It remains within the rights of all French persons to practice their religions in privacy.
And in houses of worship (churches, synagogues, mosques, etc.), I would hope.
It remains within the rights of all French persons to practice their religions in privacy.
Sure there were things I missed as an American while living there - running to the store in sweats/sneakers, [...] I didn't wear blue jeans [...]
Sure there were things I missed as an American while living there - running to the store in sweats/sneakers, [...] I didn't wear blue jeans [...]
Why can't you wear sweats/sneakers in a store or blue jeans ... whenever?
Yeah, lots of people wear crosses. And a lot of Jews wear Yarmulkes. Hassidic Jews wear distinctive beards. All these must be banned.
I've not lost any perspective. What a few people don't seem to grasp is that this is not about the bondage of women-- it's about the freedom of women to wear what they want. It's irrelevant whether you want to call it a symbol of bondage. If they want to dress that way, they have the right.Yeah, lots of people wear crosses. And a lot of Jews wear Yarmulkes. Hassidic Jews wear distinctive beards. All these must be banned.
What a stupid thing for such an intelligent man to say. I want to cry for you.
A man of your caliber would liken the bondage of women to a simple matter of clothing.
Have you lost all perspective?
Well played, sir, well played!
Meanwhile female journalists are wearing head scarves when covering stories in Arab countries. When choosing to visit/live in another country it's only polite to respect the culture in place so that makes sense to me.
There's a lot of hysteria about religious icons which don't rob the wearer of their identity. They are red herrings. Carrie doesn't help by not differentiating between these two things.
What a few people don't seem to grasp is that this is not about the bondage of women-- it's about the freedom of women to wear what they want. It's irrelevant whether you want to call it a symbol of bondage. If they want to dress that way, they have the right.
Not just with the face veil but with the ban on girls in schools wearing headscarves a few years back.
Sure there were things I missed as an American while living there - running to the store in sweats/sneakers, [...] I didn't wear blue jeans [...]
Why can't you wear sweats/sneakers in a store or blue jeans ... whenever?
There was no law saying I couldn't. It just didn't fit in with the culture at the time. If I didn't make an attempt to at least understand and respect the culture I was living in then my only friends would have been other Americans - not the worst thing in the world but not why I moved over there.
Meanwhile female journalists are wearing head scarves when covering stories in Arab countries. When choosing to visit/live in another country it's only polite to respect the culture in place so that makes sense to me.
A lot of people that move to a different land adopt parts of the culture to fit in. It makes perfect sense. However that isn't the debate.
The debate is that it should never ever be a law in any country that you have to wear something or can't wear something that is native to your culture. That's what France has done. Not just with the face veil but with the ban on girls in schools wearing headscarves a few years back.
So ... no one in France wears sweats, sneakers or jeans?
What do they wear?
So ... no one in France wears sweats, sneakers or jeans?
What do they wear?
Skirts, pants, heels, etc.
Yeah, lots of people wear crosses. And a lot of Jews wear Yarmulkes. Hassidic Jews wear distinctive beards. All these must be banned.
What a stupid thing for such an intelligent man to say. I want to cry for you.
A man of your caliber would liken the bondage of women to a simple matter of clothing.
Have you lost all perspective?
Of course not - on both counts. But, at least a child or woman can go out in public and not be singled out by both her own culture as well as the secular culture.
Of course not - on both counts. But, at least a child or woman can go out in public and not be singled out by both her own culture as well as the secular culture.
Where the full veil is used as an object of true oppression by males, do you really think they'll be going out in public much once it's banned?
Hypothetically, in a public school, what if a girl is wearing a headscarves in a "non-religious" way? Don't girls/women in France just wear them sometimes?All religious symbols are banned at school, not only headscarves.
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