Anonymous wrote:Interesting...but im thinking if someone were injured as a result you might have liability?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Very thoughtful post pp.
Small blurb in today's Post: Judge orders women soldiers to stop accompanying 5 Guantanamo defendents as it is causing them religious distress.
So we have as a society fought for these women's inclusion in the armed forces, prepped and sent them to this locale, and now they are not allowed to perform their duties....because they are women? What am I.missing here??????
Cultural relativism.
Anonymous wrote:Very thoughtful post pp.
Small blurb in today's Post: Judge orders women soldiers to stop accompanying 5 Guantanamo defendents as it is causing them religious distress.
So we have as a society fought for these women's inclusion in the armed forces, prepped and sent them to this locale, and now they are not allowed to perform their duties....because they are women? What am I.missing here??????
Anonymous wrote:To be clear, the niqab ban is not on headscarves per se, but it is a ban on face coverings like the niqab and burqa. The reasons given often relate to security (like our ban on shouting "fire" in a theater), also France's tradition of using facial expressions to communicate. Also, it has been argued that the niqab is not necessarily a religious duty under Islam, because the Quranic verses would seem to refer to covering the hair and/or chest, but they don't clearly mention the face.
Anonymous wrote:Not to turn this into a discussion of the niqab ban, but I have never understood how France could claim they are a democratic, enlightened society where all are welcomed and then impose such a law. The argument that 'if you don't like, then move' is all well and good, but I thought of France as more progressive than Saudi Arabia and the like where women are forced to wear certain items of clothes.