Indeed. I agree with this. It's definitely a very delicate subject. Many Muslim men may use it to oppress women, but there are other women who voluntarily choose to wear it as a symbol of their faith and those women shouldn't be denied that right if that is indeed their choice and how they want to celebrate their religion. People might mean well in trying to get rid of something that can be used to be a symbol of oppression, but getting rid of women's choice isn't the answer. It's a very delicate subject, but that just doesn't seem to be the best approach at all--it disrespects those women who do freely choose it and doesn't actually benefit or improve the lives of those forced to wear it in any way. That being the case, no matter how good the intent may be of those in favor of such bans, it's a skin-level solution at best that doesn't truly fix anything and thus not an approach I can truly be in favor of.If a women voluntarily of her free will wants to wear a burqa it shouldn't be a man's opinion to tell her "no". In the meantime we can try to improve this situation through education but we always must tread lightly on topics like this.
Hear, HearSeems this is going to be the default in Europe and other countries, and I have no problems with that. Even Islamic countries like Morocco and Egypt, and other African countries are pushing back against the burqa and niqab.
fyi this is a burqa
I'm fine with banning this
To be fair, i'm much more mad about the fact that - along with this - they are also planning to ban women in certain jobs (teachers, as a prime example) from wearing a hijab / headscarf.
There's certain arguments to be made about the burqa.
The issue will be that women who were previously wearing a burqa in public, will go on to live as shut ins, not going outside anymore. It's not like they'll throw their burqa into the trash yelling "Finally, i'm free!".
Someone is still making them wear the burqa, be it their husband / family or their belief.
I disagree with any kind of clothing ban - out of principle - when it's targeting a religion and i feel these measures are counterproductive to integration, especially the (edit: proposed, incoming) hijab ban for teachers.
we just inaugurated a green party president over a right-winger. So let's just wait and see how you do on May 7th
If a women voluntarily of her free will wants to wear a burqa it shouldn't be a man's opinion to tell her "no".
A hoodie still shows your face.Lets ban hoodies too. only thugs wear them to intimidate others /s
fuck sake.
Yes it is ?guys, burqa is not banned in france
Yeah I'm okay with this, your religious rights end where the rights of others begin.
What?Lets ban hoodies too. only thugs wear them to intimidate others /s
fuck sake.
Fucking stupid. I didn't know France banned it either, which is probably even stupider considering France is better than Austria.
Yes it is ?
I don't deny it's complex, but I would test anyone on the notion that even 50% of these women choose to wear a burqa of "free will". It'll either be husbands/family forcing them, or oppression based within scripture. The burqa itself has also been used, or I should say forced violently on women by terrorist organisations. So on the one hand we read an article like this and celebrate for the women, but on the next hand we say "who are we to judge the burqa?" ~ http://www.independent.co.uk/news/w...eing-freed-from-isis-manbij-sdf-a7173671.html.
Which would be abuse and there are organisations helping with that. We shouldn't allow one form of oppression because that is better then another form. Fight both.the issue is different here, though. Banning the burqa in Austria doesn't explicitly mean permission to leave the house without a veil. It might result in an effective house arrest for women formerly wearing burqas.
Probably a fine.The weird implication is how you turn this into reality.
Police has to basically arrest a woman wearing it now. And then what? A penalty? Which one?
People need to understand how France works really before commenting. France has an extremely strong separation of church and state, which it arrived after hundreds of years of internal conflict between different branches of Christianity. The overt religious elements of USA politics are completely unthinkable over there - even things like swearing on a bible as a juror do t happen. France has an extremely strong set of laws and customs around religious elements in public society, which makes it not as simple as calling it racist.
For quick reading : https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laïcité
Basically, France takes separation of church and state literally and very strongly.
Also, while many may be doing at as a choice due to religion, how much resistence would they face by their family if they opted for western clothing?
There is no "free will" when you've been forced to wear it since birth.
fyi this is a burqa
I'm fine with banning this
Fucking stupid. I didn't know France banned it either, which is probably even stupider considering France is better than Austria.
No need to arrest anyone you can just give them a fine.The weird implication is how you turn this into reality.
Police has to basically arrest a woman wearing it now. And then what? A penalty? Which one?
Yeah then some lunatic will hide under it and blow somewhere?This will just want to make people wear it more. If people want to cover their faces fucking let them.
Yeah then some lunatic will hide under it and blow somewhere?
Fuck no
Only if they are ready to take it off, I would imagine.No need to arrest anyone you can just give them a fine.
Glad to see the same unsubstantiated myths about western burqa and other face-veil wearers get propagated in this thread. There is no proof that these articles of clothing are worn by women forced to do so, from a young age or as adults, by family/community/partner. Watch any interview with one of these women and you'll find out that for many wearing it is a deliberate choice.
Yeah "let me go and tell how much I fuckin hate wearing this on live tv, there will be absolutely no consequences to my well-being at home!"Glad to see the same unsubstantiated myths about western burqa and other face-veil wearers get propagated in this thread. There is no proof that these articles of clothing are worn by women forced to do so, from a young age or as adults, by family/community/partner. Watch any interview with one of these women and you'll find out that for many wearing it is a deliberate choice.
These bans rarely (never?) come with that though. They're not actually trying to solve issues of integration but sate the tears of the sensitive right-wing who don't like to see people that look distinctly different. Shit, that's what the 'average Joe' means by integration, not having to see foreigners who look or act differently.A disgrace to women. I would however, be interested to know how much effort was first put into trying to re-educate and integrate. As a liberal thinker, I often think discussion and education are best to try first, before things such as bans.
Yeah, you're totally right! That's why ever single terrorist attack perpetrated in the West has been by a Muslim hiding in a Burqa!Yeah then some lunatic will hide under it and blow somewhere?
Fuck no
When you're told from childhood that you'll go to hell, and grow up in a patriarchal community that treats you like property, sure, you'd want to wear it. Using people of minority groups speaking up for things that are against their best interest as a shield does not make things more morally correct.
Well, then the whole 'by choice' argument is bullshit as its essentially coercion.Nobody can say for sure but banning it isn't going to suddenly let the oppressive members of such a family allow their wives/daughters to go out. They'll just be more controlling and force them to stay inside. Those women are the ones being punished by such bans, while people pretend they're doing the bans for them.
Yeah and if you watch the liberation of ISIS strongholds, you will see women gladly throw it away.Glad to see the same unsubstantiated myths about western burqa and other face-veil wearers get propagated in this thread. There is no proof that these articles of clothing are worn by women forced to do so, from a young age or as adults, by family/community/partner. Watch any interview with one of these women and you'll find out that for many wearing it is a deliberate choice.
Can people please please stop with the bullshit false dichotomy of 'oh you don't support this liberal policy, you must be a trump supporter!". Its frankly ridiculous and invidious and shows that your worldview is so narrow that any dissenting opinion must be from the Antichrist.
On the Burqa, eh, I think it's a losing battle. As long as all other full body clothing is banned for consistency I don't mind.