• @Cypher
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    141 year ago

    No one in France is allowed to wear religious iconography/clothing in public schools so why do you believe there should be an exemption for abayas?

    • @cley_faye
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      31 year ago

      Because it is not particularly religious clothing? It is not exclusively used by religious people, it just happens to be mainly used by one group of people. Also, please, “no one in France is allowed to wear religious iconography”. Tell me you didn’t go to school in France without telling me you didn’t go to school in France. Some religion are overlooked quite often.

      I’m all for banning religious iconography from schools; but if that was the real goal (hint: it was not), do it fully, and only do it for actual religious stuff. This is about banning a sleeved dress that have little to no connection with religion except that “some people off said religion sometimes wears it”. I’m sure they sometimes wear snickers too, should we also ban them?

      • @electrogamerman
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        61 year ago

        I think the point is that this particularly religious clothing is used to shame women of their bodies.

        You know other religions used to have women cover their bodies too, but that has been left behind a lot of years ago.

        I have a question for you, why dont men also cover their bodies? why is it that only women have to cover their bodies?

        “That is our culture!” It is a culture based on religion, based on regressive and mysoginistic ideals.

        • @FinnFooted
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          1 year ago

          The problem is, theres no definitive distinguishihg description of an abaya. It’s a loose dress. How do you distinguish someone who wants to be comfortable in a loose dress from a girl being oppressed by an abaya?

          • @electrogamerman
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            11 year ago

            Is it really that hard for you to answer that?

            Maybe this will help: What is more important, allowing girls to feel comfortable in a loose dress or helping girls that are being opressed by an abaya?

            • @FinnFooted
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              1 year ago

              There are better ways to prevent oppression than controlling what people wear (which is ironically exactly what their oppressors are doing). These girls and women should feel comfortable and free to wear whatever they want, without being forced by religion or the french government. The answer to oppression and authoritarianism isn’t more oppression and authoritarianism.

              • @electrogamerman
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                -21 year ago

                Yeah, the answr to opression and authoritianism is peace and love, go tell that to the ukranians, maybe if they surrender, Russia will threat them with love.

                The solution of opression and authoritarianism is intolerance to them. The french government is not forcing people to wear something, they are enforcing the opressors to not force people to wear something.

                • @FinnFooted
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                  1 year ago

                  Woooow. The mental gymnastics. Are you actually comparing the french government telling little girls what not to wear to the Ukrainian army forcing out a militant government trying to overtake them?

                  This so is incomparable I don’t even know where to start. First, the Ukrainians are choosing for themselves how and why to deal with their oppressors. I have never suggest you have to be nice and hold hands to fight authoritarianism. I only said that more authoritarianism is not the answer to authoritarianism.

                  What the french are tying to do is pander to the far right and distract form other issues within their government with culture war BS while willful idiots like you act like the government is playing white savior helping these poor girls from their oppressive clothes. This is actually peaceful AND AUTHORITARIAN at the same time. You do not need to be violent to be anti authoritarian or violent to be authoritarian. Your weird appeal to force to deal with everything… weird and makes no sense.

                  You don’t liberate people by being authoritarian. Yes, be intolerant of authoritarianism. Use violence when necessary even. But again, MORE AUTHORITARIANISM DOES NOT COMBAT AUTHORITARIANISM. Forcing people to combat authoritarianism under your control and terms does not work. If it did, the US would control a lot more of South America and the middle east. Instead, they just killed a lot of innocent civilians.

                  This is not some paradox of tolerance I am appealing to. Be intolerant of authoritarianism. Offer these girls mental health resources and a way to escape their families and religion. Offer them a way out of their oppressive situation. Offer them the power to overcome their oppressors on their own terms. Have consequences FOR THE OPPRESSORS if you want to be forceful. Because banning a “square shape” loose dress does nothing to the actual oppressors. What, you think they’ll send their daughters to school in jeans now? No, lol. They will send their daughters to school in a slightly different style of loose dress now. Nothing has happened to the oppressors forcing girls into the abaya.

                  But, forcing these little girls into “what is good for them” is not helpful. THEY should have the power to decide what is good for them. Everyone deserves that. They should decide what they want to wear. Not their parents. Not the french government.

                  • @electrogamerman
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                    1 year ago

                    I only said that more authoritarianism is not the answer to authoritarianism.

                    Come on, be real. Muslims and Islam force people into wearing x and y clothing. Dont come here and say they are not authoritarian. Yes, authoritarianism is the answer to authoritarianism. You are not going to win to authoritarianism with kind words.

                    Not their parents

                    Exactly. And they are the ones making a big deal out of this.

                    If a little girl wanted to dress as a unicorn to school, the parents would easily say: “no, you cannot dress to school, it is banned”, or do you think the parens would be like “WHY CANT MY LITTLE GIRL DRESS AS UNICORN TO SCHOOL. FRANCE IS FASCIST!”.

                    All these “but my daughter wants to cover her whole body, its her choice!!”, its coming from their parents.

        • @cley_faye
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          31 year ago

          Hmm no? Please tell me how to distinguish a “regular” dress from a “religious” dress, when they have roughly the same coverage and no specific patterns. That would be helpful to enforce this new restriction without relying on the wearer’s religious belief.

          • JokeDeity
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            -11 year ago

            Here’s a fucking clue: is a man FORCING them to wear it?

            • @FinnFooted
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              1 year ago

              Well, a bunch of men are certainly forcing them not to wear it now. I find it interesting that your answer to men controlling women is to have different men control the same women.

              Edit: Honestly, fuck people who use religion as an oppressive tool. But, I find it really frustrating that people are acting like they’re liberating women and girls by controlling what they wear. That’s not liberation. These kids should be given access to confidential in school therapy and resources to report and deal with abusive parents if we’re actually worried about them being oppressed. But that’s not really what this is about.

              Additionally, banning the abaya doesn’t prevent oppression. If these girls are being forced to dress modestly and being made ashamed of their bodies, they will just be forced to dress modestly in a vaguely different way now. Acting like this will bring meaningful change to these girls lives is just theater.

                • @FinnFooted
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                  1 year ago

                  Do you actually have anything to argue what I said though? Like… really. Your best answer to oppression is more oppression? And that makes me an idiot?

    • Hello Hotel
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      31 year ago

      Small prayers before meals is effectively religious iconography. So is muslums call to prayer. But are they prosthilitizing?

      • @Cypher
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        1 year ago

        iconography ī″kə-nŏg′rə-fē noun

        1. Pictorial illustration of a subject.
        2. The collected representations illustrating a subject.
        3. A set of specified or traditional symbolic forms associated with the subject or theme of a stylized work of art.

        An action is not iconography, though public prayer is absolutely proselytizing but how you think that relates to clothing standards is not clear.

    • @SCB
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      -21 year ago

      No one in France is allowed to wear religious iconography/clothing in public schools

      Yeah that’s fucking evil and we should sanction France for it.

      • @hoch
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        21 year ago

        lol okay buddy

        • Hello Hotel
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          11 year ago

          A little extreme i admit, i would agree with a weaker take