Discodog wrote: » Very good point. The alienation that immigrants felt when they came to the UK was partially due to racism - they simply felt safer in their own communities. The ones that left these areas were often professionals. People can forgive an immigrant if he happens to be a doctor.
bluewolf wrote: » Seems like it's just the easiest option to pick on women and women's clothing and insist it's for their own good
Discodog wrote: » I want an Ireland that's the polar opposite of this new right wing intolerance.
Discodog wrote: » Like I said - a disappointment. I think it works fine in the UK.
Banning a piece of cloth
Discodog wrote: » Like I said - a disappointment. I think it works fine in the UK. I lived there for many years, sometimes with muslim neighbours. They respected me & I respected them. Same with all other religions.
The so called problem is the one dreamed up by Boris, Farage etc. It was used to spread fear & resulted in Brexit. I want an Ireland that's the polar opposite of this new right wing intolerance.
Ireland shouldn't ban anything unless it's really necessary. Banning a piece of cloth for the sake of a tiny number of people is just dumb.
riffmongous wrote: » timthumbni wrote: » Union flag you mean. A jack is ones that are on ships. Sashes are rarely worn nowadays by orange men. They wear collarettes mostly. Deflection is becoming a habit for you. And I’m still very interested on exactly what forum on here you are a mod. I would assume there wasn’t any other volunteers..... Are you happy to defend outdated and sadistic Islamic practices or just happy to have a dig at the brits again.? Yeah I think everyone's heard that before a few times now but everyone still calls it the union jack don't they. I'm just an ordinary poster here timmy like everyone else, if you don't like what I post either report it or get over it Option 2 definitely, when our resident backward ideology supporters come out so strongly in favour of banning another backwards ideology it's hard to just ignore it
timthumbni wrote: » Union flag you mean. A jack is ones that are on ships. Sashes are rarely worn nowadays by orange men. They wear collarettes mostly. Deflection is becoming a habit for you. And I’m still very interested on exactly what forum on here you are a mod. I would assume there wasn’t any other volunteers..... Are you happy to defend outdated and sadistic Islamic practices or just happy to have a dig at the brits again.?
FTA69 wrote: » Sorry I disagree with you here in a big way. You're right of course that sexism isn't solely an Islamic concept and that women in all countries face hurdles and systemic barriers. No argument there. But if you're suggesting that those hurdles and oppressions are as explicit and severe in somewhere like Germany as they are in Morocco or Bangladesh then you're codding yourself. In Iran, a tremendously complex place, while women are the majority in the professions ad university - they're legally obliged to wear a hijab. Women are being jailed today for heavy sentences for removing it as an act of protest. When I was on the plane out of Tehran the first thing the women did was pull off their hijabs. In many Islamic countries the official role of women is as of wives and mothers of the nation, pigeonholed into a category due to their gender. I think feminism has huge validity the world over, but I also think this liberal tendency to try and equivocate the position of women in some Islamic societies with people here is just lunacy.
FTA69 wrote: » My Nan would probably eyeball you for wearing a short dress as well. Wouldn't say we should ban her from Waterford though. Conservatism isn't unique to Muslims.
bluewolf wrote: » Second generation is it. They didn't make the choice to move, they don't have somewhere to "go back to", they're trapped between family culture and the rest of the country. Who has the answer, i don't, but i think more proactive positive things that they all must do, rather than things that only 50% must not do, would be a better approach. And i think it will be a lot more subtle than this one public image
bluewolf wrote: » Who has the answer, i don't, but i think more proactive positive things that they all must do, rather than things that only 50% must not do, would be a better approach. And i think it will be a lot more subtle than this one public image
wakka12 wrote: » Second class citizen would mean more restrictive laws governing one group differently to another Which happens many muslim women, such as not having been able to drive Western world has no such lawsWestern world treat women a lot better, it just goes without saying
bfa1509 wrote: » Of course I would not ban burkas/hijabs. I would follow Sebastian Kurz, the austrian president. He made the very valid point that Islam is more than a religion, it is a set of political ideologies (sharia law) and that it simply could not co-exist with his own government. So he closed down seven mosques and plans to expel 40 imams from the country. And before you say "Oh, that's racist. Oh freedom of religion", come back to me in 10 years when we will have much bigger problems on our hands than people wearing burkas/hijabs.
One eyed Jack wrote: » Just to pick two recent examples in AH alone off the top of my head, there’s a woman on trial by social media for having too many children, and how she is nothing more than a leech and a drain on society, and then there is the more recent thread about a woman whom I gather there are a few posters would only wish she would wear a burqa to cover herself up :pac: Like I said - it’s a matter of perspective, and we’re no better or worse in the West as a society than they are in the Middle East.
Wibbs wrote: » My "answer" would be pretty simple; don't import the problem in the first place. The problems of multiculturalism are massively reduced by massively reducing multiculturalism in the first place. The last few years of opening Europe up to the many hundreds of thousands from very different cultures is to me beyond moronic.
emo72 wrote: » I remember a holiday in Spain sharing a communal pool. There was a woman head to toe in some black plastic suit swimming. Yeah it's none of my business but I had a strong reaction thinking this is so wrong. Just couldn't reconcile that a woman had to do this to get a swim. I get the feeling these women aren't fully interacting when they leave the sanctuary of their homes. Horrible way to exist. These women need our help.
FTA69 wrote: » Have you ever spoken to a woman in a hijab or niqab? The idea that you’re going to help a woman by forcing her to tog off at the pool is loopy mate.
Muslim women aren’t dopes. They also happen to believe in Islam and often have deep concepts of modesty. They don’t want or need you to insist they wear a bikini for their own good.
Deleted User wrote: » And I was recently at a pool resort in Spain, where there was a group of M.Eastern men (ethnicity) living in the area (learned through conversation), who insulted or made obviously inappropriate gestures towards the women in their bikinis or more modest swimsuits. Women wearing Burqa's, Hijabs, and all-covering swimwear doesn't solely affect the women themselves. It affects those around them. Allowing such habits, encourages Muslim men (and women) to retain their attitudes (learned/developed in their original country/culture) while living in the West. It reinforces the difference, and encourages a dual attitude towards perception regarding behavior. Wearing a bikini on a beach, a short skirt on a street, or a sexy outfit while out for dinner, is all part of western culture. Most people would see such, and ignore it beyond their own appreciation (internalized or vocalized)... but we have laws to reduce the harassment that women receive... because it's wrong. It shouldn't be happening. However, allowing a subculture to dress differently due to their religious beliefs encourages that belief to be pushed on to others. After all the reasons why the Burqa or Hijab are worn is not to do with the garment itself... it is what is to be hidden. To show modesty. To show respect.
Odhinn wrote: » For a few hundred years being a catholic was a great disadvantage in this country. Look how that worked out.
FTA69 wrote: » Have you ever spoken to a woman in a hijab or niqab? The idea that you’re going to help a woman by forcing her to tog off at the pool is loopy mate. Muslim women aren’t dopes. They also happen to believe in Islam and often have deep concepts of modesty. They don’t want or need you to insist they wear a bikini for their own good.