Fer cryin' out loud... "Pretending that you already know the answer when you don't is not actually very helpful." ~Migeru.
How is a government demanding a woman dress a certain way any different than a religion demanding a woman dress a certain way?
Because, in a democracy, a full public debate can be held about it?
I didn't say I was happy with the majority dictating to the minority on rules of dress.
Hell, if there's a single anthropological universal, it might very well be that. Un roi sans divertissement est un homme plein de misères
Nudity is a very buddha kind of thing. It extends from the pacific to Europe and the US, but it is lacking in most non-buddha, non-Chrst ,-non_allah, no-single major-entity above the semi-gods (in crhistian faith called saints) culture...
I wonder why that would be? well I guess I now have to go and reread Levi-Strauss again :)
Specially toa pply the reading to nude beaches, interesting topic.
On the topic at hand, everybody knows my point of view around here.
A pleasure I therefore claim to show, not how men think in myths, but how myths operate in men's minds without their being aware of the fact. Levi-Strauss, Claude
I have the gut opinon that it is like a sacred place (I have never been done ethnology on a nude beach so I do not know, but I would love to), and it is structured like a non-monotesitic religion. Since I seem to remember that the concept of being nude is strongly linked with monoteistic (or one god above the others) religion I would bet that most people in nude beaches either are agnostic or follow other spirittual structures, and therefore they use it as a sacred place.
In any case, I do not know enough about that, I should read a bit on religion structre/space structure/and human body covering or bodies tabus...and relearn some antrhopology 201 :)
structured like a non-monotesitic religion
Some crhristian congregations, those on the left and on "god is love" who work with kids use them too. I have always wondered how they manage and why they do it.
It is difficult to translate to english , but I guess in spanish you get my point. In catalan I call it the "esplai" structure. Do you know what a "esplai" is?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Esplai
http://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Esplai
It is similar to scouts, but completely different :)
"Kumbaya" (also spelled Kum Ba Yah) is a spiritual song from the 1930s. It enjoyed newfound popularity during the folk revival of the 1960s and became a standard campfire song in Scouting and other nature-appreciative organizations. The song was originally associated with human and spiritual unity, closeness and compassion, and it still is, but more recently it is also cited or alluded to in satirical, sarcastic or even cynical ways that suggest blind or false moralizing, hypocrisy, or naively optimistic views of the world and human nature.[1]
"Kumbaya" (also spelled Kum Ba Yah) is a spiritual song from the 1930s. It enjoyed newfound popularity during the folk revival of the 1960s and became a standard campfire song in Scouting and other nature-appreciative organizations.
The song was originally associated with human and spiritual unity, closeness and compassion, and it still is, but more recently it is also cited or alluded to in satirical, sarcastic or even cynical ways that suggest blind or false moralizing, hypocrisy, or naively optimistic views of the world and human nature.[1]
Look, you seem to have your minds made up about this, and I certainly have mine made up, so a "debate" here isn't going to accomplish much, at least on my end. I will go to my grave lamenting every time a government or religion uses the female body is used for ammunition in patriarchal power struggles. Like just leaving the house doesn't present enough opportunities to be judged on our appearance. Like women born into an oppressive culture don't have enough to worry about. Now they have to choose who they please, her family or her government. Makes me perfectly sick, to be honest. "Pretending that you already know the answer when you don't is not actually very helpful." ~Migeru.
the land of the French
Who are the French? A people of different historical roots (Celtic, Latin, Germanic) which has assimilated and continues to assimilate many varying strands of immigration. What's in question here is a ragged edge in the assimilation process.
The argument is about whether the state should intervene by setting rules. I think it may do so. But just saying "this is the land of the French" is not only substantially meaningless, it also happens to be the National Front line. :)
There is no such thing as a French person and anyone who thinks there actually is such a thing is himself an unreconstructed nazi.
Sigh. Peak oil is not an energy crisis. It is a liquid fuel crisis.
Bleh.
But if you want to consider it from a social economic perspective... Societal equality requires the welfare state. The welfare state requires solidarity. There is no strong solidarity without homogenity, or at least the feeling that we are all in this together. If some group puts itself apart, the whole thing breaks down and the neolibs win.
Imagine there is an enclave populated entirely by foreigners, let's say Arabs. Chances are that this city will not be a net contributor of funds to society. How is this different from just incorporating an entire Arab city in say Syria in the social benefit system? Well, there isn't. And as we don't send money to the Arab city in Syria, why should we do it back here? Well, we shouldn't. So we should stop. But basing the welfare state on ethnicity in that way would be racist, so we'd just rather dismantle the entire welfare state instead.
We should be very happy that the forces in Europe that oppose multiculturalism and etc generally do it just because they oppose multiculturalism, and not like in the US where the Republicans used the race card to get the Southern Democrats to vote against their own economic interest, an issue Paul Krugman writes about in his excellent book The Conscience of a Liberal. Peak oil is not an energy crisis. It is a liquid fuel crisis.
Well, that's how the standard right-wing argument goes, certainly.
First question: why is the enclave not a net contributor to society?
Second question: why don't we send the money to Syria?
Third question: doesn't all this just depend on the story you tell yourself about who belongs in the in-group you believe is deserving of social welfare? Seems to me that right-wingers choose to tell themselves a story that restricts deserving to a small sub-group, at the extreme restricting it to small, lucky groups of the racially and/or religiously select. The homogeneity argument is an excuse for your choice of story.
While I do agree with you and Jerome on the social value of assimilation, something valuable is lost in the process and it should be possible to integrate without erasing cultural differences.
Starvid:
Imagine there is an enclave populated entirely by foreigners, let's say Arabs. Chances are that this city will not be a net contributor of funds to society
Imagine there is an enclave populated entirely by poor people. Chances are that this city will not be a net contributor of funds to society...
In other words, the race card allows to define deserving poor and undeserving poor, and make the poor fight between themselves rather than against their common economic foe. In the long run, we're all dead. John Maynard Keynes
Integration just has to do with the ability/willingness to function/be accepted more or less fully in mainstream society.
Other people than just immigrants can fail to be "integrated" - they fall through the cracks, they feel alienated, etc... A man of words and not of deeds is like a garden full of weeds; a man of deeds and not of words is like a garden full of turds — Anonymous
after assimilation the resulting culture is a compromise between the mainstream culture and the assimilated ones...
We are no longer talking about France there, then. This is a country where, on the last "what is your favourite dish" study, couscous came out on top (despite a rather rich and diverse local cooking tradition), displacing gratin dauphinois.
As the husband of the daughter of a Moroccan man and a Laotian woman, I do spend quite some time within immigrants. They are quite assimilated, yet far from having had their identity erased. Earth provides enough to satisfy every man's need, but not every man's greed. Gandhi
I do spend quite some time within immigrants
Integrate means that there remain subsocieties defined by culture
A subsociety will have some - strong - amount of social segregation in the form of specific friendly interactions, a preponderance of marriage within the subsociety, etc. The geek subculture exists but is definitely not a subsociety according to this, for example.
I bet there is a "conservative catholic" subculture in France which mostly only interacts friendly and intermarries with itself. A man of words and not of deeds is like a garden full of weeds; a man of deeds and not of words is like a garden full of turds — Anonymous
And also, the problems of a subsociety for the wider demos comes not only from the fact that the subsociety exists, but also how it defines itself : Is it collectively attempting to define itself, segregate itself, and consciously improve its lot in society as opposed to the other subgroups ?
For example, typically in France, academics are defined by "having a PhD", which is more or less attemptable by everybody, although being from academic parents help ; so the maintaining of a subsociety is not conscious. Secondary school teachers in France is one of the group most adamant about not forming subsocieties, indeed.
Compare to what counts in France as the haute bourgeoisie, which consciously creates a segregated education system for it kids, enforces marriage within the class through social disapproval, and is able to get members of the class in the Elysée.
Compare to a mythical muslim subsociety which would only vote for communautarian parties, which would send the kids to private muslim schools, and whose women would be practically unable to communicate with the outside society because of the burqa.
Obvious reasons mean that Sarko denounces the mythical later subsociety rather than the earlier one... Un roi sans divertissement est un homme plein de misères
Has all of this ever been researched properly? It would make a wonderful study.
I suspect it's rather leaky
All subcultures are leaky, however you care to define them. A man of words and not of deeds is like a garden full of weeds; a man of deeds and not of words is like a garden full of turds — Anonymous
And not all subcultures are equally significant politically. No one much cares what fringe religions like paganism do or what geeks believe, because pagans have no influence on policy, and geeks only care if they change the source code.
But Islam could have an influence and Catholicism very much does have an influence - especially in the UK, where it gave us Plastic Tony.
So perhaps the issue isn't about freedom of expression as much as freedom of political influence.
Sarko's motivation is that he wants to get the far right voters to support him ; that includes the conservative christians, but quite a lot of the racist supporters are just racist and want a racially defined French society.
But he knows he won't be criticised on the burqa subject because quite a bit of the left sees the burqa as the instrument of a fundamentalist muslim subsociety and thus don't like it. Un roi sans divertissement est un homme plein de misères
your own
Compare to what counts in France as the haute bourgeoisie, which consciously creates a segregated education system for it kids, enforces marriage within the class through social disapproval, and is able to get members of the class in the Elysée. Compare to a mythical muslim subsociety which would only vote for communautarian parties, which would send the kids to private muslim schools, and whose women would be practically unable to communicate with the outside society because of the burqa. Obvious reasons mean that Sarko denounces the mythical later subsociety rather than the earlier one...
Obvious reasons mean that Sarko denounces the mythical later subsociety rather than the earlier one...
But from the other side, there's also the implication that as long as Muslims play the game by not challenging existing symbol systems head-on, they can be 'assimilated' and allowed to fit into the usual round of social aspiration and imitation - which is the true state religion, even if the state likes to pretend that it's purely secular and doesn't do any overt ritual or social management.
the usual round of social aspiration and imitation - which is the true state religion, even if the state likes to pretend that it's purely secular and doesn't do any overt ritual or social management.
I would not call it State religion, but State ideology. And I would say that in France the State does not pretend anything of the sort: the ritual and social management are definitely part of the acknowledged fabric of French society.
Again, this goes back to a point that I made earlier in this thread: that active State interventionism is something conscious, acknowledged and supported by large majorities in the country.
And that's why many on the left will support some form of action against burqas (not forbidding them in the street, because that's just impossible and silly, but forbidding them in regulated places like schools and hospitals, with the full symbolic impact of such limited measures) even though they are fully aware of his racist mongering. That's France. In the long run, we're all dead. John Maynard Keynes
I would not call it State religion, but State ideology
Sort of like Blair's classless society.
Whether they are recognised by the state is a different matter. All states recognise some subcultures (even France, even if it pretends not to) but no state recognises every subculture.
Political parties are examples of the subcultures that France recognises. But not every political party might be allowed - an explicitly Islamic political party might run up against institutional (and cultural) opposition. A man of words and not of deeds is like a garden full of weeds; a man of deeds and not of words is like a garden full of turds — Anonymous
she's quite capable of deciding for herself how to dress
In the case where it's religion telling her how to dress, or patriarchal family values backed up by religion, how true is that statement?
scary party
You are sometimes very silly.
Are you suggesting a woman is incapable of deciding what is best for herself simply because of her family or religion?
not incapable - npt allowed, and transgressions can be paid with their lives? What are you arguing about, exactly? In the long run, we're all dead. John Maynard Keynes
That is a presumption of guilt in the general case. Girls, women and their families should be presumed innocent (of coercing or submitting to such coercion) until proven guilty in a given particular case. Truth unfolds in time through a communal process.
Because the only "community" the French state recognizes is itself - no subcommunity is allowed. A man of words and not of deeds is like a garden full of weeds; a man of deeds and not of words is like a garden full of turds — Anonymous
Can't you see the difference? I'm not making any comment about other countries' choices, just supporting those made in France. In the long run, we're all dead. John Maynard Keynes
i am probably misunderstanding your point here. but there is absolutely nothing wrong with commenting on the policies of other countries, especially important ones like France, when one feels that they are deeply unjust. otherwise, only citizens of that country would be allowed to criticize it. Truth unfolds in time through a communal process.
In Philadelphia, for just one example, you will see women in burqas in all parts of the city, on buses and subways and in the markets, and it causes absolutely zero problems for anyone. It would be a law respecting religion (unconstitutional) to tell someone that they can dress as they see fit as part of their religion.
Anyone who feels that they are being coerced by their spouse or family into dressing a certain way has recourse under the law.
I fail to see the point of aggressive secularism from organs of the state.
Easy to say, hard to put in practice. It can be very hard to go against one's family and social group. (points to the problems the US recently had with the Mormon polygamists). Un roi sans divertissement est un homme plein de misères
As for the problem of parents coercing their children into doing things they do not want to do, that is a problem in all countries, cultures, and religions. I wish I could have a year of Sunday mornings back from all the times I was dragged to church as a child. I don't think we should pass a law making it illegal to force your child to attend religious services.
It is better to err on the side of giving families the freedom to settle such issues internally. If a child is being compelled to wear a burqa against her will, they should be able to appeal to the same authorities that protect them from physical abuse. If they are too scared to do that, it's unfortunate, but no different from the child that won't report regular beatings. You ought to keep the laws as free as is possible.
I don't think we should pass a law making illegal to force your child to attend religious services.
Some people may be able to break the conditioning. Some will rebel. But both options are only available in pluralistic cultures which can model different behaviours and belief systems.
In all honesty I'd suggest the opposite would be more effective - children should be brought up in a secular culture, and then only allowed to choose religion after 18.
The fact that this would deprive all religions of most of their followers highlight how essential indoctrination and coercion are to religious experience.
children should be brought up in a secular culture, and then only allowed to choose religion after 18.
would yo do the same for soccer games? For soccer teams? Which culture-generated identity items you would not allow adn which ones you would? Maybe there is a criteria I am missing. Make-up? Short pants? friends gathering? Language use? Book reading? TV/tale surroudned structures? Narrative self-structures (from games to "personal talks with your child"? religious gathering? Rithual gathering (as sports)? Which one out, wich one in
Can a crrteria be generated to force parents not to do any of these? We can force them to do something.. and society does it constantly, my question is about forcing not to do something. You can force parents to make their children look for the doctor but what is the criteria to prevent them to look for other alternative/non-legal/foreign/chaman structures? You cannot even force parents not to kill or beat their chidlren, only prosecute afterwards...and beating and killing does not construct the identity narrative directly, something which the three main religious and the secular all consider a good thing.
There's a difference between giving children hundreds of options and leaving them to find something that works for them, and giving them the One True and Holy Option and telling that if they try something different they will die, burn in agony for eternity, and so on.
Would I like to see tribal and caste identities being diluted in a similar way? Personally, I would - not necessarily into insignificance, but certainly to the point where they can't be used as an excuse for exclusion and physical or emotional violence. (I'm including class within caste.)
Tribal and caste identities seem to cause a lot of problems while offering very little that's useful or positive.
Of course this means making diversity an indoctrinated value. But since it probably isn't possible to avoid indoctrination altogether, I wouldn't see that as a completely bad thing.
So we should force parents to take their children to different religious gatherings, to different soccer teams.. and so on and so on.
It is forcing diversity.. more or less like my idea of forcing parents to send kids overseas (with state support). Something I have long ago advocated.
Of course you can not force parents not to attend mass regularly on a catholic church with their kids, but you can indeed force them to go to a synagogue, to a mosque and to a flying spageutti monster gathering or to a star-trek/BSG gathering.
The only problem of course is that diversity indoctrination is going to be a tough sell.. but if we can make kids and parents go to school...everything is possible.
In the case of short pants, it is not necessary for the State to intervene, as whether kids (or adults) wear short pants does not have the potential to interfere with the State's existing functions. In the case of religious dress, the potential for widespread social/religious radicalization is clear and present, and by implication, this poses a direct threat to the French State's explicitly secular role.
To put this another way, if the burqa was not associated with religion, and in particular, was not associated with foreign religious alternatives to the French State's functions (ie the Sharia in particular and also Middle Eastern customs which clash with European ideals), then it would pose no threat and be perfectly acceptable and benign.
However, the burqa is associated with Sharia and incompatible Middle Eastern social models, and therefore is an unacceptable encroachment on the French State's role and functions. As such, the State is justified in outlawing the burqa, not because of the dress itself, but solely because of the religious role it plays and the danger if it spreads. -- $E(X_t|F_s) = X_s,\quad t > s$
It is all very eurocentric anyway. A vote for PES is a vote for EPP! A vote for EPP is a vote for PES! Support the coalition, vote EPP-PES in 2009!
Again, this is a misunderstanding between those who tags those garments as religious and those who don't ! Islam is pretty well lived in France and is not segregated (I must insist). While class, and where you live is still selective !
And by the way, the "car burqa" (the tinted windows of a car) has been unlawful for quite a while... :-) "What can I do, What can I write, Against the fall of Night". A.E. Housman
BTW, I am not claiming that Muslims as a whole are not well integrated in France or that Islam must disappear, I am arguing that the minority which imposes strict rules on their women are in contradiction with the values of the fifth French Republic, and this is why there necessarily is a clash.
The State must uphold and preserve the republican values which are described in the French constitution (in the same way, the American State must preserve the American constitution, which is different, etc). If a community diverges strongly from these values (and in fact the radical Islamic interpretation not only strongly clashes with these values, but offers a completely different and well developed civilisation), then the (French) State has no choice but must take action to impose the (French) constitutional values on this community.
It is really a question of which comes first in France, the State or the religion? -- $E(X_t|F_s) = X_s,\quad t > s$
How can you claim that the head coverings are not religious?
What you need to argue is that covering a woman's head with a scarf etc does not imply values which are promoted by religion. One could start by asking if the head covering were denounced by early religious leaders as pagan, and only accepted grudgingly over time. I am not qualified to make socio-historical remarks of this precision. -- $E(X_t|F_s) = X_s,\quad t > s$
Only available at Emergency Treatment centers. You can't be me, I'm taken
-- $E(X_t|F_s) = X_s,\quad t > s$
10 Uses for a Silk Scarf : The List Maven - Lists of Beauty Tips, Fashion Advice and Shopping Suggestions
or this one?
This used to be the hight of fashion. I still have some of these scarves. :-)
How do you test for values?
Anyway, the obvious way is some sort of questionnaire. Adherence to values can be faked, of course.
You can then fall back on behaviours as evidence of values. This naturally leads to "a burqa disqualifies you for French citizenship".
On "which values?", there was a time when France and the US were Enlightened nations but nowadays even France has a Head of State who believes they're "Christian Nations" so the kinds of "values tests" that are applied to people are becoming less palatable to lefties... But still, Sarkozy will have some success in getting French leftists to support his racist policy because they agree on the "secular republican values" principle. Or at least he'll paralyse them into indecision over whether banning the Burqa is civic or racist. A man of words and not of deeds is like a garden full of weeds; a man of deeds and not of words is like a garden full of turds — Anonymous
You cannot impose values.
In rrual afgan communities it has nothing to do with religion but with gender structures in rural areas (just like in Spain nowadays).
The role of burrqas in the few urban afghan posts is... well highly debatable and I do not know enough about it.
The only place where it is clearly assocaited due to an strange symbolic imaginarium, with religion is in western countries inside non-muslim communities (which would never never in their dreams associate burqa with msulim nor arab).. burqa, for muslims, is a regional and rural symbol (well, more like evocation, like when you heard someone with a different accent and you recognize where it comes from), not a religious one.
A pleasue I therefore claim to show, not how men think in myths, but how myths operate in men's minds without their being aware of the fact. Levi-Strauss, Claude
I have no data on this change of view.
Also, don't forget that the "muslim" communities in France, at least those that are going the veil or burqa way, aren't the most knowledgeable about their version of traditional islam, and a fair share of the imams are educated in the more conservative muslim countries. Un roi sans divertissement est un homme plein de misères
Despite looking like religious, and having the stamp of religion, it is actually non-religion. The key point is gender roles which religion acts as a structure which supports the "stability" of the roles.
Same as rural Spain in the 40/50's.
My grand grand ma used cover and soemtimes face-covers even in cities when she was no longer at all religious.. it was a role marker...Not to say that the church in the town would have not protested/commented... but nothing like the non-church social control to enforce the rules
why don't you x-post a diary from the frog pond here too, once in a while?
don't happen to agree with you on this point, but you make it very well.
is it possible there is less parental control in general in the USA?
can you see that perhaps it might be a good thing to create an environment where daughters didn't have to lawyer up in order to enjoy the freedoms we do?
another factor may be geography. america is physically further, so the ties to the 'old country' are more tenuous, reducing the adherence to archaic customs.
i do think america tries to celebrate immigration in its ideal form, (with a bit of schizophrenia on the southern border!), whereas, though we europeans need immigrants about as much as you did back in the 20's and 30's to keep afloat, i somehow can't see any statue of liberty suggested for any of the usual ports of entry here.
sheer speculation, i know... however, the phrase 'melting pot' is not in common use over here either.
(should be!) ~"When an inner situation is not made conscious, it appears outside as fate." Karl Jung~
it sounds good to pass laws that expand freedom, but this law doesn't expand freedom, it takes it away.
you have the president of France saying that there is something wrong with women who choose to cover. He didn't say there is something wrong with coercing them. We could all agree on that, and even on laws that punish people for coercing others. Instead, you would become the coercers and the sanctimonious judges of other people's morality.
There is something wrong with a secularism that feels the need for coercion. It violates one of the most basic principles of Enlightenment thinking, which is that there should be no laws made respecting an establishment of religion. That means that the state should neither support or oppose the exercise of religion, including in matters of dress.
That means that the state should neither support or oppose the exercise of religion,
As a mental exercise, that's fine and can help clarify unexamined assumptions.
But none of it is applicable here. We aren't talking about public urination or human sacrifice or public nudity.
The rights of a supposedly free people are being threatened so that there might be some hypothetical gain for a subcategory of the people being impacted.
That hypothetical gain already exists and can be strengthened without bans on dress.
My advice would be to keep the state from exerting any power over people that isn't absolutely necessary. And guard that jealously.
My advice would be to keep the state from exerting any power over people that isn't absolutely necessary
As for polygamy, it's a legacy of biblical injunctions that doubles as good deal for women and their empowerment. It might not be strictly necessary, but it has its purposes.
Precisely. Whether you agree with its justification or not, public nudity is outlawed for a specific reason: to "protect" the public from so-called "indecency". Clearly that same reason does not apply to the wearing of burqas. So the issue of public nudity is really not relevant here.
What is relevant is finding a reason that justifies prohibiting the wearing of burqas. So far at least three have been brought up, with varying levels of explicitness:
Still, somehow I feel there are indecency criteria or an indecency threshold that indecent exposure does satisfy but burqas do not. I have to think about it more, but I believe that it has something to do with the intent of the behavior (or lack thereof). If I understand illegal public nudity correctly, it must involve an intention to shock, offend, titillate or "upset" others in some way. In other words, it involves a form of psychological aggression. I think there is a key difference with burqas there: while some people may wear burqas in order to offend, shock, upset, etc., I believe that for the vast majority, that is far from the case. People may be disturbed at the sight of burqas, but that is normally not the intention of the wearer. Wearing a burqa, I daresay, is not a form of psychological aggression. And for this reason, even if some people may find it "indecent", that indecency is in their (the viewers') head, not in the intent of the burqa-wearer, and so it is not a form indecency that should be made punishable by the law. Truth unfolds in time through a communal process.
It speaks volumes about the contempt and domination in which those women are held by their own community. Nudity, in contrast, does not diminish anyone, only the social stigma associated to it would make it so. That the indecency be not the intention of the Burqa-wearer only makes it worse: it is the intention of the community that forces them to become Burqa-wearer.
And it is not about religion -unless we are talking about a new religion. Islam was all over the world with not a Burqa in sight apart from Afghanistan until very recently.
It is, however, very much about the subjugation of women. Earth provides enough to satisfy every man's need, but not every man's greed. Gandhi
Unfortunately, I must deny your request to be taken seriously. My hands are tied, you understand, but without sufficient corroboration by other parties, it is very difficult. There are individuals, you see, highly unscrupulous individuals... and you will laugh at this: they pretend to have a religion! I know, I know, how could anyone believe them? Ha, ha. They are of course nothing like you, but you see, your temporary... shall we say lack of documentation... puts you, regrettably, in their company. It happens to the best of us, I could tell you stories... but I digress.
Of course, my door is always open should you come upon a reliable set of references, and I have little doubt that your present predicament cannot last. In my experience, leaders of idiosyncratic religions often pass through a period of tribulation and testing, it's in the nature of the thing, and is usually not fatal. (Well, I say it isn't fatal, but how would I know about the fatal cases, I ask you? Ha, ha.)
I trust therefore that I shall see you soon, with all the paperwork in order, and together we shall be able to put this little contretemps behind us once and for all, with all the contempt it so richly deserves. My secretary will be happy to make an appointment for you. -- $E(X_t|F_s) = X_s,\quad t > s$
the state should neither support or oppose the exercise of religion, including in matters of dress
How do you square this with
BooMan:
the Mormons abandoned polygamy as a condition of Utah becoming a state
Is there not American legislation against polygamy? Didn't Utah becoming a state entail the integration of its inhabitants into the sphere of the rule of American law?
afew:
Didn't Utah becoming a state entail the integration of its inhabitants into the sphere of the rule of American law?
minor point 1-the phrenia of racism in the States is not limited to the souther border at all, and is stirred by the same type of fearful and fearsome people who are ranting up this law, as well as most all of the wars of history.
"melting pot" isn't used here in France, but it is expected that the soup is made - all shall speak parisian french, all will be bliss if we can only get those people over there to be like these us people.
Notwithstanding the obvious counter-arguments that there are others who are forced to wear collars and habits and the like in order to show subjugation to Rome (or whatever piety demands to create a difference for the public)...these priests of our secular virtue are not fighting to lift the burden of shadow from women. Nor, presuming they were, is there any instance in history that can be pointed to which indicates that banning laws be the way to handle such subjugation.
As the Shakti Gawain quotes goes: In order to cause a shadow to disappear, you must shine light on it.
The sentence before is: You cannot cause a shadow to disappear by trying to fight it, stamp on it, by railing against it, or any other form of emotional or physical resistance.
The sentence before that is: Evil is like a shadow - it has no real substance of its own, it is simply a lack of light.
Sarkozy and his ilk are as much the epitome of an absence of light as those fellow Sujectionists that he thinks he is fighting. Never underestimate their intelligence, always underestimate their knowledge.
Frank Delaney ~ Ireland
I know France is not America. But I can guarantee you that France will continue to experience much greater difficulties integrating their Muslim population than America experiences so long as they carry on with these childish games about how people dress.
Mind you, I find the aggressive secularism counter-productive, but for different reasons: suppression of religion by force seldom produces the result you want.
It's nothing like what goes on in Europe, and the respect they are shown has a lot to do with it.
what goes on in Europe
???
What does go on in Europe?
Neighborhoods are not segregated, although there are enclaves that are very heavily Muslim.
When I was in London I spent 4 years in a "heavily Muslim enclave" (my landlord, my next-door neighbours and my hairdresser, greengrocer, newsagent, post office clerk, convenience store owner... for the last 3 years, and one of my three local Councillors, were Pakistani). However it was not a "segregated neighbourhood".
Is this a case of "I have enclaves, you have segregated neighbourhoods, he has ghettos"?
Madrid also has "heavily Muslim enclaves" but I am not aware of "segregated neighbourhoods" either. Does Paris have "segregated neighbourhoods"? A man of words and not of deeds is like a garden full of weeds; a man of deeds and not of words is like a garden full of turds — Anonymous
Apparently in Europe we have segregated neighbourhoods, whereas in the US they have "heavily Muslim enclaves".
Yes, sort of like how in Yurp you have "used cars" while in America we have "pre-owned vehicles".
;) Conservatives want live babies so they can raise them to be dead soldiers. - George Carlin
It's nothing like what goes on in Europe
France will continue to experience much greater difficulties integrating their Muslim population than America experiences
There are very few serious articles about Arabs in France in the US media. It's all about the Muslim menace, or French racism, or economic decline (or all 3, usually), mixed with stunning ignorance of facts on the ground.
Arabs in France are more secular than Christians in the US, they intermarry with other French people, and are getting integrated into the mainstream just like Italians, Poles and Portuguese were over the past 3 generations. They have the problems of low income groups and neighborhoods, plus discrimination that's been fanned by the very same rightwing politicians that use immigration and fearmongerign to push the very economic policies that make things worse for them.
Please consider that anything that's written on Muslims in Europe bears the same relations to reality as articles on "socialism." In the long run, we're all dead. John Maynard Keynes
I'm just waiting for a US winger to draw that conclusion ...
It seems to me that, for some reason, many in the US who wouldn't trust their media at all on domestic news think that it becomes impartial when it starts discussing Europe.
you are the media you consume.
If France didn't have communist healthcare they wouldn't have any rioting Muslims. Well known fact.
NO ONES DENIES THIS!! Conservatives want live babies so they can raise them to be dead soldiers. - George Carlin
But in fairness' sake, the government already does put constraints on how we dress. One wouldn't be allowed to run around naked or wear a t-shirt with a nazi swastika, to take two extreme examples. Though I certainly agree with you that debates of this nature often oozes with misogyny, I'm not sure that is the case here. And I'm certainly not sure where I stand on this issue, though "my religion commands me to behave in this manner" is usually an argument that holds little sway with me... "The basis of optimism is sheer terror" - Oscar Wilde
I find it offensive to try to hijack this as if it's yet another example of patriarchy, and that it's a political issue which only applies to women.
The reality is that in many situations men have to wear clothing which is neither comfortable nor freely chosen.
Try wearing a tie and a stiff-collared shirt for ten or twelve hours and see how free and liberated you feel. Try turning up to a job interview wearing whatever you feel like wearing, and watch how your decision not to play the appropriate dressing up game completely trumps your qualifications and abilities.
Is it different? Not really, no. A tie isn't quite as ridiculous as a burqa, but it's hardly the epitome of sanity, especially in hot weather.
Is it religious? Well, it's certainly ideological and entirely symbolic. It's not as if men wear ties for practical reasons.
Bizarrely, not wanting to wear a burqa is seen as rather westernised, enlightened and rebellious, while not wanting to wear a tie is framed as being adolescent, rather immature, and - most of all - unserious.
If so, I must have missed that. Last time I looked Sarkozy was claiming they were all gangsters and criminals, by definition.
Any bets on whether we'll see someone in a hajib having a serious role in government before we see someone in a hoodie?
Seriously, I should not need to explain that there's a bit of a difference between not being invited over for supper and not being "welcome on our territory."
Free minds, not hair.
And on terminology: as a rough reference, hijab is a style of dress where the head and neck are covered but the face free; niqab also covers the face but leaves the eyes visible; the burqa features a total head covering with a grille before the eyes. (In all versions, the body is covered down to the ground).
So far as I can recall, the people who are 'not welcome' haven't been called out en masse as thugs and criminals and haven't been subject to systematic police abuse.
As for a 'serious role in government' - of course, teen males aren't serious, by definition, and therefore not fit for government. Everyone understands this. Which is why Sarkozy and Burlesconi are such perfect models of political seriousness, carefully selected to be the acme of maturity and effectiveness from the populations they represent.
The hijab is perfectly serious business attire, and the burqa is potentially perfectly serious business attire. Teen fashions aren't, and will never be. (Except in very limited contexts like the creative industries, where a certain amount of wackiness is tolerated.)
There's no conflation - you're simply not seeing that extremely rigid kinds of discrimination are so institutionalised they're invisible.
Of course there's conflation. On the one hand, we have people who want to be able to dress however they want at work in certain types of jobs and aren't allowed to take off their tortuous ties while at work in certain types of jobs. On the other hand, we have women who are being told by the president of the country that they may not wear a certain clothing while setting foot on French soil or YE SHALL BE CAST OUT. This from a man who, as you pointed out, has repeatedly demonized those with the misfortune to lack the proper skin color and bear non-Muslimy names.
But yes, by all means, let's make this about ties, because that's the real discrimination.
Of course there is socio-cultural pressure on all of us to act and dress in certain "acceptable" ways. Every society has that, and this is not about my ability or inability (thanks for that, though) to see it. Sarkozy has chosen to throw the coercive weight of the state behind his side.
My sympathies go to those who face competing pressures from two different societies, which they inhabit simultaneously, and which expect opposing behaviors from them. Politicizing their dilemmas does them no favors.
Just saying.
it is fascianting and proves your point that specific spaces and symbolic structures are generated when particualr dress conducts want to be expres in order to satisfy the other big "western"myth, the generation of the "growing and mature" self.
When peopel gather in nude beaches (or theya re created by the government so that only nude people go), when rave parties are structured, when dress code is ubiquous in semi-pubic spaces as discos, you know that dress codes are interanlized and can become conscious caste markers or full identity and space generators.
there is no such a thing as "free" dressing or "dressing as you want". Not here.