too many people (I don't mean you) falling over themselves professing to be advocates for liberal choice and free expression without even taking a real look at some of the choices they are endorsing. You have to draw the line somewhere. Not all cultures are equal. Some ideas and expression brought by foreign culture and cultural identity are simply incompatible with other cultures, and we should stop pretending they ever will be. The burka is a massive point of contention because the practice itself is inherently and diametrically opposed to the values of a nation like France.

    4. Those who oppose the burka wave the freedom and equality of women as a banner, and so do those on the other side, those who are against the ban. Both sides are sincere in this, I'm sure. Its a stalemate. Let that line of thought cancel itself out, so we can get some perspective and balance. 

    Look at it as a customs clash, because that’s what it is. Two cultures nose to nose causing conflict, whose custom and tradition are alien to each other. France is a big place, a nation to which no one is essentially foreign and co-existence is welcome. There are only some practices that are foreign to it and one of them is the burka. One of the pillars of French civilisation and tradition is courteous love and more recently the equality of women. France prides itself on the presence and visibility of women and this ban is a practical manifestation of this, in that there will be no exception made for any culture that threatens it.

    The burka is completely out of touch with French society. I respect this French ideal and concept, much more than I respect the article of faith we’re just ‘supposed’ to respect and that already goes part-way to removing inalienable rights of women. I'm with France on this 100%, since I actually do respect their stance on this willingly, without it being forced out of me or without me being guilt-tripped into it. I have no respect for the burka, nor should I have to.



    I’d like to add on points 3. And 4.

    3: No women freely wears a burqa Q-Man. I really hope this makes sense. Any woman who says “I wear it because I want to” says that because she has been indoctrinated from a young age or at some point in her life to think wildly incorrectly. For the lady who wears it because of indoctrination – this is unacceptable. Men is Islam are not forced to wear one, and do they wear one? No. Women on the other hand are forced to wear one, and so they wear it. If you experienced the shouting matches between my sisters and mother Q-Man, perhaps this would be ingraved in you emotionally like it is in me. As for the grown up women who wear one, say recent  converts, well just like it is idiotic of them to go drink driving, I would say it is idiotic of them to wear one because of the negative consequneces is has on society including social division (e.g. asking a burqa woman a question at a bus stop) and promoting such a ridiculous fashion accessory when evolution over millions of years wanted her to show her face in order to COMMUNICATE with people.

    4: Re the “negative consequences of the ban” : this is exactly what my local MP (Member of Parliament) wrote to me via email and even mentioned terrorism. I think the law is a powerful thing and it is well respected. Just like changing the minds of drink driving takes a while, so too I think it will for Muslim women and Muslim men. I don’t think women will not stay at home – more over it will give the wives, daughters ammunition to have confidence that the law is behind them. Consider this:

    Mother: You will WEAR this scarf to school I tell you, or I will kick you out of the house!
    Daughter: Mum, they’ve banned the burka, it was in the news.
    Mother:  Well this isn’t a burqa, it is a scarf. Now do as I say!!

    Even when such scenarios happens, and it will do up and down France to the girls trying to assimilate, you as the state have got the ball rolling in the right direction. This is progress. This is consequential benfit. Muslim men will start thinking twice about forcing their wives, women will have the confidence of the law, Muslim families will have to come to terms with Western values and through a slow, simmering social sharing of ideas they will be forced to adapt to better, Western values, that is better for them where Muslim daughter are confident, men become less oppressive and gets to the core of Muslim women going to University more, Muslim men being less domestically violent (whether physical or verbal), young Muslims thinking about Islam more, etc.

    As to the radical Islam point – I think that’s getting very low in terms of a decent point. The best impact will the Bin Laden making a statement or Anjem Choudary whining on TV. Terrorism is here to stay and brewing through the ammunition of Afghan/Iraq war, hatred of Jews, false grievance for Palestine and disgust for pr0n and Britney Spears and kaffirs in general. Sure, the burka ban, sharia ban, minaret ban will add some salt, but not much. I think.

    I do think anything-goes as far as the state not intervening is concerned until and unless personal autonomy directly and immediately infringes on the personal autonomy of someone else. This is the entire concept of limited civil government/minarchism.


    Which the burqa does, I really do think. It affects Muslims sons and daughters growing up. It affects the society at large for social integration. Do you accept this? If you do no, we *completely* disagree and can't help each other if (I think) you can't see the blindingly obvious *facts* here (obvious to me, that is).

    But ishina, the problem is that a state which has the power to ban something we disapprove of also has the power to ban something we approve of. Look how the European governments are treating Wilders (who I hate but whatever) and other critics of Islam.


    Which comes back to the issue of having a platform whereby law and order has a feedback mechanism for control. Wilders will be fine, because there is this platform. The Wilders hate speech trial has collapsed for this reason.

    We can't expect the state to always wield its powers in the best way, so it's safest to simply limit those powers to where the state can only intervene and prohibit personal activity when that personal activity directly and immediately infringes on someone else's rights.


    If the state is thinking better than it's populous, has rational, scientific, mathematical, social and subject matter expert reasoning to doing so; together with a platform for alterations, protests, demonstrations, being sued in the courts; then I think there are very good reasons (namely progress) for allowing the state do what is best for it's people, which means change and putting through laws. Look, I don't like some of the rushed technology bills/acts being put through, but there is a platform to change this. Law and order is very important just like bureaucracy (procedures, protocols, regulations) is important in multinational organisations for them to survive when there are thousands of workers. Yes, sometimes it is wrong, but with a platform to correct it, the pipes and filters of law and order which affects millions of people need to be constructed as time goes on otherwise you are halting progress for country/continent/human advancement.

    To me it feels like you are saying, "I'm not sure this will work, it feels like a slippery slope, I'm scared, so I will do nothing". Wake up, please wake up, progress comes with change mon ami.

    There is nothing wrong with change, if it is in the right direction. - Winston Churchill

    To improve is to change; to be perfect is to change often. - Winston Churchill
  • Re: Another question for ex-Muslims
     Reply #87 - October 31, 2010, 12:50 AM

    HO - You remind me of Reihan Salam http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reihan_Salam (Q-man - you come across him before, do you know if he's an apostate too?)

    He's the son of American Bangladeshi immigrants (probably currently the highest profile Desi in USA today), an ex-Harvard thinker & political commentator.

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  • Re: Another question for ex-Muslims
     Reply #88 - October 31, 2010, 12:54 AM

    I read his articles in the Daily Beast occasionally. 

    So once again I'm left with the classic Irish man's dilemma, do I eat the potato or do I let it ferment so I can drink it later?
    My political philosophy below
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bwGat4i8pJI&feature=g-vrec
    Just kidding, here are some true heros
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dBTgvK6LQqA
  • Re: Another question for ex-Muslims
     Reply #89 - October 31, 2010, 12:56 AM

    whats you opinion on him?  Do you know if he's he an ex-muslim?

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