Originally posted by Richard Barrett
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Wearing of Burka
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Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostFair enough
lets all decide to drive on the left hand side of the road
but what people wear of their own choice ?
Why are people so frightened of "chaos" ?
Sure, if i decide to drive my car on the other side for a change that's not a good idea BUT the assumption that somehow we need more "order" , (which usually means something imposed from outside) regardless of the context is a bit daft IMV
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Originally posted by Beef Oven! View PostWhy not? I would take seriously a lecture from, say a member of the Socialist Workers Party. I would focus on the argument, not on a prejudice about the person's circumstances - that would be the lazy option.
Having lived (and being a frequent visitor to) in Totnes I would imagine that she (like most of those who seem to be terribly offended by people choosing to dress differently ) has little personal experience of this ? but correct me if i'm wrong ....
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Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostShe's not making much sense though is she ?
Having lived (and being a frequent visitor to) in Totnes I would imagine that she (like most of those who seem to be terribly offended by people choosing to dress differently ) has little personal experience of this ? but correct me if i'm wrong ....
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Originally posted by Beef Oven! View PostNot keen on profiling people like that.
I was just wondering (as Richard asked before) whether she had actually communicated with someone in a niqab ?
What one imagines would be difficult (the whole nonsense of not being able to "communicate" without seeing someones face) is often not so ...... conversely sometimes things one would imagine to be simple (like editing string parts grrrrrrrr) can be most complex
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Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostSO is it OK to "profile" folks who dress differently ?
I was just wondering (as Richard asked before) whether she had actually communicated with someone in a niqab ?
What one imagines would be difficult (the whole nonsense of not being able to "communicate" without seeing someones face) is often not so ...... conversely sometimes things one would imagine to be simple (like editing string parts grrrrrrrr) can be most complex
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I think this article makes a good case against the use of the term "Islamophobia". There are beliefs and practices within Islam which it seems perfectly reasonable to criticise and someone doing so should not be labelled as "Islamophobic". Islam is a belief system and like any other belief system is open to criticism. Ironically, the article mentions a source which suggests that the term may have originated during the Iranian revolution to describe women who refused to wear the hijab.
The issue raised by the thread in the first place concerned the wearing of the niqab (mistakenly described as burka) during legal proceedings. The recently delivered judgement on this stated that it could be worn, but that the face had to be disclosed while the wearer was giving evidence. Does anyone have a strong argument against this verdict?
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Originally posted by Resurrection Man View PostIslam is a religion. You can't be racist about a religion.
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scottycelt
Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostSo if EVERYONE is to have the same law then if I decide to (for example) open a B&B ............ you get the point ?
However the basic human right of 'freedom of belief' is not quite the same as expecting to be treated differently in a court of law through the clearly inappropriate wearing of any sort of face-cover, whether it's a religious custom or not.
Religion and Feminism are both somewhat irrelevant to what is the main point at issue here ...
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostSo this Telegraph article is "balanced", is it? Firstly, as teamsaint says, a lecture on feminism from a Tory MP is hardly to be taken seriously.
Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostAnd then: "once the niqab becomes an accepted norm" - where is the evidence that this is even a vague possibility on the horizon? Less than 5% of the population of the UK is Muslim, and of this 5% a tiny proportion are wearing the niqab. Why is this phenomenon inflated into a matter for "national debate" and front-page news? One might almost suspect it was in order to foment Islamophobia and the racism lurking behind it.
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scottycelt
Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostOr to put another way...... decided that they were more concerned with their beliefs than the welfare of vulnerable children
The adoption agencies simply wanted to help vulnerable children in exactly the same way as they had always done in the past but it was the state that demanded they had to ditch their beliefs or close down. Understandably, the agencies closed down. It would have been unthinkable for anyone to be forced to act against their principles simply at the diktat of the state. The outcome was entirely predictable and the cause of the closures was entirely due to agenda-driven politicians and not the agencies.
However, that's not the subject of this thread so why bring it up here ? Let's stick to the wholly separate and simple issue of whether any sort of face-cover should be permitted in court, MrGG!
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scottycelt
Originally posted by ahinton View PostI don't see how religion can be irrelevant to discussion of the wearing of a garment that is part of a religious custom.
The issue is transparency and exactly the same level of transparency should be demanded of everybody.
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