And if I'd want to run around naked in public because I am overconfident? Should I be able to too?
Why not? What's your reason for banning nudity? You can't just ban what you want for no reason.
The only reason I'm concerned is that being nude and exposing your genitals can be seductive to children, who are not capable of consent. To create a safe space for children, I'd be okay with nudist colonies and beaches, just as long as children are banned from there without supervision. But other than that, I think you should be allowed to walk in your thong. I think it's indecent, but that's my problem, not their problem.
Again, as a society, by law, we have decided that it's not desirable to cover your face in public, whatever the reason is. It is where we draw a certain line in the way we interact with each other. And there is the undeniable aspect of the niqab as a tool of oppression, which doesn't rhyme with how our society views women's rights.
Sorry, but the bolded is exactly the problem I have with your style of thinking. You cannot use the strong hand of government to dictate how other people should live. What kind of "free society" is that? If you're going to create a law, it should be based on logic and reason, and it should promote freedom and protect people. Not create laws for "whatever reason". If you can't convince me it can do that, then it's simply tyrannical government's intrusion into private people's lives. Plain and simple.
The Niqab is a tool of oppression for some, a part of their religious faith for others. We can do what we can to help the former (legal, financial, educational and social support) without resorting to poorly thought out authoritarianism.
And don't lay words in my mouth. Offcourse society won't collapse. You are exagerating without any fundation to do so. But rules and laws decide how we organise our society. Also, it will take a lot before a judge will place a woman in prison for this in Belgium. Trust me. I don't think there is precedent in the 6 years this law is in effect.
To me it's simply amusing that people think that society can't function without seeing people's faces, since this is more or less what I see happen every winter. The paranoia and fear is baseless, the "you have to see people's faces" rule is completely made up. A woman wearing a Niqab can function perfectly fine and do anything anyone else can, if other people let her. If she needs to reveal her face for security or identification reasons, they do so.
Jailing and imprisonment is violence against women, plain and simple. We should be helping these women who are being abused, but instead, the state piles on the violence and makes a woman truly feel trapped. This is not feminist, this is not progressive, and this is most certainly not liberal.
And also don't turn this in a fear tactic. Please. That's obnoxious and besides the case. I also don't want to be asociated with that at all. I have been vocally against laws proposing the ban of the hijab in public functions. I have been vocally oposed to lots of measures we in Belgium took after the attacks in Paris (like putting soldiers on our streets). I have been vocally oposed against proposed laws lengthening the time someone can be jailed without orders from a judge (it's 24 now, they tried to make it 72). I've been vocally oposed against the law that states that foreigners living here can lose their right to live here on the mere suspicion of terroristic activities or sympathies. I found the burqini ban in France laughable, and vocally oposed when Belgian politicians wanted to follow. Hell, I've been very vocal in my opinion that the terror attacks are abused to push laws that limit our freedoms.
I'm not sure where I implied that you weren't progressive, I was speaking strictly of this measure. I'm happy you did those things though (really). But you say you laughed at the burkini ban. How is the burkini ban any different? Manuel Valls said banning the burkini is okay to protect public order and social norms. Really, how is that any different from what you are arguing?
Just like I am vocal that religion does not exempt someone from laws, and that we have certain limites, rules and ways that form our society, like the fact that in interacting with one another in real life, you don't cover your face. And though I'm very left on the political spectrum, I don't want to defend practices like the Niqab just because it's a practice of a minority of which I believe they need to be protected against discrimination and need to have absolute equal rights as everyone else.
I don't like the Niqab or Islam or religion either. But there are a lot of things people do that I don't like, and my instinct isn't to get government to ban them. People are going to do things that offend your sensibilities, it's just how it is.
As for women who have no choice but to wear it, that is the true crime. We have to find out why it is that they don't out their husband (usually for financial and socio-cultural reasons) and target those specifically.